
Directors: Mak Yan Yan | Clement Cheng
Actors:
Teddy Robin (泰迪羅賓)
Nora Miao (苗可秀)
Ella Koon (官恩娜)
Lawrence Chou (周俊偉)
Denise Ho (何韻詩)
Merry-Go-Round, featured in Hong Kong Asian Film Festival, follows the story of three lost souls in Hong Kong. Merry (Ella Koon) is a terminally ill patient who goes to Hong Kong from San Francisco to find an internet friend Allen (Lawrence Chou) to confess her love out of loneliness. Eva (Nora Miao) is a Chinese herbal doctor going back to Hong Kong to stop his nephew from selling the herbal shop which has been passed down for generations. Allen is a man who's trying to find redemption by selling the herbal clinic to obtain a sum of money to help the wife of a co-worker.

After being rejected by Allen, Merry wonders to a coffin house, which stores coffins with the dead until claimed and shipped back to their hometown, meets Uncle Hill (Teddy Robin) who offers her a job as an assistance. While working at Tung Wah Coffin House and getting acquainted with Uncle Hill and learning his past, Merry desperately tries to win Allen's heart. Eva tries desperately to save the shop by peaking Allen's interest in herbal medicine. Allen is so filled with guilt he is willing to do anything to make sure his co-worker's wife and son is well taken cared of.
Merry-Go-Round maintains a good melancholy tone throughout the film. There were areas of the movie where the visual cinematography is beautifully done, but I didn't feel it was consistent throughout the film. The movie jumps back and forth from present to the past telling the love affair between Eva and Uncle Hill. It's always interesting to see the contrast between past and present and see how characters develop into who they are by getting a glimpse into their past. Merry-Go-Round moves in a decent pace which kept me engaged with

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