Chicken and Duck Talk

1988 [CN]

Comedy

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Plot summary

A witty and thoroughly engaging send-up of both the fast food business and the cut-throat techniques often employed by conglomerates to crush independent competition.

Director

Top cast

Sylvia Chang as Mrs. Hui
Ken Boyle as Caucasian asking for refund
Ronny Yu as Manhole Worker
Pak-Kwong Ho as Minibus Driver
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
906.48 MB
1280*720
Chinese 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
24 fps
1 hr 38 min
Seeds 1
1.64 GB
1920*1080
Chinese 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
24 fps
1 hr 38 min
Seeds 7

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by XinderellaLee25 8 / 10

Not bad Funny Comedy Food film

Not sure if there's HD Blu ray version yet, funny, love the Chicken costume fights beat up Duck costume guy. It's giving me Peter Griffin vs Chicken guy. Yes Billy Yip should be added to the cast as the Taxi Driver Guy in the beginning you can see his face clearly it's him he is so recognizable. It's about 2 restaurants who opened across each other competing each other. Nothing sexual scenes. There are real life situations such as City inspector inspection of food restaurants but nothing this dramatic. It cast Ricky Hui who is also famous for his Character in Mr Vampire. It also Cast Lowell Lo who is also in many famous films such as Mortuary Blues and You Bet Your Life with Sandra Ng. Yes this has English subtitles release version available.
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Reviewed by hungs 10 / 10

A comedy that is easy to overlook deep philosophical issues

The "Chicken and Duck Talk" was one of the classic films produced by Hong Kong's film industry in its heydays from 1980 to 1995. The story itself is simple enough: an old mom-and-pop restaurant suddenly faces a new flashy competition in the form of a fast food store, and Michael Hui as the owner of the restaurant struggled but succeeded in winning the battle for business after reimaging his business. On a purely entertainment level, Michael Hui with his side-slap comedy skills, entertain audiences with various hyperbolic acts, which should keep the audience entertained on a bored night. This is a perfectly legitimate perspective to view the film but it misses the deeper theme.

Underneath the comedic acts, Hui managed to convey the concept of no matter how good traditional ideas/things are, if you can't market them by making them look pleasing and attractive to bells-and-whistles obsessed shallow modern/postmodern generations, you stand no chance against competitors that are all-show-but-no-depth. If you managed to get this point, congratulations, you are watching the film at a deeper level than 98% of Hong Kong's population, who by and large have failed to appreciate the themes beyond the general concept of good guys overcoming baddies.

And yet another deeper theme that has only gradually started to be appreciated in the early 21st century is the theme of traditional mom-and-pop businesses full of sentimental attachments versus the efficient but heartless modern enterprises. It may not be a wholly accurate depiction by Hui after all - there are plenty of cold heartless tyrants amongst mom-and-pop shops in Hong Kong and also plenty of good multinational companies, but it does give us pause to consider whether we have sacrificed our interpersonal relationships for the sake of modern developments, and whether this must follow the waves of globalization. This theme is still far too radical and anathema for a vast majority of Hong Kong people even 20 years on, who worship at the altars of "economic development above all" and the "out with the old, in with the new" mentality, and as far as I know the film pundits who have raised this point are either from the West or Taiwan.

All this is not surprising if you are aware Hui holds a Bachelor of Social Science degree in Sociology from the Chinese University of Hong Kong before he entered the entertainment industry. He knows how to document the good and ills of a society and offer commentaries via visual media. Will the film's deeper themes be appreciated in Hong Kong one day? Hopefully so, if Hong Kong wants to regain its soul.

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