Jump to content

Dumplings (film): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Reverted edits by 173.168.8.207 (talk) to last version by Bearcat
Undid revision 1219044919 by Hyliad (talk) – old text seems clearer, especially as this article is chiefly about the whole film, not the segment
 
(31 intermediate revisions by 18 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|2004 Hong Kong horror film}}
{{Use Hong Kong English|date=July 2014}}
{{Use Hong Kong English|date=July 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2014}}
{{Infobox film
{{Infobox film
| name = Dumplings (Gaau ji)
| name = Dumplings (Gaau ji)
| image = Dumplings (film).jpg
| image = Dumplings (Chinese poster).jpg
| caption =
| caption =
| director = [[Fruit Chan]]
| director = [[Fruit Chan]]
| producer = [[Peter Chan]],<br> [[Eric Tsang]]
| producer = [[Peter Chan]],<br> [[Eric Tsang]]
| writer = [[Lilian Lee]]
| writer = [[Lilian Lee]]
| starring = [[Miriam Yeung]]<br>[[Tony Leung Ka Fai]]<br>[[Bai Ling]]<br>[[Pauline Lau]]<br>[[Mi Mi Lee]]<br>[[Miki Yeung]]
| starring = [[Miriam Yeung]]<br>[[Tony Leung Ka-fai]]<br>[[Bai Ling]]<br>[[Pauline Lau]]<br>[[Mi Mi Lee]]<br>[[Miki Yeung]]
| music = [[Chan Kwong-wing]]
| music = [[Chan Kwong-wing]]
| cinematography = [[Christopher Doyle]]
| cinematography = [[Christopher Doyle]]
| editing = Fruit Chan (as Sam-Fat Tin),<br>[[Chan Ki-hop]]
| editing = Fruit Chan (as Sam-Fat Tin),<br>[[Chan Ki-hop]]
| studio = Applause Pictures Ltd.
| studio = Applause Pictures Ltd.
| distributor = e-m-s the DVD-Company <small>(Germany)</small>
| distributor = e-m-s the DVD-Company <small>(Germany)</small>
| released = {{Film date|df=yes|2004|8|4|Germany|2005|10|11|[[Cardiff Film Festival]]}}
| released = {{Film date|df=yes|2004|8|4|Germany|2005|10|11|[[Cardiff Film Festival]]}}
| runtime = 91 min
| runtime = 91 minutes
| country = [[Hong Kong]]
| country = [[Hong Kong]]
| language = [[Cantonese language|Cantonese]]<br>[[Standard Mandarin|Mandarin]]
| language = [[Cantonese]]<br>[[Standard Mandarin|Mandarin]]
}}
}}
[[File:SKM Estate BLK39 and 40.jpg|thumb|Mei's Hong Kong apartment is located within [[Shek Kip Mei Estate]]. Block 40, demolished in 2007, is featured in the film.]]
[[File:LaiTakTsuenOO1Roy1.jpg|thumb|Kate lives with her parents in [[Lai Tak Tsuen]]. The building void appears in the film.]]
[[File:MacDonnell Road Station.jpg|thumb|[[MacDonnell Road (Peak Tram)|MacDonnell Road Station]] of the [[Peak Tram]] appears in a scene of the film, when Mrs Li and Mei walk up the hill towards Mrs. Li's house.]]
'''''Dumplings''''' ({{zh|t=餃子|p=Jiǎozi|j=Gaau2zi2}}) is a [[2004 in film|2004]] [[Cinema of Hong Kong|Hong Kong]] [[horror film]], directed by [[Fruit Chan]]. It was expanded from a short segment in the horror compilation, ''[[Three... Extremes]]''. The film is rated as [[Hong Kong motion picture rating system|Category III]] in Hong Kong.<ref>[[Hong Kong Cinemagic]]: [http://www.hkcinemagic.com/en/movie.asp?id=6441 ''Dumplings : Three Extremes'']</ref> It premiered in [[Germany]] during the [[Berlin International Film Festival]], on 4 August 2004, as part of the Panorama section.<ref>[[Berlin International Film Festival]] 2005: [http://www.berlinale.de/en/archiv/jahresarchive/2005/02_programm_2005/02_Filmdatenblatt_2005_20050106.php ''Dumplings'']</ref>
'''''Dumplings''''' ({{zh|t=餃子|p=Jiǎozi|j=Gaau2zi2}}) is a [[2004 in film|2004]] [[Cinema of Hong Kong|Hong Kong]] [[horror film]], directed by [[Fruit Chan]]. It was expanded from a short segment in the horror compilation, ''[[Three... Extremes]]''. The film is rated as [[Hong Kong motion picture rating system|Category III]] in Hong Kong.<ref>[[Hong Kong Cinemagic]]: [http://www.hkcinemagic.com/en/movie.asp?id=6441 ''Dumplings : Three Extremes'']</ref> It premiered in [[Germany]] during the [[Berlin International Film Festival]], on 4 August 2004, as part of the Panorama section.<ref>[[Berlin International Film Festival]] 2005: [http://www.berlinale.de/en/archiv/jahresarchive/2005/02_programm_2005/02_Filmdatenblatt_2005_20050106.php ''Dumplings'']</ref>


