Revision as of 10:56, 26 November 2021 edit122.11.214.202 (talk) Undid revision 1057198790 by Banedon (talk) this new plot is more correct and it follows WP:MOSFILMPLOT, so the revert is wrong.Tags: Undo Reverted← Previous edit | Revision as of 11:58, 26 November 2021 edit undoDisillusionedBitterAndKnackered (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers49,222 edits →Political satire: sp dilemmaTag: 2017 wikitext editorNext edit → | ||
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{{short description|2002 Singaporean comedy film directed by Jack Neo}} | {{short description|2002 Singaporean comedy film directed by Jack Neo}} | ||
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{{Infobox film | {{Infobox film | ||
|name = I Not Stupid | |name = I Not Stupid | ||
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==Plot== | ==Plot== | ||
The film's storyline revolves around the lives and families of three students in the EM3 academic stream, Terry Khoo (]), Liu Kok Pin (刘国彬 ''Liú Guóbīn''; ]) and Ang Boon Hock (洪文福 ''Hóng Wénfú''; ]). Terry, pampered and from a rich family, is a meek and obedient boy, with a domineering mother (]) and a negligent businessman father (]). Kok Pin is pushed to excel at school by his mother (]), but he shows a talent for art, not academics – much to the consternation of his family. Boon Hock and his mother struggle to make ends meet by running a small ] stall; to make up for the lack of a father figure, he places high value on loyalty and "manliness" in his friends. | |||
Terry Khoo, Liu Kok Pin and Ang Boon Hock were Primary 6 students and friends on the same EM3 class. Each had their daily life which ended with remarks from their parents- Kok Pin was often caned by his mother for neglecting his work, including his interest in drawing which his father admires; Boon Hock operates a hawker store with his widowed mother while juggling between study and work; Terry frequently embarrass himself for his actions and self-pride amd was reprimanded by his overprotective mother who frequently reminding him to be obedient. One day, Lee was the new teacher for the class. | |||
The boys are often bullied for being in the "stupid" stream, which eventually leads to a fight during which one of the bullies is accidentally injured. In the principal's office, Boon Hock and Kok Pin explain what happened, but Terry declines to testify on their behalf, following his mother's instructions to "mind his own business", which infuriates his friends and causes trouble between the boys. | |||
Liu was a commercial producer working in a marketing company, ''Hao Peng You'' ], helmed under an uncouth director Jerry, also Terry's father, along with American John and his friend Ben, who both recently promoted as Creative Group Head. Outside work, however, were conflicts between Liu and Jerry when the former steal a parking lot, and again in a ] leading to a whole family ], ending off with Khoo's mother bruised by Kok Pin. | |||
Meanwhile, Terry's father, Mr. Khoo gets in a fight with a man who turns out to be Kok Pin's father, Mr. Liu (]), over a parking space. Mr. Khoo's company is a client for Mr. Liu's firm, an ]. Their new-found enmity causes Mr. Khoo to select the marketing campaign of John, an American expatriate, over that of Mr. Liu, in addition to the stereotype that Americans are better than Asians. As John's ideas are deemed culturally inappropriate by locals, Mr. Khoo's business suffers due to the loss of customers. | |||
At the same time, Terry and his elder sister Selena, visited the hawker centre where Ang was, and ended up messing two customers while trying to repay him, resulting in a scolding by his mother. One day, an EM1 student and Ang's cousin, Tiong Meng, criticizes him by comparing his score of 78 as a worst score in EM1, before spitting saliva onto Kok Pin while defending Ang. Tiong Meng's mother didn't witness and argued with Kok Pin causing her to fall. In the disciplinary room, Terry, as eyewitness, explained on Tiong Meng before ending with someone who would come along- his mother, who explains the bruising and come to defend Kok Pin, but she, noticing the same bruising, denied the claim. When the disciplinary mistress asked who started first, neither spoke up. Liu's mother separately spoke to the principal privately, but he dismisses her, telling that it was a school matter, not personal. | |||
