Breakup Buddies is a 2014 Chinese romantic comedy and road film directed by Ning Hao.[2][3] It stars Huang Bo and Xu Zheng as buddies on a wild 3,000-kilometre cross-country journey from Beijing to Dali City (via Zhangjiajie).
Breakup Buddies | |
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Chinese | 心花路放 |
Hanyu Pinyin | Xīn Huā Lù Fàng |
Directed by | Ning Hao |
Written by |
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Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Song Xiaofei |
Edited by | Du Yuan |
Music by |
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Production companies |
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Release dates |
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Running time | 116 minutes |
Country | China |
Language | Mandarin |
Box office | US$195,300,000[1] |
The film premiered at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival on September 7, 2014,[4] and was released domestically on September 30, 2014. It grossed over $195 million to become one of the highest-grossing films in China.
Plot
Womanizer Hao Yi (Xu Zheng) takes his best friend Geng Hao (Huang Bo) on a road trip to Dali City in Yunnan — China's unofficial capital of one-night stands — to help him recover from a devastating divorce. Years before, Kang Xiaoyu (Yuan Quan) had traversed the same route to Dali where she met her future husband.
Cast
- Huang Bo as Geng Hao
- Xu Zheng as Hao Yi
- Yuan Quan as Kang Xiaoyu
- Zhou Dongyu as Zhou Lijuan, a.k.a. "Christina"
- Tao Hui as Avatar girl
- Yue Xiaojun as an innkeeper
- Shen Teng as a bar owner
- Zhang Li as a Si Qing
- Jiao Junyan as Xiao Bei
- Ma Su as Shasha
- Liu Meihan
- Xiong Naijin as Kang Xiaoyu's best friend
- Liu Yiwei as a cop
- Wang Yanhui as a crime boss
- Lei Jiayin as a gangster
- Yong Mengting as a cosplay girl
- Liang Hao as Li Maomao, Zhou Lijuan's boyfriend
- Guo Tao as Kang Xiaoyu's attorney (cameo)
- Li Chen as Kang Xiaoyu's new lover (cameo)
- Xia Yu as Kang Xiaoyu's ex (cameo)
Review
Derek Elley of Film Business Asia gave Breakup Buddies a 7 out of 10, calling it "Ning Hao's maturest film so far" and praising the performances as "strong".[5]
Box office
The film grossed ¥1.16971 billion at the Chinese box office[6] and a total of US$195.3 million internationally.[1] The Guardian's Phil Hoad mentioning the film as one of "a few, giant, isolated local hits".[7]