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Happy birthday movie review

Happy birthday, close to reality. There are many small details in the film, which have a strong sense of bringing in because of their truthfulness, and also make the film make the audience laugh in small places, thus bringing a little bit of emotion (xiaoxiang morning herald Review).

Happy Birthday accurately describes people's confusion about life in the new era and turns to an accurate expression of love maturity. The script of the film is very mature and tells a very simple story. Birthdays are a bit trite, but the feelings expressed are very delicate. The detailed description of the film adds a lot of luster to the film. The success of actor selection, Rene Liu's performance freely; Louis Koo also stick to the same place; Zhou Junwei, who plays his younger brother, is natural and performs well; Richard Ng and Ceng Baoyi are excellent. The music in the film is quite good, and the piano sounds are sometimes euphemistic and vulgar, and sometimes light and melodious. Absolutely enjoyable, photography and art are also wonderful, which complement the film content (Sohu Entertainment Review).

Happy Birthday is a typical small and medium-sized romantic literary film produced in the heyday of Hong Kong movies. It tells a fairly relaxed love story, not too special, but some details will make you feel deja vu, beautiful and simple. Although it is obviously a love story of minors, it is not intentional. It is just a little sad and humorous tone that a romantic literary film should have. In terms of overall quality, it is almost rare (Beijing News Review).

Happy Birthday tells a story with Rene Liu flavor. I didn't write anything important, and I didn't use words very skillfully. It tells a story in fluent vernacular, and takes turns from a male perspective, which is very objective. There is a paragraph about a woman, and then tell the story over and over again. Both of them are mortal. There is no explanation for their thoughts in the film, so the story goes forward with time, and many places make people sigh deeply. This kind of storytelling method is just like real life. Life always comes from new mistakes and proud regrets. There are still many small places in the play without traces. If you don't pay attention to them, they are all trivial things in life. On closer inspection, it is quite poetic, much like milk tea in life (Yao Qian Review).

Happy Birthday tells the emotional experience of urban white-collar workers. In addition to the slightly dramatic ending, the plot and connotation of the film are very close to the lives and thoughts of fashionable men and women (Sina Entertainment Review).