As the boys deal with their problems, a new teacher at school helps by inspiring Boon Hock to excel in Mathematics, while reaching out to the other boys. Kok Pin continues to struggle, and enlists Boon Hock to help him cheat in the ], but they are caught. Unable to face his mother, Kok Pin attempts suicide, but fails. When he finally tells her, she tries to punish him but collapses; a doctor later diagnoses her with ], and tells Kok Pin that she will die without a ]. | |||
During the exams, Kok Pin was caught ] and was disciplined by the school; before leaving, hae handed an artwork to Lee who was monitored by another teacher Lim to ensure she contact his parents. Liu attempted ] after seeing a news bulletin about an 11-year-old boy committing suicide due to the pressure of the parents' scolding over poor grades, but was thwarted by a running group of members who was apprehended by the police, one of which was Selena. When Selena was also brought into custody, she revealed she ran off from her parents because of ]. The next day, she bought a pair of ] as apology and appreciation. | |||
As the end of the year approaches, Boon Hock excels in the ] Mathematics exam, while the other boys manage to scrape by – Kok Pin only marginally. Contrary to Kok Pin's fears, his mother is satisfied because he has tried his best. When visiting Mrs. Liu at the hospital, the EM3 teacher announces that one of Kok Pin's drawings won second prize in an international competition, but the moment is overshadowed by the rush to save Mrs. Liu's life. Mr. Khoo passes the transplant test, but refuses to donate after discovering the intended recipient is his enemy's wife. He eventually relents, but it is revealed that due to a mix-up Terry, not Mr. Khoo, is the suitable donor. Despite protests from his parents, he insists on undergoing the operation, which is a success. A grateful Mr. Liu offers to help Mr. Khoo's business with his proposal. As a result, Mr. Khoo's business booms, and the two enemies become good friends. The film ends with Terry being bullied again, as in the beginning of the movie – but this time, he stands up for himself and fights back – again, to his mother's displeasure. | |||
When Kok Pin's parents returned home, his mother suddenly collapses. A determined Kok Pin began his resolve by studying hard and was praised by his father, and later some policemen for identifying the two strangers who are responsible for ] his friends one day at school while tempting them with ], one of which was a former employer working with Jerry and was fired for a ]. Terry was kidnapped along with Ang who also rushes in to the vehicle to save Terry; before making their escape, Ang convinces Terry not to trust on some strangers of bad nature and the different obedience compared to the parents, which a reluctant Terry agrees. | |||
After the arrest, Liu and Ben was impressed on the bakkwa proposal by the director and claimed the idea was from John's amendment, angering him for ]. Ben shortly challenged John for the post of ], which he accepts; creating an advertorial for a shampoo in a few weeks. John's proposal won, resulting in Ben and Liu's resigning from their job. | |||
Later, Kok Pin's mother was revealed to have been diagnosed with ], which has a low survival rate unless a suitable ] donor is found. Kok Pin was brought to the disclipinary mistress again for attacking Terry on his offending remark on his mother so that he won't be able to face a burden of doing homework, but she left the decision to Lee after learning about leukemia and Terry; separately, Jerry visited Liu to tell him about the fight, resulting in himself scolding Kok Pin as well. | |||
Few days before exams, each parent visited a nearby temple to seek blessing; four days later, Kok Pin barely passed the exam and later visited the hospital to see his mother, emotionally saying that she was proud of his effort, before Liu entered. Lee was the next to visit to inform on Kok Pin and told that his art work won runner-up in an international art contest. | |||
She sent text advertisements to public, and many visited the hospital. Jerry was among the suitable donors, however, Jerry abruptly leaves the site when he saw Liu, but after hearing their pleas to stay, he later accepts much under his chagrin. During the operation, while the surgeons asks Jerry to confirm his identification number, he told them that he gave the wrong number, which was actually Terry instead of his, who he mistakenly took a ] the same day to test his suitability as a donor; despite being ] to donate, he volunteered because he regret that his parent's action would not have make him obedient. | |||