==Plot summary==
==Plot==
Mrs Li, a former actress, is losing her good looks and longs for passion with her wealthy husband, who is revealed to be having a love affair with his younger and more attractive [[masseuse]]. In order to boost her image, she seeks the help of Aunt Mei, a local chef. Mei cooks her some special [[Jiaozi|dumpling]]s which she claims to be effective for rejuvenation. After Mrs Li sneaks a look in the kitchen and sees a [[fetus]] being used as an ingredient within her next meal on her visits, she is initially disgusted and runs away, but later comes back. Mei tells her that the secret ingredient for her rejuvenating dumplings is unborn fetuses imported from an abortion clinic in [[Shenzhen]], where she used to work. Mrs Li asks her to keep finding more potent remedies, until one day she is in luck: Mei had just performed a [[black market]] abortion on Kate, a girl five months pregnant who has been [[Incest|impregnated by her father]]. Mei makes the fetus into dumplings, which Mrs Li devours. This has a wondrous effect on her [[libido]] as she goes into the hospital and has sex with her husband, who has recently injured his leg.
Mrs. Li, a former actress, is losing her good looks and longs for passion with her wealthy husband, who is having an affair with his much younger [[masseuse]]. Mrs. Li seeks the help of Aunt Mei, a local chef. Mei cooks her some special [[Jiaozi|dumpling]]s which she claims to be effective for rejuvenation. She tells Mrs. Li that the secret ingredient for her rejuvenating dumplings is unborn fetuses imported from an abortion clinic in [[Shenzhen]], where she used to work. Mrs. Li is frustrated by the lack of progress and asks Mei to keep finding more potent remedies.


Mei agrees to perform a risky [[black market]] abortion on Kate, a girl five months pregnant who has been [[Incest|impregnated by her father]], in order to provide the fetus for Ms. Li. Mei prepares dumplings, but after Mrs. Li sneaks a look in the kitchen and sees the fetus, she is disgusted and runs away, but shortly returns and consumes them. She receives a call that her husband has broken his leg and returns home. When she arrives to care for him, he finds her more attractive than before, and they have passionate sex. Kate and her mother are seen riding a bus home after the abortion, with Kate bleeding heavily onto her seat. After getting off, Kate collapses on the pavement and dies in her mother's arms.
In a short flashback, Kate and her mother are seen riding a bus home after the abortion. After getting off, Kate collapses on the pavement, bleeding from her [[uterus]]. With no one around, her mother can only watch as she slips into unconsciousness. Muttering her last words, "I don't want to die..." Kate dies soon afterwards, presumably from a ruptured uterus.


Mrs Li hosts a dinner party for her friends, who compliment her and wonder about her newfound beauty and youth. When she joins them, they claim there is a horrid fish-like smell in the air, which turns out to be from Mrs Li herself. She excuses herself from the table and runs to the bathtub. Furious with Mei, Mrs Li calls her, demanding to know what she has ingested. Mei merely claims that a child conceived by way of incest is the most potent. Curious at what his wife is yelling about, Mr Li gets on the other line and overhears the conversation between her and Mei about what happened, and pays the latter a visit to find out if her special dumplings really work. Mr Li eats one of the dumplings and has violent sex with Mei. After seeing an old poster of her, he is shocked to learn that she is actually in her 60s but has managed to preserve her physical appearance as a woman in her early 30s. Although she attributes her looks to her [[cannibalism]], the revelation does not stop Mr Li from continuing to have sex with her.
Mrs. Li hosts a dinner party for her friends, who compliment her and marvel over her newfound beauty. However, they claim there is a horrid fish-like smell in the air, which turns out to be from Mrs. Li herself. She excuses herself from the table and flees to the bathroom. Furious with Mei, Mrs. Li calls her, demanding to know what she has ingested. Mei claims that a child conceived by way of incest is the most potent and assures Mrs. Li that the results will be worth the embarrassment from the smell, while Mrs. Li cries in the bathtub while watching a rerun of her old series. Mr. Li arrives home and eavesdrops on their conversation.


