Long Long Time Ago 2
Long Long Time Ago 2 is a 2016 Singaporean period film and comedy film directed by Jack Neo. The film commemorates Singapore's 50th birthday or SG50 and stars Aileen Tan, Mark Lee and Wang Lei as the main casts.
The film was released on 31 March 2016. It also marks the third on-screen reunion of Mark Lee and Suhaimi Yusof after they starred alongside together in the popular Singaporean sitcom named Police & Thief.
Plot
Continuing from Long Long Time Ago, Lim Zhao Di takes over her family farm with the help of Ah Long after the 1969 floods. After the government started reclaiming land for development in 1977, licensed owners like Zhao Di are compensated but her younger brother Lim Ah Kun accuses her of having an affair with Ah Long to get the money for himself. Osman does not approve his son playing in a rock band as he fears the negative influence, causing his son to run away from home. Meanwhile, Zhao Di's youngest brother Lim Ah Hee and Rani decide to get married but their traditional fathers Si Shu and Shamugen object their marriage.Cast
- Aileen Tan as Lim Zhao Di
- Mark Lee as Lim Ah Kun, Zhao Di's younger brother
- Wang Lei as Si Shu, Zhao Di's father
- Ng Suan Loi as Si Shen, Zhao Di's mother
- Charmaine Sei as Ah Feng, Ah Kun's wife
- Benjamin Josiah Tan as Lim Ah Hee, Zhao Di's youngest brother who is among the first batch of National Servicemen
- Ryan Lian as Ah Long, a Loan Shark and Gangster Boss
- Cynthia Kuang as Su Ting, Zhao Di's eldest daughter
- * Yan Li Xuan as young Su Ting
- Suhaimi Yusof as Osman, a Nasi Lemak Seller
- Nurijah Binte Sahat as Fatimah, Osman's wife
- Silvarajoo Prakasam as Shamugen, a Hawker Inspector turned People's Association Officer
- Bharathi Rani as Rani, Shamugen's daughter, Ah Hee's girlfriend and later wife
- Mastura Ahmad as the Nurse attending to Osman and Fatimah
- Yoo Ah Min as Si Shu and Shi Shen's good friend and neighbour
- Zhang Wei as the Lim's family good friend and neighbour
Production
Filming
The film was filmed in Ipoh, Malaysia, especially in Kampung Cina Pusing together with the first part, starting in May 2015 for over 60 days.While filming a scene of a sister rescuing her younger brother from a toilet he is stuck in, director Jack Neo insisted on a close-up shot of real faeces to show audiences what toilets in the 1960s were really like. For historical accuracy, Neo also requested actress Aileen Tan to grow her armpit hair for a brief show of it when her character, wearing a sleeveless blouse, raises her arms to tie her hair while working at a coal mine.
The scene of Ah Kun slapping his niece and nephew is real. The actors did over ten takes.
Familiar to Vasantham viewers, actress Bharathi Rani plays Rani in her first non-Tamil production.
Music video
The official music video of the film was released on YouTube on 14 April 2016. It was directed by Shawn Tan and cinematography was by Lincoln Lin of Famegate Studios.Reception
Critical reception
Reception was mostly positive.John Lui of The Straits Times gave the film 2.5/5. He praised the "personal" "small moments" but criticised how "what little authenticity that can be glimpsed is buried under a treacly layer of television-style drama". In addition, he found that "lmost every moment is freighted with moral significance, heavily underscored by dialogue and music" and "or all the suffering, shame and strife baked into the story, there's little inner life to the characters".
Rating the film 2/5, Whang Yee-ling of 8 Days noted that Jack Neo "seems emotionally and creatively depleted after putting much of his heart into writing-directing Long Long Time Ago" and that "even Neo's ear for vernacular humour fails him, and the Hokkien exchanges are strained". She also criticised the film's "simplistic lessons on racial harmony in addition to intergenerational strife". She concluded, "The story is merely marking time, the characters remaining one-note types over the decade".
Similarly, Yahoo! News Singapore found Long Long Time Ago 2 "not as good" as its first part, giving it a score of 3.5/5. While praising the film's "ompelling family drama" and "refreshing take on relationships in Singapore", they noted that it "doesn’t provide the proper cathartic resolution to the many conflicts that arise", with "oo many characters and plots to keep track of", "blatant product placement" and a "downer" of a "weak resolution".
Jeremy Sing of SINdie found the "discrepancy" in the two parts "so great", with Part Two filled with "preachiness, television-style histronics... in-your-face product placements" and "a paper-thin plot". While he praised the film for "bravely tackling a sensitive topic" of the interracial marriage between Ah Hee and Rani, Sing criticised the overall "weak plot development, characterisation, trite direction and its propensity to ‘teach’ the audience what we were supposed to gather from the film".