The operation was successful and Liu's mother was saved; Terry and Kok Pin resolved their differences, so were Liu and Jerry, the former praising his brand and willing to recruit himself for the advertising, which he accepts. The advertising was a success, and his business prosper as a result. At the epilogue during the house visit, Terry knocked a nearby buffet following a chase with two children who steal his food, similar to the one happening earlier in the film. At evening, the trio commented the actions were "for their own good", before breaking the ] to inform the film's ending. | |||
==Political satire== | ==Political satire== | ||
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Terry's mother, Mrs. Khoo, is a "thinly veiled stand-in for the Singapore government", whose "mother-knows-best" mentality is well-meaning, but strips her children of their freedom.<ref name="review1"/> She demands total obedience, and her repeated lines "Do you know how lucky you are to have a good and responsible mother?" and "This is all for your own good" parody the ] efforts to convince Singaporeans that government policies and actions is in the best interests of the nation.<ref name="uhde">Ciecko, Anne Tereska; Uhde, Jan and Uhde, Yvnone Ng (2006). Contemporary Asian Cinema. New York: Berg. pp. "Singapore: Developments, Challenges and Projections", pp. 81–82. {{ISBN|1-84520-237-6}}.</ref><ref name="review1"/><ref name="review3"/><ref name="resist">Kenneth Paul Tan (2008), "Cinema and Television in Singapore", Brill Publishers, pg 164–168.</ref> Mrs. Khoo also uses her position of power to buy off rebellion in her charges with gifts and bribes, in a pointed criticism of the government's social policies.<ref name="review1"/><ref name="resist"/> Other characters in the film comment on this relationship – for instance, in one scene, Mr. Liu states that "it is difficult to catch fish in Singapore, because fish in Singapore are like Singaporeans; they'll never open their mouths", poking fun at the Singaporean trait of obedience and respect for authority.<ref name="review3"/> | Terry's mother, Mrs. Khoo, is a "thinly veiled stand-in for the Singapore government", whose "mother-knows-best" mentality is well-meaning, but strips her children of their freedom.<ref name="review1"/> She demands total obedience, and her repeated lines "Do you know how lucky you are to have a good and responsible mother?" and "This is all for your own good" parody the ] efforts to convince Singaporeans that government policies and actions is in the best interests of the nation.<ref name="uhde">Ciecko, Anne Tereska; Uhde, Jan and Uhde, Yvnone Ng (2006). Contemporary Asian Cinema. New York: Berg. pp. "Singapore: Developments, Challenges and Projections", pp. 81–82. {{ISBN|1-84520-237-6}}.</ref><ref name="review1"/><ref name="review3"/><ref name="resist">Kenneth Paul Tan (2008), "Cinema and Television in Singapore", Brill Publishers, pg 164–168.</ref> Mrs. Khoo also uses her position of power to buy off rebellion in her charges with gifts and bribes, in a pointed criticism of the government's social policies.<ref name="review1"/><ref name="resist"/> Other characters in the film comment on this relationship – for instance, in one scene, Mr. Liu states that "it is difficult to catch fish in Singapore, because fish in Singapore are like Singaporeans; they'll never open their mouths", poking fun at the Singaporean trait of obedience and respect for authority.<ref name="review3"/> | ||
According to director Neo, he rewrote the script for one scene where Tiong Meng spitting onto Kok Pin. Initial scenes revealed that Terry did not provide his evidence and instead, Mrs. Khoo demands the school to punish Kok Pin for bruising his face (which in turn his mother will scold him as well), but Neo rewrote the scene instead in the final version, as he would want to avoid prejudice between EM1 and EM3 students and to demonstrate a case of ], which reflects a scenario where Tiong Meng and Kok Pin were warned by the school instead of being punished by voicing who was to be blamed for. The original version is found on the director's cut and in the TV releases, whereas home releases used the original scene with the actual scene found on the deleted scenes, and in ], the actual scene is used instead. Additionally, Neo initially considered ] for the role for the mother of Kok Pin, but he ultimately went for veteran actress ] because Xiang's age was more suitable than Tay, although Tay would be reconsidered again in the ], but it did not happen.