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15

 
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15

  • Director: Royston Tan
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Teen Movie, Juvenile Delinquency Film
  • Themes: Kids in Trouble, Suicide, Inner City Blues
  • Release Year: 2003
  • Country: SG
  • Run Time: 93 minutes

Plot

15, the debut feature from writer/director Royston Tan, takes a loosely plotted look at the lives of some unruly teens in Singapore. Melvin (Melvin Chen) and Vynn (Vynn Soh) are best friends who spend a lot of their time cutting school and watching porn together. Melvin is worried about passing his exams because his mother has threatened to throw him out if he fails. Vynn still feels bitterness over the dissolution of his friendship with Shaun (Shaun Tan), who abandoned his former friends when he became more involved in gang life. The two boys also devote some time to working on a scandalous musical number to perform at a school assembly. The second half of the film focuses on Shaun and his friend Erick (Erick Chun). First a former rival, Armani (Melvin Lee), helps them out when they're attacked by a gang of snotty, English-speaking schoolboys. In exchange, they devote a couple of days to helping the suicidal Armani find a suitable building from which to jump. Shaun and Erick also engage in drug smuggling, and Shaun helps Erick pierce his cheek. 15 was based on an earlier short film by Tan, who used the boys' own stories to help shape his narrative. The film created a lot of controversy in its native Singapore and inspired Tan to make Cut, a satirical short film celebrating censorship. 15 was shown at the 2004 New York Asian American International Film Festival. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

Review

Royston Tan's 15 is a glorious mess, capturing the emotional breadth and intensity of teen life with a laudable immediacy. Tan uses non-professional actors -- actual teens from housing project gangs -- and captures the anarchy of their existence in the shadows of a tightly regimented society. His filmmaking technique encompasses sentimental angst, documentary realism (as when Tan nauseatingly lingers on Shaun Tan attempting to ingest a condom filled with Ecstasy, or calmly sticking a pin through his friend's cheek), video-game graphics, music videos, and a sardonic nihilism that manifests itself in two of the more outrageous segments of the film, both related to Armani's (Melvin Lee) plan to commit suicide. In the first, a variety of possible techniques are outlined in grotesquely animated form, in the crude manner of South Park. The second segment documents Shaun and Erick's (Erick Chun) efforts to find Armani the perfect site for his suicide leap, cutting from location to location with the boys holding scorecards and Armani voicing his disdainful appraisal of each one. But the sardonic humor of this segment is tempered by the genuine pain expressed in the shot that follows: a single long take of Armani sitting on a train, silently crying. Tan tries to cover a lot of ground in the film and runs the emotional gamut. Even at 93 minutes, it would get a bit weary without the high-energy musical numbers he tosses in. More importantly, however, the director merges technique and subject matter with such skill, that even when it's clumsy or amateurish, the film has a startlingly unmediated quality. One almost gets the sense that Tan is merely the vehicle through which these lost, forgotten boys are telling their own story. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

Cast

Shaun Tan - Shaun; Melvin Chen - Melvin; Vynn Soh - Vynn; Erick Chun - Erick; Melvin Lee - Armani

Credit

Daniel Lim - Art Director, Lawrence Ang - Associate Producer, Vivian Wang - Associate Producer, Micheal Vong - Associate Producer, Freddie Yeo - Co-producer, Mabelyn Ow - Co-producer, Royston Tan - Director, Nigel Fernandez - Editor, Jeff Stevens - Editor, Darlene Lim - Editor, Azhar Ismon - Editor, Jacqueline Khoo - Executive Producer, James Toh - Executive Producer, Lim Ching Leong - Executive Producer, Yellow Box - Composer (Music Score), Lim Ching Leong - Cinematographer, Eric Khoo - Producer, Tan Fong Cheng - Producer, Royston Tan - Screenwriter

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Wikipedia: 15 (film)
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15: The Movie

15: The Movie theatrical poster
Directed by Royston Tan
Produced by Tan Fong Cheng
Eric Khoo
Written by Royston Tan
Starring Melvin Chen
Erick Chun
Melvin Lee
Vynn Soh
Shaun Tan
Editing by Pinky Calica
Release date(s) 27 Apr 2003 (Singapore)
5 Sep 2003 (Canada)
5 Nov 2003 (UK)
16 Jan 2004 (US)
16 Jun 2004 (Australia)
Running time 96 min
Country Singapore Singapore
Language Hokkien, Mandarin

15: The Movie, also known simply as 15, is a 2003 Singaporean film about teenage gangsters in the Singapore suburbs. Directed by acclaimed filmmaker Royston Tan, the film is an expanded version of Tan's 2002 award-winning short film, also titled 15. It is one of the few Singaporean films to feature brief full-frontal male nudity (in its uncensored version), together with the Singapore-Thailand film Pleasure Factory and the Singapore-Hong Kong film Bugis Steet.

Contents

Plot

The film stars three real-life juvenile gangsters, all aged 15, giving an accurate depiction of Chinese teenage gang-life in the Singapore suburbs. The 2003 film features two more gangsters as characters as well as a fight sequence with more affluent English-educated Singapore youths. Rather than scripting the movie or employing professional actors, Tan attempted to capture the troubled lives of his characters in realistic fashion, apparently without much prior scripting.

Distribution

In Singapore, the film premiered during the 2003 Singapore International Film Festival.[1] In 2003, it premiered in Canada during the Montreal World Film Festival,[1] and in Britain during the London Film Festival.[1] In 2004, it premiered in the US during the Sundance Film Festival,[1] and in Australia during the Sydney Film Festival.[1] The film also saw its first US theatrical release in New York City on 13 April 2005.[1][2]

In Singapore, the film is distributed by Zhao Wei Films. In North America, it is distributed by Picture This! Entertainment.[3]

Reception

Censorship

While 15: The Movie was initially banned in Singapore, the Singapore Board of Film Censors (BFC) later ruled that the film should be rated R(A).[4] Under pressure from the BFC, Royston Tan ended up making 27 cuts to the film.[5] Opposition was also raised against the heavy use of the Hokkien language in the film,[citation needed] which is discouraged by the Singapore government in favour of Mandarin and English. These restrictions infuriated Tan, and would later lead him to create his satirical short film Cut.[5]

Critical reception

The film received mixed reviews from film critics.[6] In Rotten Tomatoes, it earned ratings of 50% based on 10 reviews and 20% based on 5 top critics.[7] In Metacritic, the film earned a metascore of 47% based on 6 reviews.[8]

Awards

Trivia

  • 15: The Movie has been advertised outside of Singapore in gay publications, due to the heavy homoerotic tension between the characters. However, in an interview segment of the DVD Royston's Shorts, a collection of Tan's short films, Tan affirms that the boys whose lives he portrayed do not identify as gay.

Notes

References

Reviews

External links


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