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The Mermaid (2016 film)

The Mermaid (Chinese: 美人鱼) is a 2016 Chinese-Hong Kong romantic comedy fantasy film directed, co-written and produced by Stephen Chow, which stars Lin Yun, Deng Chao, Zhang Yuqi and Show Lo.[8] The film tells the story of a playboy businessman (Deng Chao) who falls in love with a mermaid (Lin Yun) sent to assassinate him.[9][10][11]

The Mermaid
Chinese theatrical release poster
Traditional美人魚
Simplified美人鱼
Mandarinměirényú
Cantonesemei5 jan4 jyu4
Directed byStephen Chow
Written by
  • Stephen Chow
  • Kelvin Lee
  • Andrew Fung
  • Ho Miu-kei
  • Chan Hing-kai
  • Lu Zhengyu
  • Ivy Kong
  • Tsang Kan-cheong
Story byStephen Chow
Based onThe Little Mermaid
by Hans Christian Andersen
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyChoi Sung-fai
Edited by
Music byRaymond Wong
Huang Fuhua
Wendy Zhang
Production
companies
Distributed by
  • Beijing Enlight Pictures
  • China Film Group Corporation
Release date
  • 8 February 2016 (2016-02-08)
Running time
94 minutes[2]
Countries
  • China
  • Hong Kong
LanguageMandarin[3][4]
BudgetUS$60.72 million[5]
Box officeUS$553.8 million[6][7]

The film was released in China on 8 February 2016, and broke numerous box office records, including biggest opening day and biggest single-day gross through its seventh day of release. The Mermaid had the biggest opening week of all time in China, where it became the ninth-highest-grossing film of all time.

Plot

Playboy property tycoon Liu Xuan (Deng Chao) purchases the Green Gulf, a coastal wildlife reserve, for a land reclamation project, and uses sonar technology to get rid of the sea life in the area. Unknown to him, the Green Gulf is the home of merpeople and the sonar (in addition to heavy pollution) has caused many of them to die or get sick. The few survivors live in an abandoned shipwreck in the gulf, and want to assassinate Xuan for his deeds. The merfolk send Shan (Lin Yun), a beautiful young mermaid, who has been trained to walk on her fins and hide among humans, to seduce and kill Xuan. At an extravagant party celebrating Xuan's business success, Shan, pretending to be a dancer, asks him to call her.

Xuan, believing that Shan is an escort, calls her number in order to make Ruolan (Zhang Yuqi), his business partner (and ex-girlfriend), jealous. Shan attempts to kill Xuan, but all her attempts backfire. Xuan decides to escort Shan back home, and along the way Shan takes him to a funfair where she works. While there, Shan shows Xuan there are more important things than money, and Xuan is impressed with Shan's simple, amusing antics. They spend the day together and develop feelings for each other. When Xuan finally takes Shan home, Shan quickly sends Xuan away before her people can kill him. The next day, Xuan takes Shan out on another date and proposes to her. Xuan admits that even though they only met the day before, he already knows that she is the one for him. A conflicted Shan rejects him and admits that she was sent there to kill him. Xuan kisses her, but Ruolan interrupts them. Shan runs out, and as Xuan attempts to follow her, Ruolan stops him. Angered, Xuan demands Ruolan to cancel their business deal.

That night, as Shan gets into an argument with the other merpeople, Xuan goes to Shan's house to talk to her. There, he discovers that she and her family are merpeople. Against Shan's wishes, the others capture Xuan and explain that he is killing them with his land development project. Xuan is about to be killed when Shan helps him escape. Octopus (Show Lo), one of Shan's friends, gets mad and realizes that she has fallen in love with him. Xuan returns home and, after the shock has worn off, decides to investigate the consequences of his project. He turns off the sonar but tells Ruolan that Shan is a mermaid and reveals where the other merpeople live. Ruolan tells Xuan that George, her henchman, also believes in mermaids and has been trying to find one. She is angered at Xuan's lack of affection and vows to kill Shan. Xuan tries to stop them but they dismiss him and proceed to the abandoned ship. The merpeople are attacked by Ruolan's mercenaries, and many of them are killed. The merpeople soon realize that the sonar had been turned off and return to the ocean. As Shan attempts to escape, she is shot and forced onto land. Xuan, using a jetpack, arrives in time to retrieve a badly-injured Shan. As he is carrying her to the ocean, Ruolan angrily shoots him, but George stops her before she could injure him any further. Shan insists that Xuan leave her, but he continues to carry her to safety. The police arrive and while Ruolan and George get arrested, Xuan collapses from his wounds.