<ref name="review3"/> | According to director Neo, he rewrote the script for one scene where Tiong Meng spitting onto Kok Pin. Initial scenes revealed that Terry did not provide his evidence and instead, Mrs. Khoo demands the school to punish Kok Pin for bruising his face (which in turn his mother will scold him as well), but Neo rewrote the scene instead in the final version, as he would want to avoid prejudice between EM1 and EM3 students and to demonstrate a case of ], which reflects a scenario where Tiong Meng and Kok Pin were warned by the school instead of being punished by voicing who was to be blamed for. The original version is found on the director's cut and in the TV releases, whereas home releases used the original scene with the actual scene found on the deleted scenes, and in ], the actual scene is used instead. Additionally, Neo initially considered ] for the role for the mother of Kok Pin, but he ultimately went for veteran actress ] because Xiang's age was more suitable than Tay, although Tay would be reconsidered again in the ], but it did not happen.<ref name="review3"/> | ||
The film also touches on other issues including Chinese self-loathing (wherein Singaporean companies regard Western ]s as inherently superior to local workers), suicide, the use of ], and the differences between English and Chinese.<ref name="newstraits">"I Not Stupid but is clever, really", ], 19 September 2004.</ref><ref name="review3"/><ref name="resist"/> | The film also touches on other issues including Chinese self-loathing (wherein Singaporean companies regard Western ]s as inherently superior to local workers), suicide, the use of ], and the differences between English and Chinese.<ref name="newstraits">"I Not Stupid but is clever, really", '']'', 19 September 2004.</ref><ref name="review3"/><ref name="resist"/> | ||
==Production== | ==Production== | ||
Jack Neo's ] for the film was the Iranian movie '']''. Neo and his wife were moved to "holding hands and crying after seeing the love shared by the children", which motivated him to make his own movie about youth. After speaking with parents to find topics to discuss in his film, Neo learned that due to problems with the Singaporean education system, specifically ], students face considerable academic and emotional stress.<ref name="inspire">Karl Ho, "Jack as court jester", The Straits Times, 31 January 2002</ref><ref name="sma">Hwa, Dr. Tan Hooi; Krysania Tan, Regina Chan (April 2002). , ''SMA News''. pp. 5–10. Retrieved 17 December 2006.</ref> This problem formed the core of his film, which he called ''I Not Stupid'' in reference to the ] that streaming places on students.<ref name="review1">"", www.lovehkfilm.com</ref> | Jack Neo's ] for the film was the Iranian movie '']''. Neo and his wife were moved to "holding hands and crying after seeing the love shared by the children", which motivated him to make his own movie about youth. After speaking with parents to find topics to discuss in his film, Neo learned that due to problems with the Singaporean education system, specifically ], students face considerable academic and emotional stress.<ref name="inspire">Karl Ho, "Jack as court jester", ''The Straits Times'', 31 January 2002</ref><ref name="sma">Hwa, Dr. Tan Hooi; Krysania Tan, Regina Chan (April 2002). , ''SMA News''. pp. 5–10. Retrieved 17 December 2006.</ref> This problem formed the core of his film, which he called ''I Not Stupid'' in reference to the ] that streaming places on students.<ref name="review1">"", www.lovehkfilm.com</ref> | ||
Neo also drew on a dissatisfaction he felt with the way the school system promoted deference to ] over self-reliance; he wanted his film to tell youth "If you don't want to change or make a difference, you won't. It's all up to you."<ref name="inspire"/> In exploring these ideas, Neo spent over two years researching and editing the ] — checking scenes for accuracy, verifying facts, and drafting dialogue.<ref name="sma"/> Altogether, the work went through thirteen different revisions, and saw over 50 children audition for the lead roles,<ref>" {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927013013/http://www.mediacorpraintree.com/ins/ins_cast.htm |date=2007-09-27 }}". Raintree Pictures Pte Ltd. 2002. Retrieved 17 December 2006.