Mr. Li visits Mei and passes a girl who resembles Kate. They discuss instances of [[human cannibalism|cannibalism]] in Chinese history while Mei makes him dumplings. He eats them and they have violent sex, during which she reveals she is actually 64 years old. They are interrupted by a call from Mrs. Li, but Mei hangs up on her. Mr. Li leaves, and Mrs. Li arrives to plead with Mei for more dumplings, but Mei continues to ignore her. When Mrs. Li tracks Mei down at a hair salon and leaves her a check, Mei rips it apart.
Soon, Mrs Li realises that she can not stay young without eating Mei's dumplings. Ignorant of her husband's affair with Mei, she pleads with Mei to continue to find her the most potent ingredients for the dumplings and promises to pay her handsomely. Presumably a mistress of Mr Li at this point in time, Mei ignores Mrs Li's plea and tears her cheque into pieces.


The next morning, police officers arrive at an apartment, where they find Kate's mother, crying, bloodied and clenching a knife. Upset about her daughter's death, she has stabbed her incestuous husband to death. It is implied that upon finding Kate's mother and her dead husband, the police find out Mei's identity and raid her apartment. Mei, however, has already fled. It is revealed that Mr Li has impregnated his masseuse. When Mrs Li finds out, she tracks down the pregnant masseuse and offers to pay her if she aborts the fetus immediately. The masseuse reluctantly accepts. Mrs Li insists to the doctor that the foetus should come out alive. She then takes the fetus, makes dumplings out of it, and ingests her husband's unborn child. Mei, on the other end, ends up selling dumplings on the streets in Shenzhen.
Police arrive at Kate's apartment and find her father stabbed to death by her mother. Mei flees her apartment, and Mrs. Li sees the apartment being raided by police. Mrs. Li meets with Mr. Li's masseuse, who states she is five months pregnant, and Mrs. Li pays her to immediately abort the fetus. Mrs. Li instructs the doctor to use a method without drugs to perform the abortion. Mei is pictured carrying her belongings through the streets while Mrs. Li makes dumplings from the fetus.


==Differences from the version in ''Three... Extremes''==
==Differences from the version in ''Three... Extremes''==
Whereas the extended version retains much of the plot from the short film in ''Three... Extremes'', the endings differ. The short film focuses solely on Mrs Li's quest for rejuvenated youth and does not include the masseuse or the subplot involving Mr Li and Mei's affair. Consequently, in place of the masseuse's pregnancy, Mrs Li finds that she herself is two-months pregnant with a child she was told she would never have. After learning she can no longer get dumplings from Mei, she decides to abort her own child and make it into dumplings for her to eat. The final scene is of Mrs Li, close-up to the camera and slowly eating a dumpling, most probably with meat of her own fetus.

[[File:SKM Estate BLK39 and 40.jpg|thumb|Mei's Hong Kong apartment is located within [[Shek Kip Mei Estate]]. Block 40, demolished in 2007, is featured in the film.]]
Whereas the extended version retains much of the plot from the short film in ''[[Three... Extremes]]'', the endings differ. The short film focuses solely on Mrs Li's quest for rejuvenated youth and does not include the masseuse or the subplot involving Mr Li and Mei's affair. Consequently, in place of the masseuse's pregnancy, Mrs Li finds that she herself is two months pregnant with a child she was told she would never have. After learning she can no longer get dumplings from Mei, she decides to abort her own child and make it into dumplings for her to eat. The final scene is of Mrs Li, close-up to the camera and slowly eating a dumpling, most probably with meat of her own child.
[[File:LaiTakTsuenOO1Roy1.jpg|thumb|Kate lives with her parents in [[Lai Tak Tsuen]]. The building void appears in the film.]]
[[File:MacDonnell Road Station.jpg|thumb|[[MacDonnell Road stop|MacDonnell Road station]] of the [[Peak Tram]] appears in a scene of the film, when Mrs Li and Mei walk up the hill towards Mrs. Li's house.]]