Three years later, a student arrives at Xuan's home to thank him for setting up a scholarship for research into environmental protection. The student asks Xuan whether merpeople are real and if the story that he fell in love with a mermaid is true, but Xuan denies it. Xuan then introduces the student to his wife, "Lucy", who is actually Shan in a human disguise. Xuan and Shan encourage the student to travel and explore the world. The screen then goes to Xuan and Shan swimming in the ocean along with the other merpeople.

Cast

  • Deng Chao as Liu Xuan (刘轩)
  • Lin Yun as Shan (), the film's titular character "the Mermaid"
  • Show Lo as Octopus (八哥)
  • Zhang Yuqi as Ruolan (若兰), Xuan's business partner, the film's main antagonist
  • Kris Wu as Long Jianfei, a student who sets an interview with Xuan (cameo)
  • Lu Zhengyu
  • Fan Shuzhen
  • Li Shangzheng
  • Bo Xiaolong
  • Pierre Bourdaud
  • Ivan Kotik as George
  • Kong Lianshun (cameo)
  • Bai Ke (cameo)
  • Chiu Chi Ling (cameo)
  • Tin Kai-man (cameo)
  • Tsui Hark (cameo)
  • Wen Zhang (cameo)
  • Lam Chi-chung (cameo)
  • Yang Neng
  • Zhang Mei'e

Production

Inspirations

The story was inspired by Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale of "The Little Mermaid" in which a mermaid loves a human, but Chow wanted to make it a modern interpretation: "I saw great creative space and development potential from the story".[12][13] In another interview, Chow said: "I'm actually a big fairy-tale fan. All my previous titles can be understood as fairy tales. In the world of fairy tales, the evil are punished and the good see a happy ending. I buy that idea."[14]

Another inspiration comes from Chow's own childhood experiences. "I lived near the sea at a young age and I looked at the sea every day. I was frightened and curious. I was very nervous when I swam in the sea and felt there might be something hidden below. I’ve been fascinated with the (mermaid) story since then, and I felt I could do the film, creating the concept 6 years ago and beginning to write the script four or five years ago."[15]

Casting

Male lead and villain

Stephen Chow picked Deng Chao to play the film's lead male character Liu Xuan, even though Show Lo (who played Octopus in the film, and had previously worked with Chow in Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons) was also in the consideration. Chow explained that he ultimately chose Deng Chao for the lead role due to his overwhelming popularity in China, and he also had confidence in Deng's comedic talent, having observed his performances in the slapstick-style hit The Breakup Guru.[16]

Zhang Yuqi first worked with Chow in CJ7 and gained fame from that role. They both later fell out in a highly publicized contractual dispute.[16] But the personal relationship between them was not intense and Zhang once defended Chow when he was under personality attacks from former disgruntled collaborators and employees. When Zhang got a call from Chow, she was in a foreign country while her car broke down. She said yes to join the cast to play the film's villain, and described the role as a personal challenge.

The "Mermaid"

The selection of the female lead character, the "Mermaid" Shan, was one of the most publicized parts of the filming process. As reported on Oriental Daily News, the then 18-year-old actress Lin Yun was selected by Chow and his casting team from over 120,000 participants due to her demure personality in a talent contest held in Shenzhen. Reportedly, throughout the 13 casting-training period, Lin Yun caught the casting team's eyes for being calm and collected while other participants tried their hardest to steal the spotlight. According to Lin Yun, she entered the audition at her friends' recommendation, and has always admired Stephen Chow.[17]

The mass audition was from 31 July – 15 August 2014 when everyone could submit the CVs to the website for online votes and for the casting team to choose. A total of 43 contestants were selected after the first round, and then were shortlisted to 13 finalists to participate in the final contest held on 15 September 2014.[18] Among them, six were chosen to continue in the audition process.[19] Lin Yun eventually won the role of the film.

