| TheLayersofV: Let's stay together...loving you whether times are good or bad, happy or sad... Al Green about 3 hours ago |
![]() | IAm_Will: WOOP I got an email from University of Bedfordshire saying I will know in 10 days wether or not im accepted!! :D *HAPPY TIMES* about 3 hours ago |
| jules99: I can't lift my arm. Or open my car door with it. Happy holidays to me the one who gets in and out of the car a few dozen times on Xmas. about 3 hours ago |
![]() | ChayaChaya: @queenuniquemvp I missed you!At times,unsure if I miss people due to no time, or cos they're not here.So Happy To See You, Angel Queenie!xx about 7 hours ago |
![]() | cassy1109: I <3 21 ..let's stay together..loving you whether times are good or bad, happy or sad..;) about 7 hours ago |
| By Bobby Tanzilo Managing Editor E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Bobby Tanzilo |
| Published Sept. 6, 2002 at 5:39 a.m. |
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"Red Sorghum," "Ju Dou," "To Live" and "Raise the Red Lantern" director Zhang Yimou returns to Milwaukee's silver screen with "Happy Times," a sweet, sad, funny picture set in a modern Chinese city.
Taking its name from a makeshift "hotel" -- actually a derelict bus -- opened to accommodate an urban park's rendezvousing lovers, "Happy Times" opens with aging bachelor Zhao (Zhao Benshan) wooing his latest bride-to-be. Zhao, who has bad luck with women, has decided that large women are more to his tastes, not least because they like him better than thin women, who, presumably, have more marriage options.
He feeds the woman of his dreams (Don Lihua) a line about being a successful hotel general manager but that backfires when she wants him to find a job in his hotel for her blind stepdaughter Wu Ying (Dong Jie).
He must try to hide from everyone the truth about the hotel and about his lack of money. When he takes Wu Ying to the "hotel," he finds it being removed by park workers and they return to the stepmother's house, where Wu Ying's belongings have already been tossed out and her room given over to her snotty and spoiled stepbrother (Leng Qibin).
Zhao is forced to bring Wu Ying home to his house, which he pretends is the employees' dorm at the hotel. He discovers Wu Ying is a masseus and he contrives to set up a massage parlor, although only a show one with his friends as faux customers. Why he doesn't try to actually sell her services is a mystery.
All of this he does to try and cement his relationship with the stepmother, but it all comes apart, as we suspect it will. But, an important bond begins to form between Zhao and Wu Ying and that is from whence the story's poignant moments derive.
There are also some witty moments, but the story feels more sad and touching than laugh-out-loud funny. Zhao Benshan is charmingly pathetic as the doting boyfriend trying to gain favor and as the poor, aging man trying to reverse his bad fortunes. Despite his frustrations, he can't help but gain affection for the sweet but sceptical Yu Wing.
"Happy Times" opens Fri., Sept. 6 at Landmark's Oriental Theatre.
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