5 movies or shows to stream or watch in cinemas in Hong Kong this weekend August 10-11

The final season of an American superhero series, a heartfelt romance set in Japan and Taiwan, a hilarious Korean spy caper and a just concluded hit K-drama series – there’s so much worth streaming this weekend, we’d be surprised if anyone ventures outdoors.

If you do leave home, there is an absorbing movie to catch in cinemas about a manipulative teacher and five naive pupils.

1. Club Zero

Set in an elite British boarding school, Club Zero centres on a newly-arrived nutrition teacher, Ms Novak (Mia Wasikowska), who runs a course in conscious eating. Her class covers mindfulness, meditation and cutting down on processed foods.

But there is more to the quietly radical Novak than meets the eye: encouraging five of her pupils to join her cultish underground group, Club Zero, she wants to lead a revolution in which her young charges will survive on no food at all, in an effort to help save the planet.

“My interest in this film is basically about the question of manipulation,” director Jessica Hausner told the Post about her unconventional thriller. Read our full interview here

Club Zero opens in cinemas today.

2. Mission: Cross

Director Lee Myung-hoon’s feature debut is a hilarious, action-packed spy caper that follows a retired special forces operative as he is forced back into action, only to face a greater threat from his unsuspecting wife – a formidable police captain – who knows nothing about his former life.

Taking cues from Hollywood hits like True Lies and Mr & Mrs Smith, the film casts Hwang Jung-min as the domesticated Kang-mu, whose quiet routine as a loyal house-husband is thrown into disarray after he is contacted by a desperate former teammate.

But it is Yum Jung-ah who steals the show as his hard-nosed, no-nonsense wife, Mi-seon, head of Seoul’s Major Crime Investigation Division, who discovers there is more to her humble hubby than meets the eye. Read our full review here

Mission: Cross will start streaming on Netflix on August 9.

3. 18×2 Beyond Youthful Days

There is something refreshingly conventional about this romantic drama from Japanese director Michihito Fujii’s (The Parades, also on Netflix), despite its needlessly clumsy title. This simple tale of a young man exploring his first love’s homeland proves surprisingly effective.

Greg Hsu Kuang-han plays Jimmy, a successful video-game developer who suffers a cataclysmic falling out with his work partners. He then chooses to embark on a spot of soul-searching, travelling to a variety of picturesque tourist spots across Japan.

We also learn that, 18 years earlier, Jimmy had a Japanese girlfriend, Ami (Kaya Kiyohara), when working at a karaoke bar in his hometown, Tainan, Taiwan. Read our full review

18×2 Beyond Youthful Days is streaming on Netflix.

4. The Umbrella Academy

The fourth and final season of the American superhero drama series drops today to follow up on the major plot twist at the end of season 3: there is a new timeline dictated by the family patriarch, Reginald (Colm Feore), and the siblings no longer have their powers.

Based on a comic book series written by My Chemical Romance singer Gerard Way, The Umbrella Academy’s story – about a group of estranged siblings with superpowers who are reunited after the death of their father – has proved a hit since it premiered on Netflix in 2019.

How will the Hargreeves siblings face their new enemies without their powers? And will they ever get them back?

The Umbrella Academy is streaming on Netflix.

5. Miss Night and Day

Now that this fantasy romcom K-drama has released its final pair of episodes (out of 16), we can say for sure what it is good at and what it isn’t.

Jung Eun-ji (Work Later, Drink Now) plays Lee Min-jin, a twenty-something single woman who has been struggling to find work for years. One day she wakes up in the body of a 50-year-old woman, played by Lee Jung-eun (Parasite). Following this, she returns to her younger self at night and back to the older woman each morning.
The real draws of Miss Night and Day prove to be the romance, comedy, family and office high jinks, while its darker serial killer investigation tropes are far less engaging. Read our preview, midseason recap and final review

Miss Night and Day is streaming on Netflix.

Find this useful? Look out for our recommendations every Thursday online.

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Chronicles Live is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – chronicleslive.com. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Leave a Comment