“Old Boy” Popular Chinese Short Film Makes Male Netizens Cry

Dancing like Michael Jackson.

From SouthCN & China Daily:

《老男孩》["Old Boy"] film becomes popular online, spurs passionate discussion about dreams

China News Service, Hefei, November 9th (Reporter: Cheng Zhanpeng) – an internet film that reflects upon one’s youth and dreams called 《老男孩》[Lao Nan Hai, "Old Boy"] has been rapidly spreading on the internet, moving people of all ages, with many people leaving shedding tears over their youth, commending it as a rare example of a fine domestically-produced piece of work. The film has also spurred passionate discussion amongst netizens about one’s dreams.

“Old Boy” tells about two ordinary men pursuing their dreams, using humorous scenes to make viewers think of their own dreams. They form a band to participate in the “Happy Boys” competition, because one song lets them return to their youth, return to the past. This touching “Old Boy” theme song at the same time moves the entire audience.

Netizen “红”, after watching, said to this reporter, “As time goes by, we can only use our memories to pay homage to our youth, and maybe that’s what makes this short film so moving. Memories of our youth gradually drift away during our daily lives, as people must toil for the basic necessities of life. Occasionally flipping open the memory book, I believe every person more or less will sigh and feel regrets.

There are also netizens who have expressed that everyone’s [lives] are difficult, that reality has the ability to make you lower your high-spirited head, make the little dreams in your heart run aground, and make daily necessities into your “big dream”. However, when youth has already withered, as long as you are alive, your dreams still have an opportunity to sprout [be realized]. When no one wishes you luck, you yourself can also cheer yourself on.

Since it went online, “Old Boy” has already been viewed over 7.1 million times. On the mainland’s famous movie review website Douban, this film’s rather has reached 9.1. Well-known screenwriter Ning Caishen has praised it as “a song dedicated to the post-70s generation.”

This film may be a little difficult for to understand if you have very different life experiences but many Chinese men have said this film made them cry. The English subtitles have many mistakes but it should still be understandable. At this time (of translating), the film has been viewed nearly 41 million times on Youku:

On YouTube (it is split into multiple parts):

Can’t see the above video?

As you can see from the Chevrolet advertisements, this is part of the same Youku and Chevrolet series of videos that included “Ms. Puff’s Goldfish Bowl“.

Comments from KDS:

那能意思:

I think the Billie Jean song in [the film] was really good. emoticons

乱舞太刀:

emoticonsemoticonsemoticonsemoticons
Definitely tear gas.

心里哈窝色:

Only limited to post-80s generation men.
Women are 99% immune.

一声叹息:

Women are 100% immune, unless they were that school beauty.

萌系电波族:

Will resonate with all of the losers/failures in life.
I didn’t have the least bit feeling after watching it, even in the end, I only wanted to laugh. emoticons

瞎7搭∞:

So many post-80s generation memories appeared in this [movie].

天蝎蓝:

[The film's] method of expression/portrayal is deserving of acknowledgment
Seeing the part where the news of MJ’s death was being broadcast, I definitely felt very sad.
However, with regards to the sympathy towards “Losers” projected in the film,
I cannot agree with it. Although every person cannot choose their background,
one is still the only person responsible for one’s own happiness and improvement in life.
This no one can escape. Avoiding/evading or putting one’s hopes on other people or other things to
change one’s life is something that cannot possibly succeed.
且一个人,一个男人,拥有一颗强大的内心才是他最大的财富”>In fact, for an individual, for a man, his greatest wealth is actually to have a strong/brave heart.
emoticonsemoticonsemoticonsemoticons

King of Pop Michael Jackson: The Time Has Come

Jay:

emoticonsA very good film, capable of evoking memories for an entire generation!

yao:

Actually, I feel like this film is really just an extremely long MV [music video]…the story at the beginning is just a lead up to the theme/main song, though the song is pretty good.emoticonsemoticons

久利生公平:

What is moving is not the film itself, but rather the memories of us post-80s generation members. Those who wee not moved probably had childhoods like this guy, and have nothing to remember.

Nothing to remember.

罗爱我爱罗:

emoticons The song at the end really added a lot of points [made the film better]. The stuff before it, honestly, was a little dull. More or less everyone has some dreams from their youth that they did not achieve, and films like this can very easily make people remember those things, so it is particularly sad/moving.

But to tell the truth, how many people are able to continue chasing their old dreams? In the end, isn’t it all abandoned? For those who truly continue pursuing their dreams, their dreams will eventually be achieved.

So dreams are even more powerful than drugs. At most, drugs will only kill you, but dreams can be a life worse than death.