==Cast==
==Cast==
*[[Miriam Yeung]] as Mrs Li
* [[Miriam Yeung]] as Mrs Li
*[[Tony Leung Ka-fai]] as Mr Li
* [[Tony Leung Ka-fai]] as Mr Li
*[[Bai Ling]] as Aunt Mei
* [[Bai Ling]] as Aunt Mei
*[[Pauline Lau]] as Masseuse
* [[Pauline Lau]] as Masseuse
*[[Miki Yeung]] as Kate
* [[Miki Yeung]] as Kate
*Wong So-foon as Kate's mother
* Wong So-foon as Kate's mother


==Production==
==Production==
Filming locations include [[Shek Kip Mei Estate]], before redevelopment, and [[Lai Tak Tsuen]].<ref>[http://www.fso-createhk.gov.hk/main/productionfacilitation.php?sub_topic_id=2&Nature=Local&Ass_Year=2004 Film Services Office website] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130526030246/http://www.fso-createhk.gov.hk/main/productionfacilitation.php?sub_topic_id=2 |date=26 May 2013 }} (see under ''Dumplings Three Extremes'')</ref>
Filming locations include [[Shek Kip Mei Estate]], before redevelopment, and [[Lai Tak Tsuen]].<ref>[http://www.fso-createhk.gov.hk/main/productionfacilitation.php?sub_topic_id=2&Nature=Local&Ass_Year=2004 Film Services Office website] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130526030246/http://www.fso-createhk.gov.hk/main/productionfacilitation.php?sub_topic_id=2 |date=26 May 2013 }} (see under ''Dumplings Three Extremes'')</ref>

==Reception and interpretation==
''Dumplings'' received mixed reviews. Keith Hennessey Brown of ''Eye For Films'' gave the film 4.5 out of 5 stars, calling it "a beautifully crafted, thoughtful and thought-provoking piece of cinema that once again confirms Fruit Chan's status as Hong Kong's best filmmaker".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Hennessey Brown |first1=Keith |title=Dumplings (review) |url=https://www.eyeforfilm.co.uk/review/dumplings-film-review-by-keith-hennessey-brown |website=Eye for Film |access-date=18 May 2023 |date=19 Aug 2005}}</ref> Mark Kermode of ''[[The Guardian]]'' praised Miriam Yeung's performance and "[[Lilian Lee]]'s blacker-than-black screenplay", but criticized that its "socio-political nuances are lost&nbsp;... amid sploshy scenes of catheters and cookery which flag up the film's grindhouse origins".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Kermode |first1=Mark |title=Dumplings (review) |url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2006/jun/18/horror.thriller |website=The Guardian |access-date=18 May 2023 |date=17 June 2006}}</ref> AmselLuu of ''Asian Movie Pulse'' called the film "well-shot" and "well-acted with the impressive performance of Bai Ling as Aunt Mei", but was less impressed with Miriam Yeung's performance.<ref>{{cite web |title=Film Review: Dumplings (2004) by Fruit Chan |url=https://asianmoviepulse.com/2019/03/film-review-dumplings-2004-by-fruit-chan/ |author=AmselLuu |website=Asian Movie Pulse |access-date=18 May 2023 |date=16 March 2019}}</ref>

The film has been called "one of the most realistic works of 'fiction'", since it deals with a practice that has been repeatedly reported from China's and Hong Kong's recent past.<ref>{{cite thesis |last1=Tsai |first1=Yun-Chu |title=You Are Whom You Eat: Cannibalism in Contemporary Chinese Fiction and Film |type=PhD |date=2016 |publisher=UC Irvine |page=110 |url=https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7nk4v18m}}</ref> Indeed Fruit Chan and Lilian Lee believe that they were served fetus soup while researching for the film in a hospital and that Chan repeatedly consumed such soup while recovering after an accident, finding out only afterwards that "he had eaten soup made from a miscarried five-month fetus".{{sfn|Tsai|2016|p=132}}

The film has been interpreted as a criticism of China's [[one-child policy]], which caused many parents to have abortions even against their will. It raises the question of who is more to blame: the government whose policy makes sure that the fetuses cannot be born, or those who then exploit their bodies for their own purposes?{{sfn|Tsai|2016|p=134}}


