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Mr. Unbelievable

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Mr. Unbelievable
Theatrical release poster
Unbelievable先生
Directed byOng Kuo Sin
Written byOng Kuo Sin
Produced byMelvin Ang
Lim Teck
Ong Kuo Sin
Toong Soo Wei
Sock Ling
StarringChen Tianwen
Liu Lingling
Marcus Chin
Roy Li
Jaime Teo
Tosh Zhang
Edited byHeng
Music byGary Leo
Production
companies
mm2 Entertainment
Clover Films
Byleft Productions
NB Productions
Distributed bymm2 Entertainment
Clover Films
Shaw Organisation
Release date
  • 3 December 2015 (2015-12-03)
Running time
94 minutes
CountrySingapore
Languages
  • Mandarin
  • Hokkien
  • English
BudgetS$1 million
Box officeS$560,000

Mr. Unbelievable (Chinese: Unbelievable先生; pinyin: Unbelievable xiānshēng) is a 2015 Singaporean musical comedy film directed by Ong Kuo Sin, and starring Chen Tianwen as the titular protagonist. It is based on the viral song "Unbelievable"[1] and was released in cinemas in Singapore on December 3, 2015,[2] and in Malaysia on January 14, 2016. It also marks the third on-screen reunion of Chen Tianwen, Liu Lingling, Roy Li and Hayley Woo after their previous collaborations in the Singaporean long drama series 118 and 118 II, where both of the installments theme songs were sung by popular local celebrity and film director Jack Neo. Secondly, it also marks another on-screen reunion of Liu Lingling and Zhang Xinxiang after their previous collaboration in the local drama known as Portrait of Home and 118. Thirdly, it also marks another on-screen reunion of Liu Lingling and Jaime Teo after their previous collaboration in I Not Stupid Too TV Series, also directed by Jack Neo. Moreover, it also marks another on-screen reunion of Chen Tianwen, Tosh Zhang and Zhang Xinxiang after their previous collaborations in the Lion Dance movies The Lion Men and The Lion Men: Ultimate Showdown, another movie franchise also directed by Jack Neo once again. Furthermore, it also marks another on-screen reunion of Chen Tianwen and Tosh Zhang after their previous collaborations in the Ah Boys to Men film series either, including Ah Boys to Men, Ah Boys to Men 2 and Ah Boys to Men 3: Frogmen, also directed by Jack Neo either. At the same time, it also marks another on-screen reunion of Chen Tianwen, Tosh Zhang, Hayley Woo and Gadrick Chin after their previous collaboration together in Jack Neo's Naval Diving Unit movie known as Ah Boys to Men 3: Frogmen. Also, Chen Tianwen and Gadrick Chin would later collaborate again as enemies in the movie known as Take 2, which was executive produced by Jack Neo once again either and directed by Ivan Ho.

Plot

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Eric Kwek Hock Seng is born on 9 August 1965, the day Singapore declared its independence, and is abandoned as a baby in a basket with a broccoli. He is taken in by Master Lo Man. Lo Man trains Eric to perform in the getai industry, although his looks has caused setbacks. Through the years, he becomes one who is a patriotic Singaporean, and is hugely supportive of national campaigns. When Lo Man's getai business becomes unable to keep up with the times, and also because of the Speak Mandarin Campaign, he decided to add English lyrics to Chinese and Hokkien songs, much to the dismay to Master Lo Man, his friends, Ah Fei and Ah Hua, and frequent getai-goers. At the same time, his poor command of the English language made it worse, resulting in certain phrases, such as "stunned like vegetable", sounding relatively wonky. However, his disciple, Lawrence, is extremely supportive of this decision, as he is encouraged by his mother to listen to Eric's songs. To show his strong will and persistence in order to fulfil his dreams, Eric is determined to go on an unbelievable musical journey, even at the age of 50. With the help of Lawrence, Eric managed to become a sensation through his song "Unbelievable".

Cast

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  • Chen Tianwen as Eric Kwek Hock Seng, a 50-year-old getai performer
    • Genghis Chan as Eric Kwek Hock Seng as a baby
  • Liu Lingling as Man Li, a beer promoter and Eric's love interest (Her name is a parody of Huang Qing Yuan's most popular song)
  • Marcus Chin as Master Lo Man, master of the singing troupe and Eric's adoptive father (His name is a parody of Lo Mang)
  • Roy Li as Ah Fei, Lo Man's disciple
  • Jaime Teo as Ah Hua, Lo Man's daughter and disciple, and Eric's childhood lover
  • Tosh Zhang as Lawrence, a part-time actor, Eric's disciple and forever-loyal fan
  • Hayley Woo as Omega Cui
  • Hong Huifang as a Samsui woman who is a fan of Eric and Master Lo Man's music (Similar to her role as Dai Ah Xiu whom is also a Samsui woman in the Singapore drama Samsui Women)
  • Zhang Wei as the getai show organiser/boss
  • Zhang Xinxiang as Man Li's boss
  • Jim Lim as TV Director
  • Daren Tan as TV Male Lead
  • Silver Ang as Competition Host
  • Gadrick Chin as Daniel
  • Chua Jin Sen as Coffeeshop Kid

Production

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The huge success of Chen's "Unbelievable" music video, which garnered 3.2 million views on Facebook and YouTube prompted director Ong Kuo Sin to come up with a feature film and provide a background story for it. The film was shot in 15 days starting from 14 September 2015.[3]

In order to sing Hokkien songs in the film, Jaime Teo had to watch online videos to brush up on the dialect.[4]

Reception

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Yip Wai Yee of The Straits Times gave the film 2 out of 5 stars, attributing it to Chen's portrayal of his teenage character "unconvincing", and that "to milk (the original music video) and drag it into a full-length feature film makes the nonsense go on for far too long".[5]

Marcus Goh of Yahoo! Movies called it "intentionally cheesy and corny, which works well given the subject matter of the film and the different language mediums it spans". At the same time, "it definitely appeals to the older crowd, but there are elements for the younger audience".[6]

Jocelyn Lee of The New Paper rated the film a 2 out of 5 stars, as it "is hindered by a thin plot, and relies on slapstick humour, making it utterly forgettable".[7]

Box office

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The film collected $25,000 on its opening day, making it the biggest opener among Singaporean films, excluding Chinese New Year-related films.[8]

References

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  1. ^ "Chen Tian Wen to star in 'un-un-un-un-unbelievable' movie". Channel NewsAsia. 28 August 2015. Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
  2. ^ "Mr Unbelievable gets Dec 3 release date". Today. 3 September 2015. Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
  3. ^ Lee, Jocelyn (29 September 2015). "Mr Unbelievable movie shot in unbelievable 15 days". The New Paper. Archived from the original on 4 December 2021. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
  4. ^ Zhuang, Zara (4 September 2015). "'Unbelievable' gives Chen Tian Wen his big break in movies". Toggle. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
  5. ^ Yip, Wai Yee (2 December 2015). "A struggle to keep it believable". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 23 December 2015. Retrieved 7 December 2015.
  6. ^ Goh, Marcus (2 December 2015). "Review: 'Mr Unbelievable' has familiar faces and feel-good vibes". Yahoo Movies. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 7 December 2015.
  7. ^ Lee, Jocelyn (9 December 2015). "Movie Review: Mr Unbelievable (PG)". The New Paper. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  8. ^ 陈, 韵红 (4 December 2015). "《Mr.Unbelievable》首日票房报捷" (in Chinese). Lianhe Wanbao. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 7 December 2015.
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