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29+1 (2017). 1h 51m

“Chrissie Chau is going to celebrate her 30th birthday in a month, and life couldnu0026#39;t be better. She is a liberated woman with a handsome boy friend and she has just gotten a major promotion at work. Why is she so stressed out and why is her life collapsing around her? When her landlord sells her apartment and forces her to move to a month-to-month, who is Joyce Cheng. the woman who is exactly her age and has built an Eiffel Tower on the wall of her apartment? u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThis well-composed film tackles the issues of thinking you know what you want to do with your life when youu0026#39;re 18, and the choices you make: not bad choices, but choices that turn out to be unsuitable when youu0026#39;re a dozen years older. With a series of well-performed characters, it offers us the truism that happiness lies somewhere between the aimlessness of living in the moment and the constriction of making lifelong decisions, as Miss Chau and Miss Cheng find their lives destroyed by factors outside their control. Itu0026#39;s been adapted very nicely from its original stage presentation, with some nice camera-work by Jason Kwan. Mostly, though, itu0026#39;s Kearan Pangu0026#39;s vision that controls, and produces a fine movie.”

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