Lan Kwai Fong 3 (Chinese: 喜愛夜蒲3) is a 2014 blue comedy film[citation needed] directed by Wilson Chin and produced by Ng Kin-Hung. Lan Kwai Fong 3 is a sequel to 2011's Lan Kwai Fong and 2012's Lan Kwai Fong 2 as part of the Lan Kwai Fong theatrical series. Originally intended for a late December 2013 release it was pushed back to an early 2014 release due to production issues. The film was finally released in Hong Kong and Singapore on January 2, 2014. The film stars Whitney Hui, Ava Yu, Jeana He, Jason Chan, Alex Lam, Christine Ng, Celia Kwok, and Charles Ying.[2][3][4] The movie is much darker than the previous two by depicting drugs and rape in club scenes.

Lan Kwai Fong 3
Lan Kwai Fong 3 theatrical poster
Traditional Chinese喜愛夜蒲3
Simplified Chinese喜爱夜蒲3
Hanyu PinyinXǐ'ài Yèpú
Jyutpinghei2 ngoi3 je6 pou4 3
Directed byWilson Chin
Screenplay byAu Cheuk-Man
Story byWilson Chin
Produced byNg Kin-Hung
StarringJason Chan
Whitney Hui
Alex Lam
Ava Yu
Jeana Ho
Christine Ng
Celia Kwok
Charles Ying
Narrated byChristine Ng
CinematographyChoi Man-Lung
Mak Hoi-Man
Yip Wai-Ying
Edited byMatthew Hui Wai-Kit
Music byRonald Ng
Production
companies
Mei Ah Entertainment
Local Production Ltd. [hk]
Distributed byMei Ah Entertainment
Golden Village Pictures
Release date
  • January 2, 2014 (2014-01-02)
Running time
93 minutes
CountryHong Kong
LanguageCantonese
Box officeHK$7,899,509[1]

Plot edit

The story follows four women who hit the Hong Kong night-life district of Lan Kwai Fong, looking for excitement and love. Jeana (from the first movie) is now a model in an open, non-committed relationship with Jacky (also from the first movie), and continues with her party-hard night lifestyle. Her friend Sara, feeling neglected by her fiance, looks for excitement by hitting the clubs again. Papa is an ugly duckling who works as an infants' school teacher by day and rushes home to go clubbing at night, hoping to find a guy who will love her. Jolie is a rich orphan who is looking to have fun, having just come back from England during her university holidays.

Jeana and Papa take Sara out to the hottest club at Lan Kwai Fong, Club Magnum, to help her forget about her boyfriend Shin, who would rather hang out with his ex-girlfriend then celebrate his birthday with her. At Club Magnum they meet up with Jeana's boyfriend Jacky, who has managed Club Magnum since Ah Gong's club went out of business. Jacky introduces them to May, the owner of the club, who then introduces them to her partying younger cousin Jolie. Jolie immediately reminds Jacky of his ex-girlfriend Mavis, about whom he still feels guilty. May, knowing Jolie likes to party hard, gives Jacky the task of looking after Jolie. She hopes the two can start a relationship, since his current girlfriend Jeana will soon be leaving for Taiwan for work. Jacky hesitantly agrees to babysit Jolie only because she reminds him of Mavis.

Meanwhile, Jeana pushes Sara to forget about her boyfriend Shin by telling her to party harder and introduces her to her Korean friend Kim. Sara is instantly attracted to Kim but because she is engaged to Shin she stops the two from going past a platonic friendship. During a yacht party thrown by May, Jeana, knowing of the rough patch in Sara and Shin's relationship, tries to seduce Shin and suggest Sara, Jolie and she go on a get away to Seoul, South Korea, to have fun with Kim. On the day they are to depart to Seoul Jeana backs out of the trip with only Sara and Jolie going. While Sara is in Korea, Jeana uses images of Sara having fun with Kim to coax Shin into having sex with her. Coincidentally, while in Korea, Kim is able to convince Sara to give in to her sexual desires and have sex with him. With Kim and Sara leaving Jolie behind at the club, Jolie gets gang raped by two Korean men she just met. At the police station to find out what happened to Jolie, Sara finds out Kim has a wife and was only using her for a no strings attached fling.

