- Director:
Royston Tan - AMG Rating:



- 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
Movies:
15 |



| Wikipedia: 15 (film) |
| 15: The Movie | |
|---|---|
15: The Movie theatrical poster |
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| 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 | |
| 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.
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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.
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]
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]
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]
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