Filming

The Mermaid began filming in October 2014, with shoots taking place in Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Dongguan, and in Beijing. Before the filming, confirmed cast members include Deng Chao, Show Lo, Zhang Yuqi, and newcomer Lin Yun was from a talent contest held specifically for The Mermaid in Shenzhen.[16]

The film's production was a well-kept secret. A major set was built up in a large factory, which was used once for glass production, in Shenzhen as the shelter of mermaids in the film.[20] Reports say that most of the scenes in his latest film have been shot more than 50 times to meet his exacting standards. Chow has even personally coached most of the cast on acting-from lead stars Deng, Zhang Yuqi and Lin Yun to Show Lo,[14] as well as other cast members. To get the best result, Chow once let Deng Chao and Lin Yun eat 150 roasted chickens for shooting a scene.[15] Lin Yun said Chow has never shouted at her and would often watch out for her. Playing the role of a mermaid, Lin often had to put on the safety harness when filming her underwater scenes. As she was not used to it, she often incurred injuries all over her body, and on one occasion, Yun nearly became disfigured.[21]

Filming wrapped up in Beijing on 2 February 2015,[20] and then went into post-production, adding visual effects by Ken Law and his Different Digital Design Ltd., as well as by MACROGRAPH,Ltd. from South Korea, both of which worked for Chow's previous film Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons.[22][23]

Notable cameos

Directors Tsui Hark and Stephen Chow collaborated for the first time in The Mermaid. The two film directors had never worked together during their careers, despite each spanning three decades. Tsui Hark said they had discussed collaboration for years but Chow was so busy that Tsui had to wait until then. At a press conference in Beijing to promote The Mermaid, it was revealed that director Tsui Hark and actor Kris Wu would have cameo appearances in the film.[24][25]

Other notable cameos include actor Wen Zhang, who was in Chow's previous blockbuster Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons, and the comedian duo Kong Lianshun and Bai Ke (White. K) from the popular web series Surprise, and the 2015 fantasy comedy film Surprise.

Marketing

Stephen Chow was on a 20-city tour in China to promote The Mermaid, including many fan meetings. Nine companies, including China Film Group, Hehe (Shanghai) Pictures and Enlight Media, invested in the production, while four companies, Star Overseas, Hehe Pictures, Maxtimes Culture, and Union (Beijing) Pictures collaborated in terms of marketing and promotion.[26]

On 24 May 2016, Stephen Chow, Deng Chao and Lin Yun joined Chinese government ministers in Wellington for a screening of The Mermaid as the opening of the "New Zealand China Film Week" at New Zealand's national museum to bring cultural exchange between the China and New Zealand film-making communities.[27]

Trailers and "hunger marketing"

There were three trailers released before The Mermaid's debut. In the first trailer, the tycoon, played by Deng Chao, tells police that he has met and been kidnapped by a mermaid. In its final 90-second trailer released on 31 January 2016, it showed the love story between Liu Xuan and Shan, the two main characters, as well as the killing and hunting of the mermaids. An interesting twist and a historical link was seen in the second trailer, where there was a clue hinting at legendary Chinese mariner Zheng He's voyages in the 15th century.[14] However, much of the storyline was kept a secret and the trailers didn't reveal too much as the marketing team held the belief to make the trailers "less amazing than the actual movie", in order to lower the hype and expectation, and so that when audiences saw the film, they would be "surprised".[28]

Chow also adopted "hunger marketing" this time to maintain high secrecy and mystery by not letting anyone, including theater managers and film critics, see the film in advance at any premieres until it actually opened in theaters.[26]

Theme song and music videos

The theme song of The Mermaid is titled "Invincible". The song was written and composed by Stephen Chow and performed by Deng Chao. Film score composer Raymond Wong (Shaolin Soccer, Kung Fu Hustle, CJ7 and Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons) made the arrangement, while the music producer Patrick Tsang (who produced records for Faye Wong, Eason Chan and more) mixed it.[29] The song also has a music video in which Deng Chao sings in studio while Stephen Chow, Kris Wu and Lin Yun appear to sing the song too. Their vocals are never heard as there is only one vocal track by Deng.[30]