</ref> before Neo decided to send ''I Not Stupid'' into production.<ref name="sma"/> | Neo also drew on a dissatisfaction he felt with the way the school system promoted deference to ] over self-reliance; he wanted his film to tell youth "If you don't want to change or make a difference, you won't. It's all up to you."<ref name="inspire"/> In exploring these ideas, Neo spent over two years researching and editing the ] — checking scenes for accuracy, verifying facts, and drafting dialogue.<ref name="sma"/> Altogether, the work went through thirteen different revisions, and saw over 50 children audition for the lead roles,<ref>" {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927013013/http://www.mediacorpraintree.com/ins/ins_cast.htm |date=2007-09-27 }}". Raintree Pictures Pte Ltd. 2002. Retrieved 17 December 2006.</ref> before Neo decided to send ''I Not Stupid'' into production.<ref name="sma"/> | ||
This production was carried out by ] on a budget of S$900,000,<ref name="uhde"/> sponsored by ], ] and Sunshine Bakeries.<ref name="review0">Soh Yun-Huei, "", FilmAsia.</ref> The production crew included ] as executive producer, ] and ] as producers, ] as ] and ] as music supervisor.<ref name="prodnotes">" {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061104051910/http://www.mediacorpraintree.com/ins/ins_prodnotes.htm |date=2006-11-04 }}", MediaCorp Raintree Pictures. 2002.</ref> In addition to writing and directing, Neo also composed the ], which was sung by ]. The actual filming took place at Braddell Westlake Secondary School and Westlake Primary School over a period of 24 days,<ref>Wong Kim Hoh, "Who says I’m only good at drag?", The Straits Times, 20 June 2004</ref> and the film found distribution through Raintree Pictures and ].<ref>" {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061223130011/http://www.mediacorpraintree.com/js/fs.asp?ref=%2Finotstupid2_160106.htm |date=2006-12-23 }}". MediaCorp Raintree Pictures Pte Ltd. 2005. Retrieved 17 December 2006.</ref> | This production was carried out by ] on a budget of S$900,000,<ref name="uhde"/> sponsored by ], ] and Sunshine Bakeries.<ref name="review0">Soh Yun-Huei, "", FilmAsia.</ref> The production crew included ] as executive producer, ] and ] as producers, ] as ] and ] as music supervisor.<ref name="prodnotes">" {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061104051910/http://www.mediacorpraintree.com/ins/ins_prodnotes.htm |date=2006-11-04 }}", MediaCorp Raintree Pictures. 2002.</ref> In addition to writing and directing, Neo also composed the ], which was sung by ]. The actual filming took place at Braddell Westlake Secondary School and Westlake Primary School over a period of 24 days,<ref>Wong Kim Hoh, "Who says I’m only good at drag?", ''The Straits Times'', 20 June 2004</ref> and the film found distribution through Raintree Pictures and ].<ref>" {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061223130011/http://www.mediacorpraintree.com/js/fs.asp?ref=%2Finotstupid2_160106.htm |date=2006-12-23 }}". MediaCorp Raintree Pictures Pte Ltd. 2005. Retrieved 17 December 2006.</ref> | ||
==Reception== | ==Reception== |
Revision as of 11:58, 26 November 2021
2002 Singaporean comedy film directed by Jack Neo
I Not Stupid | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Jack Neo |
Written by | Jack Neo |
Produced by | David Leong Chan Pui Yin |
Starring | Jack Neo Xiang Yun Richard Low Selena Tan Shawn Lee Huang Po Ju Joshua Ang |
Production company | Mediacorp Raintree Pictures |
Distributed by | United International Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 105 min |
Country | Singapore |
Language | Mandarin / Hokkien / English |
Budget | S$1,000,000 |
I Not Stupid (Chinese: 小孩不笨; pinyin: Xiǎohái Bù Bèn; lit. 'Children are not stupid') is a 2002 Singaporean comedy film about the lives, struggles, and adventures of three Primary 6 pupils who are placed in the academically inferior EM3 stream. Written and directed by Jack Neo, and produced by Mediacorp Raintree Pictures, the movie stars Jack Neo, Xiang Yun, Richard Low, Selena Tan, Shawn Lee, Huang Po Ju and Joshua Ang.
Released in cinemas on 9 February 2002, I Not Stupid earned over S$3.8 million, becoming the second-highest grossing Singaporean film. Its satirical criticism of the Singaporean education system and social attitudes in Singapore sparked public discussions and parliamentary debates that led to reforms in the education system. Its sequel, I Not Stupid Too, was released in 2006.