==Awards==
==Awards==
Bai Ling won the award of Best Supporting Actress at the [[24th Hong Kong Film Awards]] in 2005.
Bai Ling won the award of Best Supporting Actress at the [[24th Hong Kong Film Awards]] in 2005.<ref>{{cite web |title=List of Nominees and Awardees of The 24th Hong Kong Film Awards | url=http://www.hkfaa.com/winnerlist24.html| publisher=[[Hong Kong Film Awards]]| access-date=23 May 2023 |lang=zh,en}}</ref>

==See also==
* [[Child cannibalism]]


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


== External links ==
== External links ==
Line 64: Line 74:
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dumplings (Film)}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dumplings (Film)}}
[[Category:2004 films]]
[[Category:2004 films]]
[[Category:Hong Kong films]]
[[Category:Hong Kong horror films]]
[[Category:2004 horror films]]
[[Category:2004 horror films]]
[[Category:2000s Hong Kong films]]
[[Category:Films about abortion]]
[[Category:Films about cannibalism]]
[[Category:Films about cannibalism]]
[[Category:Films directed by Fruit Chan]]
[[Category:Films directed by Fruit Chan]]
[[Category:Films with screenplays by Lilian Lee]]
[[Category:Hong Kong horror films]]

Latest revision as of 13:22, 15 April 2024

Dumplings (Gaau ji)
Directed byFruit Chan
Written byLilian Lee
Produced byPeter Chan,
Eric Tsang
StarringMiriam Yeung
Tony Leung Ka-fai
Bai Ling
Pauline Lau
Mi Mi Lee
Miki Yeung
CinematographyChristopher Doyle
Edited byFruit Chan (as Sam-Fat Tin),
Chan Ki-hop
Music byChan Kwong-wing
Production
company
Applause Pictures Ltd.
Distributed bye-m-s the DVD-Company (Germany)
Release dates
Running time
91 minutes
CountryHong Kong
LanguagesCantonese
Mandarin

Dumplings (Chinese: 餃子; pinyin: Jiǎozi; Jyutping: Gaau2zi2) is a 2004 Hong Kong horror film, directed by Fruit Chan. It was expanded from a short segment in the horror compilation, Three... Extremes. The film is rated as Category III in Hong Kong.[1] It premiered in Germany during the Berlin International Film Festival, on 4 August 2004, as part of the Panorama section.[2]

Plot

[edit]

Mrs. Li, a former actress, is losing her good looks and longs for passion with her wealthy husband, who is having an affair with his much younger masseuse. Mrs. Li seeks the help of Aunt Mei, a local chef. Mei cooks her some special dumplings which she claims to be effective for rejuvenation. She tells Mrs. Li that the secret ingredient for her rejuvenating dumplings is unborn fetuses imported from an abortion clinic in Shenzhen, where she used to work. Mrs. Li is frustrated by the lack of progress and asks Mei to keep finding more potent remedies.

Mei agrees to perform a risky black market abortion on Kate, a girl five months pregnant who has been impregnated by her father, in order to provide the fetus for Ms. Li. Mei prepares dumplings, but after Mrs. Li sneaks a look in the kitchen and sees the fetus, she is disgusted and runs away, but shortly returns and consumes them. She receives a call that her husband has broken his leg and returns home. When she arrives to care for him, he finds her more attractive than before, and they have passionate sex. Kate and her mother are seen riding a bus home after the abortion, with Kate bleeding heavily onto her seat. After getting off, Kate collapses on the pavement and dies in her mother's arms.

Mrs. Li hosts a dinner party for her friends, who compliment her and marvel over her newfound beauty. However, they claim there is a horrid fish-like smell in the air, which turns out to be from Mrs. Li herself. She excuses herself from the table and flees to the bathroom. Furious with Mei, Mrs. Li calls her, demanding to know what she has ingested. Mei claims that a child conceived by way of incest is the most potent and assures Mrs. Li that the results will be worth the embarrassment from the smell, while Mrs. Li cries in the bathtub while watching a rerun of her old series. Mr. Li arrives home and eavesdrops on their conversation.

Mr. Li visits Mei and passes a girl who resembles Kate. They discuss instances of cannibalism in Chinese history while Mei makes him dumplings. He eats them and they have violent sex, during which she reveals she is actually 64 years old. They are interrupted by a call from Mrs. Li, but Mei hangs up on her. Mr. Li leaves, and Mrs. Li arrives to plead with Mei for more dumplings, but Mei continues to ignore her. When Mrs. Li tracks Mei down at a hair salon and leaves her a check, Mei rips it apart.