金刚钻:

Floats/flutters by without a single feeling…

2PAC:

I too didn’t feel there was anything particularly moving [about the film]…apart from the props and the music making me reminisce a little, the film’s entire style was too bangzi.

桃红色的猫:

When the song at the end began, I can’t explain it but I started crying.
Maybe a lot of TF believe the film only relates the youth and memories of men, but women were young once too.
The youth of the post-80s generation has already been lost, and now all that is left in the lives of the post-80s generation is cruel reality.

风云使者:

Yeah, I just finished watching it today, and my tears brimmed at the edge of my eyes, with the only reason I didn’t break down was because I kept telling myself that I am a man, a 30-year-old man, and I cannot allow my dreams to truly become tears and thus lost~~

戴小尔:

The tears are one’s own youth, one that is gone forever.

A really ugly character from "Lao Nan Hai".

"Lao Nan Hai", a Chinese short film about realizing the dreams of their youth.

“Take it darling!” Personals @ chinaSMACK.

  • Oldestboy

    Isn’t “Oldboy” a Korean movie? I think I watched it on my 沙发 once.

    • koji kabuto

      read the article before asking dumb questions, dumbass.
      it just shares the same title.

      • Koji Kabuto

        wait a minute,
        why are you using my name?

        • Kojika Buto

          Hey, what the heck?

          • Devin

            In fact, you are long-lost twins

  • dim mak

    FIRST BEFORE READING ARTICLE

    • mankouzanghua

      Kumite Express leaves in five minutes.

    • Jackson

      What the hell is a Dim Mak?

      • dim mak

        I could show you, but then I’d have to kill you.

      • ed banger

        a pretentious hipster

  • Chris

    Post 80′s Chinese men = Soft.

    • Devin

      but stronger than any men in the world.. Next time, remember to finish sentence completely.

  • deputamadre

    SECOND AFTER SKIMMING IT

  • Said

    What a vulgar sense of humour they have in the beginning.

  • Pvt. Joker

    Very different than the Korean version of Old Boy….

  • Alex

    I really liked this. Anyone know where to download the song they perform at the end?

  • Jiang

    TO ALL THE GUYS OUT THERE,
    WACKO IS GONE,
    JACKO IS JUST A PASSING FAD,
    HE IS AFTER ALL, ALL FLESH & BLOOD.
    YOUR OWN LIFE IS REAL,
    THE DREAMS MAY NOT HAVE MATERIALIZE,
    BUT HAVING A DREAM OR DREAMS,
    IS WHAT LIFE IS ALL ABOUT.
    MAKE YOUR OWN BILLIE JEAN,
    FIND YOUR OWN BEN,
    BUT, MOST OF ALL,
    WE HAVE TO USE OUR HANDS AND MIND,
    TO HEAL OUR OWN WORLD.

  • M.N

    does any one know the name of that Chinese song which the guy sang at the end……?

    • Yuna

      “lao nan hai” by Chopsticks Brother

  • anon

    This is a really good post, and a really good film…though I have to agree with the Chinese netizen that said it felt really Korean. There is definitely some slapstick humor in there that is reminiscent of some Korean comedies I’ve seen. Apart from that though, the popularity of this film says so much about a lot of Chinese people’s views on life.

  • Justin

    This was really rather touching and well done. Kudos to the makers of the film. Too bad it was done for a car company. I guess the the Renaissance had the Medici family, and China’s film industry has Chevrolet.

    The movie makes me think of that Tom Petty song, “even the losers get lucky sometimes.” So I guess there’s hope for us all.

  • Duhhh

    Utterly shallow, poor humour, big fat lie (do you think MJ has such influence in China during that time – 80s/90s, MJ is indeed an international icon but during that time Chinese was pretty much living under a well!) Poor editing and film director, using cheap tactic ‘begging’ audience to shed tears by showing countless scene of people crying. A good film doesn’t have to show people crying in order to make people cry. If you listen to the song itself without watching the video, it won’t make you cry. The pathetic song is about life experience which we see everyday in another word, it’s too common. This type of challenge happens everyday and no big deal! WTF!

    Cheap, cheap, cheap….waste of time! Retarded! Duhhh!

    • dumbass

      we know you could do better mr. spielberg

    • Justin

      The first part of the film was most likely set in the mid-90s since the stars are in their mid 30s, so I think it is feasible that MJ had a presence in China. I mean how do you know for sure? Did YOU live in China in the mid-90s? No. Of course not, so you’re contention that this is a big lie is based on nothing more than ignorant assumptions of what you think you know about China, when in reality you know dick. Obviously, the tale did ring true to some millions of Chinese who watched it.