Plot
The film's storyline revolves around the lives and families of three students in the EM3 academic stream, Terry Khoo (Huang Po Ju), Liu Kok Pin (刘国彬 Liú Guóbīn; Shawn Lee) and Ang Boon Hock (洪文福 Hóng Wénfú; Joshua Ang). Terry, pampered and from a rich family, is a meek and obedient boy, with a domineering mother (Selena Tan) and a negligent businessman father (Richard Low). Kok Pin is pushed to excel at school by his mother (Xiang Yun), but he shows a talent for art, not academics – much to the consternation of his family. Boon Hock and his mother struggle to make ends meet by running a small wonton noodle stall; to make up for the lack of a father figure, he places high value on loyalty and "manliness" in his friends.
The boys are often bullied for being in the "stupid" stream, which eventually leads to a fight during which one of the bullies is accidentally injured. In the principal's office, Boon Hock and Kok Pin explain what happened, but Terry declines to testify on their behalf, following his mother's instructions to "mind his own business", which infuriates his friends and causes trouble between the boys.
Meanwhile, Terry's father, Mr. Khoo gets in a fight with a man who turns out to be Kok Pin's father, Mr. Liu (Jack Neo), over a parking space. Mr. Khoo's company is a client for Mr. Liu's firm, an advertising agency. Their new-found enmity causes Mr. Khoo to select the marketing campaign of John, an American expatriate, over that of Mr. Liu, in addition to the stereotype that Americans are better than Asians. As John's ideas are deemed culturally inappropriate by locals, Mr. Khoo's business suffers due to the loss of customers.
As the boys deal with their problems, a new teacher at school helps by inspiring Boon Hock to excel in Mathematics, while reaching out to the other boys. Kok Pin continues to struggle, and enlists Boon Hock to help him cheat in the Preliminary examinations, but they are caught. Unable to face his mother, Kok Pin attempts suicide, but fails. When he finally tells her, she tries to punish him but collapses; a doctor later diagnoses her with leukaemia, and tells Kok Pin that she will die without a bone marrow transplant.
As the end of the year approaches, Boon Hock excels in the PSLE Mathematics exam, while the other boys manage to scrape by – Kok Pin only marginally. Contrary to Kok Pin's fears, his mother is satisfied because he has tried his best. When visiting Mrs. Liu at the hospital, the EM3 teacher announces that one of Kok Pin's drawings won second prize in an international competition, but the moment is overshadowed by the rush to save Mrs. Liu's life. Mr. Khoo passes the transplant test, but refuses to donate after discovering the intended recipient is his enemy's wife. He eventually relents, but it is revealed that due to a mix-up Terry, not Mr. Khoo, is the suitable donor. Despite protests from his parents, he insists on undergoing the operation, which is a success. A grateful Mr. Liu offers to help Mr. Khoo's business with his proposal. As a result, Mr. Khoo's business booms, and the two enemies become good friends. The film ends with Terry being bullied again, as in the beginning of the movie – but this time, he stands up for himself and fights back – again, to his mother's displeasure.
Political satire
I Not Stupid criticises many aspects of modern Singaporean culture, including streaming in the education system, deference to authority, and sociocultural stereotypes. The film can be read as an allegory for Singaporean society – the pampered protagonist and narrator, Terry, is an "everyman;" deferent and coddled, with a domineering mother and affluent father. Terry's intellectual failings lead him to be placed in the inferior EM3 stream, which becomes the driving force behind the storyline. The subsequent stigma placed upon the narrator illustrates how the Singaporean education system promotes academic elitism, with students in lower streams looked down upon as inferior, making it harder for them to catch up and realise their potential (see golem effect), even if they are not necessarily stupid. This kiasu mentality puts mounting pressure upon the protagonists of the film, confounding them as they attempt to improve their standing and ameliorate their reputation in a society which judges them "worthless".
