I Do, I Do
Directed byJack Neo
Lim Boon Hwee
Written by
Produced by
  • Titus Ho
  • Chan Pui Yin
  • Seah Saw Yam
  • Jack Neo
  • Asun Mawardi
Starring
CinematographyAndy Yuen
Edited byMartyn See
Music byRedwan Ali
Production
company
J Team Productions
Distributed byRaintree Pictures
Release date
8 February 2005
Running time
105 minutes
CountrySingapore
LanguagesEnglish
Mandarin
Hokkien
Budget$800,000
Box office$1,849,000

I Do, I Do (Chinese: 爱都爱都), is a 2005 Singaporean romantic comedy film directed by Jack Neo and Lim Boon Hwee.[1][2][3] It was the first time Neo had directed a romance film.[4]

Plot

A workaholic in an office building for fish ball production, Liu Wenhui, had been recently referred by several women as an "auntie" due to her appearance, age, and being single as she had recently rejected several dates with male partners, most recently with her colleague and truck driver Lee Ah Peng, who's also single. Her mother continued to advise on Liu on what to do to get a good relationship, while Lee, who sometimes went lazy, was also advised by his colleagues, notably Xu Wenbing and his friend and hairstylist Jojo Chin.

One day, Chen Jianfeng joined the company, attracting the attention of several women due to his build, leaving Lee jealous. while during a boardroom presentation, Chen volunteered to suggest his proposal; his attraction coupled by the praise of the company's proposal and his first impression, fueled Liu's interest to start a relationship; her colleague, Liang Yiling, later warned Liu about deception and told to stay vigilant.

Meanwhile, Lee and his friends went to a night class under Xu's suggestion to improve his skills after meeting with foreign tourists, one of which was coincidentally a lecturer named Rachel; they eventually began their relationship after going out for a supper after class ended, with Rachel building one with Lee; Xu however, also bond with Liang after coincidentally wear the same shirt of pattern and color and offered his shirt after her clothes was soiled by accident.

On that birthday of Liu's father, Chen visited her home as a surprise to give him a present, then kissed Liu on the scene. Lee and their friends begin to concern Liu seeing her elegant dress, prompting their next course of action including visits to a member-of-parliament and a witch doctor. One day, Lee rejected Rachel as he understands that relationship and friendship are separate, while Chen suddenly broke up with Liu and subsequently resigned the day after.

Xu quickly learned about Chen's sudden resignation when he was beaten up by loan sharks, allowing Lee to inform Liu on his whereabouts. Liu offered $10,000 of her savings to Chen; he initially refused, but the appearance of the debtors made her pay instead, along with another $10,000 from a cheque; he was released, then bond her for a night before he subsequently disappeared. On the following day, Lee's friends learn about Chen's true nature that he deceived several girlfriends of their money including a female customer; Liang later confirms it after she requested the customer some pictures with Chen, who then showed it to Liu.

Liu began to grieve after she went broke and Chen rejecting her calls, leading her driven to suicide through asphyxiation, but soon noticed the gas was empty. Liu called Liang for the number to order the gas tank, leading to her calling Lee's friends on visiting Liu's residence while at the same time, removing all hazardous objects except the gas tank, which Chin said it was too heavy. Realizing this mistake, they quickly went a few floors above to met his relative, then Lee abseils a few floors down to save her, and subsequently sent her to hospital.

After Lee's unsuccessful part-time job stints while trying to earn her money back, Liu praised him for the determination and then fell in love, before kissing onstage during a getai performance; when Liu recalled about a divination lot that she would marry someone who was two years older, Lee's Chinese calendar year fulfilled it instead of Georgian calendar, allowing their marriage to happen. Elsewhere, Xu and Liang were revealed to have been married and Liang being pregnant.

Near the end of the film, Chen, Chin, their parents, and the debtors, while having dinner, revealed the secret about a setup was meant for Lee and Liu to form a relationship, praising them for a successful operation.

Cast

  • Sharon Au as Liu Wenhui[5][6]
    • Liu was a hardworking workaholic who worked in an office building of a fishball production factory. She was revealed to be 35 years old and single at the start of the film.
  • Adrian Pang as Lee Ah Peng[5]
    • A truck driver and another worker of Liu's company, and a getai performer.
  • Marcus Chin as Xu Wenbing[7]
    • A fellow friend of Lee and Liang's love interest. He was usually smart and kind in terms on helping Lee.
  • John Cheng as Jo Jo Chin[7]
    • A hairstylist and a close friend of Lee and Xu, who presents a more humorous tone in terms on communicating people.
  • Allan Wu as Chen Jianfeng[5]
    • A charismatic worker who was employed in the company for a brief period. His stocky build and his charisma attracted several female colleagues.
  • Margaret Lee as Liang Yiling
    • A fellow female colleague and Xu's love interest, namely due to a coincidental dress code with his, which became the film's running gag.
  • Alexandra Dunn as Rachel
    • A foreigner and lecturer of an English night class; like Wu, her body appearance and her fluency of English attracted the likes of male learners.
  • Anna Lin Ruping as Liu's mother
    • A mother who cared Liu and showed her that age is not a matter in terms on finding relationship.

Other appearances in the film include Mark Lee, portraying as a loan shark[7], Johnny Ng as Liu's father, Yoo Ah Min as the mother of Chen who resided in his home, Chuay Pui Chan as Lee's relative, as well as Patricia Mok, Lim Kian Hock, Jimmy Nah, Boris Boo, and Henry Thia, who portrayed the roles of the Prime Minister of Singapore, a fortune teller, a witch doctor, a police officer, and a stage director[8]. Director Jack Neo played as a Member of Parliament during the film.[9]

Release

The film released in theatres on 8 February 2005.[9][10]

Reception

Chen Yunhong of Shin Min Daily News rated the film three-and-a-half stars out of five.[11] Wendy Teo gave the film two-and-a-half stars out of five, praising the performances of Pang and Chin, as well as the cameo of Lee, but criticising the film's editing, the "cliched" twist, and stated that "the thin material of I Do I Do doesn't provide a wide enough stage for their talents."[7]

References

  1. Tay, Mervin (26 February 2005). "I Do I Do... hope for 'Two'". today. Singapore.
  2. 洪铭铧 (15 February 2005). "《爱都爱都》的情与喜". Lianhe Zaobao. Singapore.
  3. 廖仕豪 (20 February 2005). "本周说:《爱都爱都》 在戏院里看电视". Lianhe Zaobao. Singapore.
  4. 陈彬雁 (16 February 2005). "梁智强作品I do I do爱都爱都 期待情人说'I do' 《爱都》情人节卖座 前天票房破10万". Lianhe Wanbao. Singapore.
  5. 1 2 3 Chia, Elisa (11 December 2004). "Adrian says 'I do' to Jack ..." today. Singapore. Retrieved 23 June 2022.
  6. "I Do, I Do (2005) - IMDb". Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  7. 1 2 3 4 Teo, Wendy (8 February 2005). "Good comics can't save thin plot". The New Paper. Singapore.
  8. "Saying I Do for reel". The Straits Times. Singapore. 14 December 2004.
  9. 1 2 Hong, Xinyi (7 February 2005). "Jack the rebels Neo the one?". The Straits Times. Singapore.
  10. Wee, Tze Yi (26 February 2005). "Marital bliss". The Straits Times. Singapore.
  11. 陈韵红 (13 February 2005). "《爱都爱都》 牵动单身男女心". Shin Min Daily News. Singapore.
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