Good Times, Bed Times

Good Times, Bed Times (戀上你的床, Luen seung ngei dik chong) is a 2003 Hong Kong romantic comedy film starring Sammi Cheng, Louis Koo, Sean Lau, Charlene Choi, with guest appearances by Tony Leung and Sandra Ng.

Good Times, Bed Times
Film poster
Traditional戀上你的床
Simplified恋上你的床
MandarinLiàn Shàng Nǐ De Chuáng
CantoneseLyun2 Seong5 Nei2 Dik1 Cong4
Directed byChan Hing-Ka
Patrick Leung
Produced byChan Hing-Ka
Tiffany Chen
Amy Chin
Janet Chun
Written byChan Hing-Ka
Debbie Lam
StarringSammi Cheng
Louis Koo
Sean Lau
Charlene Choi
Tony Leung
Sandra Ng
Music byAnthony Chue
CinematographyCheung Man Po
Edited byCheung Ka-fai
Distributed byChina Star Entertainment Group
Release date
25 July 2003 (2003-07-25)
Running time
105 minutes
CountryHong Kong
LanguageCantonese
Box officeHK$20 million

Cast

  • Sammi Cheng as Carrie Wat
  • Louis Koo as Inspector Paul Ko Chi-keung
  • Sean Lau as Magistrate Raymond
  • Charlene Choi as Tabby
  • Tony Leung Ka-fai as Boss Ike Hung
  • Sandra Ng as BoBo Au
  • Jim Chim as Uncle Lam
  • Tats Lau as Tabby's father
  • Lee Lik-chi as Paul's superior
  • Lam Suet as Judge Chow
  • Pinky Cheung as P
  • Raymond Wong Yuk-man as Magazine chief
  • Philip Chan as Superintendent
  • Chui Tien-you as Basketball interviewee
  • Wong You-nam as Basketball interviewee
  • Maggie Lau as Policewoman in TV commercial
  • Zhuge Boli as Japanese AV muscle man
  • Niki Chow as Peggy
  • Helen Ma as Female PTU
  • Gloria Chan as Female CID
  • Angela Au as Female SDU
  • Elaine Ho as Female traffic police
  • Serena Po as Policewoman
  • Six Luk as Tuition teacher
  • Yeung Wong-fook as Yakuza's representative
  • Leung Kin-chuen as Shooter
  • Poon Hang-sang as District Judge
  • Vincent Chik as SDU

Reception

Comparing the film to La Brassiere, an earlier creative collaboration by the creative team Hing-Ka Chan, Patrick Leung, and Amy Chin, Variety wrote that Good Times, Bed Times was "less vaudevillian in its humor, but with a stronger pair of distaff thesps this time round", as "the joke comes from casting matinee idol Koo as a sexual non-achiever and Lau, not a prototype romantic lead, as an incurable lothario".[1]

Variety reported that the film "grossed a sturdy HK$20 million ($2.5 million)" from its summer 2003 Hong Kong theatrical release.[1]

The film was initially banned in Malaysia, then reworked and released there under the title In Love With You.[2][3]

References

  1. Derek Elley, "Review: Good Times, Bed Times", Variety, 14 October 2003.
  2. Silvia Wong, "Homerun is a non-starter in Malaysia", Screen Daily, 7 November 2003.
  3. Sharon Wong, "Good news about `Good Times'", New Straits Times, 28 August 2003   via HighBeam Research (subscription required) .


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