
That's how I first heard about “Finding Mr.

Right” one of the highest-grossing movies of 2013, they made Seattle the destination spot for Chinese living abroad. Was it refereshing to Chinese moviegoers? For they not only made “Finding Mr. She gets drunk at a nightclub, and after Frank gently suggests she not drink for the baby, she accuses him of looking down on her and declares, “As a mother, I’m a hundred times better than any of those women!” You want to be a million miles from her.
#Making mr right 2008 streaming movie
She walks into a room where a movie is being watched and gives away its ending. Huang (Elaine Jin of “Yi Yi”)-she demands a bigger room, then demands and gets Mrs. At the illegal maternity center-the house of Mrs.

She berates the driver who meets her at the airport (Frank), calls him “mouse boy” (for the gerbil cage he has in the backseat), and makes him carry her heavy, designer luggage everywhere. And since she can’t legally have the baby in China (since she's not married), she flies to the U.S., specifically Seattle (because she loves “Sleepless in.”), to have the baby there.Īnd she's just awful. Jia Jia (Tang Wei) is somehow both former editor of a gourmet food magazine and spoiled, pregnant mistress to a Chinese tycoon. The female lead? She's the worst of humanity. Here, the male lead, Frank (Wu Xiubo), is quiet and centered, lovely around his daughter, and with infinite patience around even the worst of humanity. Right” (Chinese title: “Beijing Meets Seattle”). How often is the man the moral corrective in a romantic comedy? Ever? Generally, the men in these movies have issues (think “Pretty Woman,” “As Good As It Gets”), and it's up to the woman to, you know, make them want to be a better man.