      I do admit, that you have a point to some extent that it is a cheap tactic to show a bunch of people crying, but it was very similar I thought to a scene in the movie Magnolia or in Requiem for a dream. It was an honest portrayal of a lot of people feeling very strong emotions. Maybe culturally you don’t get it but it resonated with Chinese people, who were the intended audience, not some Westerners who look down with disdain on any cultural efforts by the Chinese, regardless of their merit.

      And I might add that intelligent criticism of a film usually involves use of more sophisticated language than “Retarded! Duh!” but I guess that is too much to expect from a ChinaSMACK troll.

      • Linda

        I like the movie a lot. Everyone once had a dream and failed to achieve his dream and actually has experieced a real life will be touched by it. I have watched many many holleywood movies, and I believe that people share commom true value of life.

    • Fauna
    • 40hoto

      spoken like a true virgin..

    • jin

      ehm another ***** farting without proof.
      MJ IS and WAS famous in china in the 90s.
      i remember when i used to live there as a kid. my cousins were a fan of MJ. the even had a DVD on MJ. i believe it was 1997

      • Chris

        Recognise!

        …without burp.

    • Strangerland

      I feel like watching a movie that re-told the journey of talents like Susan Boyle, Paul Potts, and the armless pianist Liu Wei; before they decided to appear in their respective talent shows. And how they finally “touch”ed the heart of people, even if for a single minute only. When you watched them shine on that stage, have you ever wondered what have they gone through before they have the chance to show what they are inside, on that cold stage, all alone under scrutinizing stares?
      This movie might as well served as a reminder that currently, there are these kind of guys around us too. Maybe someday they’d have their chance.
      The crying is also understandable, I was reminded of how people are crying too when they watch Susan Boyle performed on that BGT stage for the first time. Or when Liu Wei started his first song with his feet. Or when Paul Potts suddenly awe the rest of us, despite his appearances. People cries in the movie because they’re touched, not because they’re begging you to cry.
      But anyway, this is life.
      I hope you’re happy too wherever you are. Maybe when you stand on that ‘stage’ somewhere, someday, you’d be reminded of this movie and can appreciate those who shed tears before others do the same for them.

  • hei_bai

    The film would have been sad if it didn’t have a Stephen Chow-esque feel to it. It’s hard to take it seriously with that sort of acting.

    • Shino

      Thats the beauty of the movie and why it is successful

  • 水溶C100

    Great film, thanks for sharing.

    My wife, who grew up in China during the 80′s and 90′s knew about and was strongly influenced by MJ.

    Also, the last song is a lot more “moving” if you can read and speak Chinese. It’s kinda crony in English but really quite creative in Chinese.

  • jess

    I don’t understand this film, so in the end he didn’t achieve his dream of winning the talent contest or getting the girl?

    • anon

      They both gave up their dreams of getting the girl quite early on. Instead, it became about their talent for singing and dancing, which was dashed by the power being cut by the guy with bad teeth (the tv producer bun guy). I don’t think their dream was to win the talent contest but to just revisit what they once loved: singing and dancing. After they did that, and despite still losing, they returned to their normal lives but with a renewed vigor, confidence, and satisfaction with their lives. That’s just one “positive” message of the movie, with a “negative” message being that the show was still rigged (though we don’t know for certain if those that went on weren’t really just better and more popular than them or that the judges really followed through on voting as the producer told them to), or that the producer guy still had them cut despite also being moved to tears by them.

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  • krdr

    Great movie. Period. It is very filmesque. Good stories resonates over cultures. In every culture people fail and raise. In every culture there’s those guys that will try everything just to ruin your dream in whatever reason. In every culture there’s a people that tries to overcomes setbacks from past.
    Crying at the end maybe is too much, but I’m sure that director didn’t want to beg for tears. The last scene shows ability of every person to touch hearts and souls of others.

  • John

    Well done! xie xie

  • Ben

    OMG!!! this is great!! Really touched me! It describes life pretty well. The unpredictability and cruel reality of it.

  • wan

    awwwww this is a very romantic moviee !!
    its help to learn something in my life
    ..!

  • MM

    It’s not true this movie is only for men. I am a 80s women, who grew up in North America. But even though, I still shed tears at the end song…everybody has had memories of their teenage years, have had their puppy love, and friends they have lost touch with…every class has a bully, has a fat guy everybody picks on, and that pretty girl every girl wants to befriend, and every guy wants to kiss..and needless to say, we all have dreams that get shattered as we grow up.

  • Ambientman

    Interesting to see what makes people from other countries/cultures cry.

  • Andy

    shucks! This webisode made me feel like crap. I just turned 19 and I have yet to be wild like I should have when I was younger.
    Dammit, and my dreams as a child is forgotten…sigh*

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  • LittleBlack

    it is indeed very touching!