Terry's mother, Mrs. Khoo, is a "thinly veiled stand-in for the Singapore government", whose "mother-knows-best" mentality is well-meaning, but strips her children of their freedom. She demands total obedience, and her repeated lines "Do you know how lucky you are to have a good and responsible mother?" and "This is all for your own good" parody the Singapore government's efforts to convince Singaporeans that government policies and actions is in the best interests of the nation. Mrs. Khoo also uses her position of power to buy off rebellion in her charges with gifts and bribes, in a pointed criticism of the government's social policies. Other characters in the film comment on this relationship – for instance, in one scene, Mr. Liu states that "it is difficult to catch fish in Singapore, because fish in Singapore are like Singaporeans; they'll never open their mouths", poking fun at the Singaporean trait of obedience and respect for authority.
According to director Neo, he rewrote the script for one scene where Tiong Meng spitting onto Kok Pin. Initial scenes revealed that Terry did not provide his evidence and instead, Mrs. Khoo demands the school to punish Kok Pin for bruising his face (which in turn his mother will scold him as well), but Neo rewrote the scene instead in the final version, as he would want to avoid prejudice between EM1 and EM3 students and to demonstrate a case of prisoner's dilemma, which reflects a scenario where Tiong Meng and Kok Pin were warned by the school instead of being punished by voicing who was to be blamed for. The original version is found on the director's cut and in the TV releases, whereas home releases used the original scene with the actual scene found on the deleted scenes, and in meWatch, the actual scene is used instead. Additionally, Neo initially considered Zoe Tay for the role for the mother of Kok Pin, but he ultimately went for veteran actress Xiang Yun because Xiang's age was more suitable than Tay, although Tay would be reconsidered again in the sequel, but it did not happen.
The film also touches on other issues including Chinese self-loathing (wherein Singaporean companies regard Western expatriates as inherently superior to local workers), suicide, the use of Singlish, and the differences between English and Chinese.
Production
Jack Neo's inspiration for the film was the Iranian movie Children of Heaven. Neo and his wife were moved to "holding hands and crying after seeing the love shared by the children", which motivated him to make his own movie about youth. After speaking with parents to find topics to discuss in his film, Neo learned that due to problems with the Singaporean education system, specifically streaming, students face considerable academic and emotional stress. This problem formed the core of his film, which he called I Not Stupid in reference to the social stigma that streaming places on students.
Neo also drew on a dissatisfaction he felt with the way the school system promoted deference to authority over self-reliance; he wanted his film to tell youth "If you don't want to change or make a difference, you won't. It's all up to you." In exploring these ideas, Neo spent over two years researching and editing the script — checking scenes for accuracy, verifying facts, and drafting dialogue. Altogether, the work went through thirteen different revisions, and saw over 50 children audition for the lead roles, before Neo decided to send I Not Stupid into production.
This production was carried out by Raintree Pictures on a budget of S$900,000, sponsored by Bee Cheng Hiang, Yeo Hiap Seng and Sunshine Bakeries. The production crew included Daniel Yun as executive producer, David Leong and Chan Pui Yin as producers, Ardy Lam as cinematographer and Li Yi as music supervisor. In addition to writing and directing, Neo also composed the theme song, which was sung by Chen Guorong. The actual filming took place at Braddell Westlake Secondary School and Westlake Primary School over a period of 24 days, and the film found distribution through Raintree Pictures and United International Pictures.
Reception
I Not Stupid earned just S$46,000 during a limited sneak preview run, prompting Raintree Pictures to embark on a massive publicity campaign, including invitations for teachers to discuss the film. After showing for four months on 30 screens the movie earned S$3.8 million, becoming the second-highest grossing Singaporean movie after Money No Enough. Following its success in Singapore, I Not Stupid was released in Malaysia, Hong Kong, Taiwan and mainland China. The movie also screened at the Pusan International Film Festival, Tokyo International Film Festival, the Jakarta International Film Festival and the 2005 Singapore Season cultural exhibition in London. Over 50,000 VCDs of I Not Stupid were sold and its sole distributor, VideoVan, declared it the "No. 1 selling VCD in Singapore". This claim was disputed by Alliance Entertainment, which said that 70,000 VCDs of Money No Enough were sold, but VideoVan called the comparison inaccurate, as Money No Enough was a mature title, rather than a new release.