Police arrive at Kate's apartment and find her father stabbed to death by her mother. Mei flees her apartment, and Mrs. Li sees the apartment being raided by police. Mrs. Li meets with Mr. Li's masseuse, who states she is five months pregnant, and Mrs. Li pays her to immediately abort the fetus. Mrs. Li instructs the doctor to use a method without drugs to perform the abortion. Mei is pictured carrying her belongings through the streets while Mrs. Li makes dumplings from the fetus.

Differences from the version in Three... Extremes

[edit]

Whereas the extended version retains much of the plot from the short film in Three... Extremes, the endings differ. The short film focuses solely on Mrs Li's quest for rejuvenated youth and does not include the masseuse or the subplot involving Mr Li and Mei's affair. Consequently, in place of the masseuse's pregnancy, Mrs Li finds that she herself is two-months pregnant with a child she was told she would never have. After learning she can no longer get dumplings from Mei, she decides to abort her own child and make it into dumplings for her to eat. The final scene is of Mrs Li, close-up to the camera and slowly eating a dumpling, most probably with meat of her own fetus.

Mei's Hong Kong apartment is located within Shek Kip Mei Estate. Block 40, demolished in 2007, is featured in the film.
Kate lives with her parents in Lai Tak Tsuen. The building void appears in the film.
MacDonnell Road station of the Peak Tram appears in a scene of the film, when Mrs Li and Mei walk up the hill towards Mrs. Li's house.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

Filming locations include Shek Kip Mei Estate, before redevelopment, and Lai Tak Tsuen.[3]

Reception and interpretation

[edit]

Dumplings received mixed reviews. Keith Hennessey Brown of Eye For Films gave the film 4.5 out of 5 stars, calling it "a beautifully crafted, thoughtful and thought-provoking piece of cinema that once again confirms Fruit Chan's status as Hong Kong's best filmmaker".[4] Mark Kermode of The Guardian praised Miriam Yeung's performance and "Lilian Lee's blacker-than-black screenplay", but criticized that its "socio-political nuances are lost ... amid sploshy scenes of catheters and cookery which flag up the film's grindhouse origins".[5] AmselLuu of Asian Movie Pulse called the film "well-shot" and "well-acted with the impressive performance of Bai Ling as Aunt Mei", but was less impressed with Miriam Yeung's performance.[6]

The film has been called "one of the most realistic works of 'fiction'", since it deals with a practice that has been repeatedly reported from China's and Hong Kong's recent past.[7] Indeed Fruit Chan and Lilian Lee believe that they were served fetus soup while researching for the film in a hospital and that Chan repeatedly consumed such soup while recovering after an accident, finding out only afterwards that "he had eaten soup made from a miscarried five-month fetus".[8]

The film has been interpreted as a criticism of China's one-child policy, which caused many parents to have abortions even against their will. It raises the question of who is more to blame: the government whose policy makes sure that the fetuses cannot be born, or those who then exploit their bodies for their own purposes?[9]

Awards

[edit]

Bai Ling won the award of Best Supporting Actress at the 24th Hong Kong Film Awards in 2005.[10]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Hong Kong Cinemagic: Dumplings : Three Extremes
  2. ^ Berlin International Film Festival 2005: Dumplings
  3. ^ Film Services Office website Archived 26 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine (see under Dumplings Three Extremes)
  4. ^ Hennessey Brown, Keith (19 August 2005). "Dumplings (review)". Eye for Film. Retrieved 18 May 2023.
  5. ^ Kermode, Mark (17 June 2006). "Dumplings (review)". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 May 2023.
  6. ^ AmselLuu (16 March 2019). "Film Review: Dumplings (2004) by Fruit Chan". Asian Movie Pulse. Retrieved 18 May 2023.
  7. ^ Tsai, Yun-Chu (2016). You Are Whom You Eat: Cannibalism in Contemporary Chinese Fiction and Film (PhD). UC Irvine. p. 110.
  8. ^ Tsai 2016, p. 132.
  9. ^ Tsai 2016, p. 134.
  10. ^ "List of Nominees and Awardees of The 24th Hong Kong Film Awards" (in Chinese and English). Hong Kong Film Awards. Retrieved 23 May 2023.
[edit]