  • Collin- 白翰林

    我是男美国人- I came across this movie hoping to listen to some chinese for practice, but left with so much more! I too cried during the films beautiful ending song!

  • ABCkid

    The movie was very moving for me. Alas, I shed tears at the end.

  • Burgher

    Nice movie. Touching. And to the above person who said that “it only resonates with those who are failures/losers in life”. (he wrote this in chinese btw). I say you are the loser. If you can not feel for others then dont insult them. And its not only losers you disrespectful chinese ass. Obviously you are another pampered (yet uneducated) official or richman’s son…ooooooooor just plain white….. :D Clearly his naiveity and dismissivness has pissed me off. I got everything I wanted as a kid. Succeeded academically and am currently a law student. Attended an elitist highschool and to make it short…I am by no means a failure or loser. Nor am I the most successful person in the world, but I believe this was a great movie from many angles and that people should have the decency to refrain from insulting others or laughing at others’ misfortunes.

    In other words, in a much less polite way, BUGGER YOU, YOU DISRESPECTFUL USELESS GIT. HEY! HEY! YOUR MOTHER SOOOO FAT THAT…..WHEN SHE JUMPED FOR JOY…SHE GOT STUCK….(courteousy to Russell Peters)

    • Burgher

      OK…anger gone. Swearing at the guy was not helpful..and I hope it dosent get me in trouble? :D? but id just like to reinforce that such people should not be so demeaning of other people, be they less fortunate or not.

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  • Justin

    You can say what you will about Jackson’s personal life, but “Don’t stop til you get enough” will pack a dancefloor anywhere in the world guarantee. It’s what old school DJs (and the Beastie Boys) used to refer to as a “sure shot.”

  • jin

    ignore this troll.

  • shenmeniao

    cmon guobao, that perception is due to too much media exposure. this is not a story about why michael jackson should or shouldnt be famous or looked at in a positive light, its about being inspired by something. does anyone here look up to anything enough feel inspired? and do you have the gonads to act on that inspiration?

  • Justin

    And also I would add, trying to generalize about “most” of Chinese people is a pretty tricky proposition in a nation of more than 1 billion. For one, I have found the music that is popular in China, at least in the clubs, is the same music that’s popular everywhere else, e.g. Lady Gaga, A-kon, all that crap. And that’s all defined as mainstream in America, which means it is what “most” Americans listen to as well. Seeing how America is the de facto center of pop music now, that means it’s the most popular music in the world.

    China has a fairly huge rock, noise, post-punk, electronic, hip hop and punk scene along with some more interesting hybrids of rock and traditional music such as the Mongolian throat singing band Hanggai.

    Like my roommate made a mixtape for his Chinese friend and he thought he was doing a favor to him by exposing him to all these new bands, such as Pavement and the Velvet Underground, but his friend already knew about those bands. So you’d be surprised.

  • KT

    Justin. The Velvet Underground. Surely you are winding us up. Is it April Fools Day already??
    As for your 10.05 claims. Are you on acid?

  • Justin

    Well I know VU is not a “new” band if that is what you are referring to, but in this context, my friend that he was introducing something “new” to his Chinese friend.

    As for my other claims, I stick by them. China does have a rock scene in the major cities. I guess maybe it is an exaggeration to call it huge. But there are a growing number of festivals throughout China in case you haven’t noticed and most of them reflect pretty diverse tastes in music and they’re not strictly limited to pop.

    As for America, being the center of pop music, am I wrong about that? It’s not like I’m proud of my country for producing the most vapid lowest common denominator swill, but just look at the world charts and you’ll see that it’s true.

  • KT

    Justin. Chinese music festivals, Midi

    http://www.chinahearsay.com/china-contrast-watch-music-festivals/

    This is freaking laughable. Sneer. Jeer.

    Antisepetic, contained and the high points were the mud throwing competition and burning a Japanese flag.

    Look, any music festival worth its name should be pure f…… anarchy, lots of police confrontations and drug overdoses (I mean serious drugs and not horse tranquilliser) and not this pathetic pratfest.

    As far as vibrant music goes today, you go to Africa – Mali, Guinea, Senegal and Nigeria.

  • Pvt, Joker

    Blow me instead. Wait you’re too beaucoup….

  • elenore

    Most Americans do not listen to Lady Gaga or even Madonna,etc….The problem is that America has such a variety that what is consider a large number usually adds up to like less than 5% of population.lady Gaga, The Fame sold about 4 million U.S. that is a small percentage of the U.S. population.Even Oprah’s highest rated show which was a Micheal Jackson interview was about 36 million viewers less than 20% of U.S. population.

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