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Cast:
Do
Do Cheng
Joey
Wong
Sandy
Lam
Derek
Yee
Wu
Fung
Mark
Cheng
Cheung
Kwok Keung
Lau
Siu Ming
Writer:
Fong
Chi Ho
Andy Chin Wing Keung
Producer:
Fung
Wai Jan
Director:
Andy
Chin
Score:
    
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GIFT
FROM HEAVEN
AKA:
A Modern Daydream
Year:
1989 Reviewer: Andrew
Saroch
Becky
(Do Do Cheng), Angie (Wong) and Candy (Lam) are three harassed
employees at a faceless Hong Kong corporation who long for a
way out of their daily drudgery. The opportunity to change
their lives arrives when, during they work a late-night
over-time shift, they happen upon a bag of unclaimed money.
Taking the money, but still eager to do the right thing, the
trio decide not to spend any of the windfall for one month,
just in case someone claims the money. Unfortunately the
company head's son is the one who has mislaid the money and is
eager to catch those who made him lose face. Now Becky, Angie
and Candy have to think of a plan to smuggle the money back
into work and also destroy the encoded CCTV footage of them
before someone uncovers the truth.

Though
the storyline of 'Gift From Heaven' can be transplanted to any
era and any country, the idea behind it seems very appropriate
for the 80s economic boom in Hong Kong. The material obsession
and get-rich-quick desperation - often a target for Michael
Hui's withering satires - are very much in evidence in this
enjoyable ensemble comedy. Our three heroines are stuck in
this endless cycle of menial tasks, eager to jump aboard the
capitalist gravy train that everyone else is apparently
enjoying. Such a theme is particularly effective as it is
clearly rooted in the late 80s and enjoys the vibrant
confidence the local film industry was also basking in.

Alongside
the nostalgia of looking back at a product of such a distinct
era, the other notable strength of the film is the trio of
actresses who take the lead roles. Do Do Cheng - long
appreciated as one of the foremost comic actresses of the
modern era in Hong Kong - offers her usual commanding presence
in the main role. Cheng has the ability to lift good material
to the next level and here she is aided by a solid script and
excellent support. The ever-reliable Joey Wong leaves behind
the roles synonymous with her and strikes up a fine rapport
with Do Do Cheng and the scene-stealing Sandy Lam. With these
three fine performers enjoying such chemistry, even the slower
moments near the middle are never arduous to sit through.

'Gift
From Heaven' is a low-key comedy, but a very watchable 90
minutes. It could be argued that the tension of whether our
heroines will evade capture is lacking and that, due to the
actual source of the money, their actions are at times
questionable; it may have been a more intriguing film had the
windfall been connected to crime and our heroines really been
in danger. This may well be a valid argument, but 'Gift From
Heaven' has a professionalism that's hard to dislike. Overall,
it thoroughly deserves a 3 1/2 stars verging on 4.
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