Jump to content

Mee Pok Man

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by SpaceFighterMan (talk | contribs) at 06:40, 21 February 2008 (External links). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Mee Pok Man
Directed byEric Khoo
Written byEric Khoo
Produced byJacqueline Khoo
StarringJoe Ng,
Michelle Goh,
Lim Kay Tong,
David Brazil
Music byJohn David Kompa
Distributed byZhao Wei Films
Release date
1995
Running time
105 minutes.
CountrySingapore
LanguagesCantonese, Mandarin, Hokkien, English
Budget$100,000

Mee Pok Man is a 1995 film by Eric Khoo. The film is a black comedy starring Joe Ng as the male protagonist Johnny, and Michelle Goh as the prostitute Bunny. The film was given an "R(A)" rating in Singapore, restricting the movie audience to adults only, but after the change in censorship ratings, it was rated "M18" since 2005 (Restricted to 18 and above). The mature rating was due to themes of necrophilia present in the second half of the film.

Synopsis

Johnny (Joe Ng) is a lonely man who runs a Mee Pok stall. Although he isn't very intelligent, he is hardworking and yearns for romance. One day, Bunny (Michelle Goh) came to his stall and Johnny fell in love with her at first sight. He didn't dare to admit his feelings for her, instead watching her from a distance as she flirts around with expatriate white men. As Johnny got to know her better, he realized her inner need for peace, a place where she can find true happiness. Bunny was counting on a policeman named Ah Lim (Lim Kay Tong) to save her from her current occupation, but the man instead betrayed her to the pimps.

Bunny decided to be on the run after the pimps threatened to sent her to Thailand to live with the transvestites. Johnny offered to assist her to flee, an offer which touched her. She and Johnny were about to leave when a car, driven by one of Bunny's pimps, knocked her down. Johnny carried her back to his home where he tried to take care of her. Without proper medical treatment, Bunny died and Johnny became depressed. The devoted young man still continued to care for her even when her corpse began to rot.

Johnny started praying to Sun Wukong, the deity he worshiped. Johnny took great lengths to hiding Bunny's corpse so much so that even his neighbours and senile parents were not alerted. After three weeks of hiding the corpse, Johnny died as well due to the disease he caught from the flies feeding on the corpse. Unknown to the two dead people, Johnny's house has a magical talisman given from a taoist priest, which resurrects the two into a pair of sentient zombies. The two finally got together after death as an undead couple, with no small thanks to the powers of the Monkey God.