Awards that I Not Stupid won include Best Chinese Film at the Golden Bauhinia Awards and Best Chinese Humanitarian Film at the 2002 Taiwan Golden Torch Awards; the movie was also nominated for Best Asian Film at the Hong Kong Film Awards, losing to My Sassy Girl. Critics praised the film for its humour and uniqueness, noting that it touched a raw nerve among Singaporeans. For example, Sanjuro of LoveHKFilm.com wrote, "I Not Stupid covers a variety of serious subjects, but all the while maintains a light comedic touch. Jack Neo a clever, well-crafted social commentary and a damn good film to boot." Other reviewers described I Not Stupid as "one of the greatest cinematic feats I’ve had the pleasure of experiencing" and displaying a "simple and yet excellent execution". In contrast, FilmAsia reviewer Soh Yun-Huei, found it "most shocking...that the Singapore censors actually allowed this film through in the first place".
Despite its political satire, the film received a positive response from the government of Singapore. Goh Chok Tong, then Prime Minister of Singapore, commended Jack Neo's creative talent during his National Day Rally address on 18 August 2002. In 2004, Neo was the first local film-maker to receive a National Day Award, and on 21 October 2005, he and Dick Lee became the first pop culture artists to receive the Cultural Medallion, Singapore's highest arts award. The movie sparked public discussion and parliamentary debate about the negative effects of streaming. In 2004, the Ministry of Education decided to merge the EM1 and EM2 streams, and on 28 September 2006, it announced that the EM3 stream will be scrapped by 2008.
References
- ^ Ciecko, Anne Tereska; Uhde, Jan and Uhde, Yvnone Ng (2006). Contemporary Asian Cinema. New York: Berg. pp. "Singapore: Developments, Challenges and Projections", pp. 81–82. ISBN 1-84520-237-6.
- ^ "I Not Stupid but is clever, really", New Straits Times, 19 September 2004.
- ^ "I Not Stupid – Review", www.lovehkfilm.com
- ^ Daniel Nguyen, "I Not Stupid – Review Archived 2006-11-01 at the Wayback Machine", KFC Cinema.
- ^ Funn Lim (2005), "I Not Stupid – Review", Spcnet TV.
- ^ Kenneth Paul Tan (2008), "Cinema and Television in Singapore", Brill Publishers, pg 164–168.
- ^ Karl Ho, "Jack as court jester", The Straits Times, 31 January 2002
- ^ Hwa, Dr. Tan Hooi; Krysania Tan, Regina Chan (April 2002). Interview with Mr Jack Neo and Dr Winston Hwang from the cast of Local Production "I Not Stupid", SMA News. pp. 5–10. Retrieved 17 December 2006.
- "THE CASTS Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine". Raintree Pictures Pte Ltd. 2002. Retrieved 17 December 2006.
- ^ Soh Yun-Huei, "I Not Stupid – Review", FilmAsia.
- ""I Not Stupid" – Production notes Archived 2006-11-04 at the Wayback Machine", MediaCorp Raintree Pictures. 2002.
- Wong Kim Hoh, "Who says I’m only good at drag?", The Straits Times, 20 June 2004
- "UNITED INTERNATIONAL PICTURES, MEDIACORP RAINTREE PICTURES AND SCORPIO EAST PICTURES RELEASE "I NOT STUPID TOO" Archived 2006-12-23 at the Wayback Machine". MediaCorp Raintree Pictures Pte Ltd. 2005. Retrieved 17 December 2006.
- "Lineup", Tokyo International Film Festival official website.
- "Britons get a taste of Singapore culture in I Not Stupid show", Channel NewsAsia, 6 April 2005.
- Camilla Chiam, "Two Jack Neo movies slug it out", The Straits Times, 12 June 2002.
- "List of Award Winner", Hong Kong Film Awards official website.
- Goh Chok Tong (18 August 2002), "National Day Rally Address Archived 2006-09-27 at the Wayback Machine", National Day Rally Address.
- "Jack Neo honoured with National Day awards". Channel NewsAsia. 9 August 2004.
- "Dick Lee, Jack Neo among this year's Cultural Medallion recipients", Channel NewsAsia, 21 October 2005.
- "No streaming, no stigma", TODAY, 29 September 2006.
External links
Films by Jack Neo | |
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