Papa, who has the body but not the face, is often called pork chop (ugly girl) by all the men at the club. Being ignored by guys, she sits by herself cutting paper patterns while waiting for a guy too drunk to notice her looks to come along and have a one-night stand with her. She is introduced to one of Shin's friends, Parker, who takes an interest in her. The two eventually have sex one night, with Papa leaving early in the morning thinking Parker will think of it as a one-night stand the next day. Parker waits outside Papa's workplace the next day to tell her he is truly serious about their relationship.

May sends Jacky to Korea to take care of Jolie until she recovers from her horrific incident. In Korea Jolie tells Jacky she knows that she reminds him of his ex-girlfriend Mavis and that he's not obliged to take care of her. Once back in Hong Kong Jacky shows Jolie that he wants to take care of her, not because he has to but because he wants to. With Jeana leaving, Jacky and Jolie eventually become a couple and manage Club Magnum together.[5]

Cast edit

Main cast edit

  • Whitney Hui as Jolie
  • Ava Yu as Sara
  • Jeana Ho as Jeana
  • Jason Chan as Jacky
  • Alex Lam as Shin
  • Christine Ng as May
  • Celia Kwok as Papa
  • Charles Ying as Parker
  • Lee Shi-Min as Kim (voice dubbing by Z.O. Chen Zhi-Ming)

Guest star edit

Casting edit

  • Dada Chan was supposed to be the lead actress of the film, but backed out of the film the day before filming was to start. Whitney Hui, who was only to have a guest role, became the film's new female lead. Since Hui is a TVB contract artiste and former Miss Hong Kong runner up she was not given any explicit sex scenes in the movie to protect her image. Instead, most of the explicit scenes originally intended for Dada's character were rewritten for Ava Yu and Jeana Ho's characters. With Chan no longer part of the movie some of the cast were reshuffled and scripts rewritten. Yu was originally to play party girl Jolie while Chan was to reprise her role as Cat.[6]
  • Gregory Wong reprises his role as Sean from the first movie in a guest spot to take a dig at Dada Chan for backing out of the film at the last minute. His character Sean mentions that his wife Cat has run out on him.
  • Z.O. Chen Zhi-Ming, who plays Steven and was the lead actor in the first movie, does the voice dubbing for Korean actor Lee Shi-Min's character Kim in the 3rd movie. Z.O. was chosen to dub the character Kim's voice because of his non-fluent pronunciation of Cantonese.
  • Michael Tse's guest spot as Yee Gor is in homage to the character he played in the Young and Dangerous film series.

Soundtrack edit

No official soundtrack was released for the movie. Music featured in the movie are:

  • Wonderland by 24HERBS ft. Janice Vidal
  • Wooh Yeah by EO2
  • Feel The Bass by JW
  • Do Me More (Juicy Girl) - JW
  • Wave Your Hands by Gregory Fitzgerald
  • Hit The Dancefloor by Donnie Dragon, Jae Hoon Shin, Mobile Mansion

Released edit

Mei Ah Entertainment released a trailer for Lan Kwai Fong 3 in November 2013.[7]

The film premiered in Hong Kong on December 20, 2013 and it was given a wider release on January 2, 2014.[8][9]

The film was a box office disappointment and the least profitable of the Lan Kwai Fong series.

References edit

  1. ^ 2014年1月20日 - 2014年1月26日. hkfilmart.com (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 20 February 2014. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
  2. ^ 三级片《喜爱夜蒲3》宣传 许亦妮低胸装抢镜 (in Chinese). Tencent. 4 January 2014. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  3. ^ 《喜爱夜蒲3》办斗奶趴 嫩模爆沟试管湿吻(图) (in Chinese). 28 November 2013. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  4. ^ 《喜爱夜蒲3》首映 豪放女星拿胸罩抢镜[高清大图] (in Chinese). Ifeng. 20 December 2013. Archived from the original on 23 December 2013. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  5. ^ [1] lovehkfilm review. Retrieved 8-6-2014
  6. ^ [2] Whitney Hui and Ava Yu Fight For Lead Status in “Lan Kwai Fong 3″. Retrieved 8-6-2014
  7. ^ 《喜爱夜蒲3》预告片曝光:女星被揉胸贴身肉搏 (in Chinese). 23 November 2013. Archived from the original on 28 November 2013. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  8. ^ 《喜爱夜蒲3》首映礼 众嫩模深V露肉各出奇招争艳 (in Chinese). 163.COM. 20 December 2013. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  9. ^ 组图:《喜爱夜蒲3》首映 女星拿胸罩蒙男星脸 (in Chinese). Tencent. 20 December 2013. Retrieved 14 April 2014.

External links edit