Adam Cheng, Lin Yun, Stephen Chow and Karen Mok appeared at a press conference in Beijing on 18 January 2016, to release the promotional song "You Are the Best in the World" for the film. The song is Cheng and Mok's cover of the popular old song from the 1983 TV series "The Legend of the Condor Heroes." The music video of "You Are the Best in the World" shows a duet by Adam Cheng and Karen Mok with Stephen Chow adding background vocals.[31]

Finance

A rumored deal of a two billion yuan box office guarantee was widely reported by the media. The deal would enable Chow and the film's producers to receive a huge chunk of advance income before box office grosses actually hit two billion yuan in China. If the gross eventually surpasses that figure, the distributors will take priority in collecting dividends.[32] Yang Wei, Chairwoman of Hehe Pictures, "admitted there was such deal but she would not reveal the exact number since the details were covered by a secrecy clause in the agreement."[26]

The "box office guarantee model" has existed for more than a decade now in the Chinese film industry. Chow's last film Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons, along with many other recent blockbuster comedies such as Breakup Buddies also used this kind of approach. It is said "The model offers not only risk control, securing the production party's interests, but also gives distributors priority in financing blockbusters-to-be, as well as showing their confidence in the films' future box office performance."[32]

"I can confirm Hehe Pictures is the principal party of the deal and paid all the box office guarantees," Yang said.[26]

Milestone posters

As The Mermaid has become the highest-grossing film in China, a new poster was released to mark the milestone.[33]

Release

The Mermaid was released in China on 8 February 2016. In the U.S., it was given a limited release by Sony Pictures on 19 February across 35 theaters.[34] In the Philippines, the film was also given a limited released in theaters on 11 May 2016, simply titled Mermaid, with Columbia Pictures Philippines and Edko Films as distributors.[35][36]

Box office

Buoyed by anticipation from fans as well as having the advantage of opening a day after the Chinese New Year, The Mermaid earned an opening day record of US$40.9 million, at the time this was the biggest opening day for a Chinese film and the second biggest of all time there behind the opening day of Furious 7.[37][38] US$1 million came from midnight screenings.[39] The film set a record for the fastest film to earn ¥1 billion RMB (US$152.4 million), doing so within four days of release,[40][41] and also recorded the largest five-day gross receipts (US$187.3 million).[42] Through its seven-day opening week, it grossed US$275.1 million, breaking records for the biggest seven-day gross and the biggest opening week of all time in China (breaking the record of Furious 7),[43] and the third biggest of all time, behind Hollywood films Star Wars: The Force Awakens (US$390.8 million) and Jurassic World (US$296.2 million).[44] It grossed US$120.4 million alone for the three-day opening weekend (Friday to Sunday), the biggest of all time in China and the second biggest three-day gross behind the Saturday-to-Monday gross of Furious 7.[45] This along with From Vegas to Macau III (US$119 million) and The Monkey King 2 (US$116 million) helped the Chinese box office to break the Guinness World Record for the biggest box office week with $548 million from 8 – 14 February 2016.[43] The previous record was set in the week of 26 December 2015 – 1 January 2016 when Star Wars: The Force Awakens led the box office with US$261 million and the box office that week totalled US$529.6 million.[43] The previous biggest Chinese box office week had been set in July 2015 when Monster Hunt, Pancake Man, and Monkey King: Hero is Back, combined for a then total US$253 million during their first week.[46]

On 19 February 2016 – 12 days after release – the film became the highest-grossing film in China with ¥2.45 billion RMB, overtaking the previous record holder, Furious 7.[47][48][49][50][51][52] In its second weekend, its receipts fell by 53% to US$55.9 million from 155,704 screenings for a 14-day total of US$419.2 million.[53] On 26 February, it was announced that The Mermaid had grossed three billion yuan (US$459 million) on its 19th day since release on Chinese mainland. It was the first film ever to launch the three-billion-yuan club in China's film industry and set a new milestone.[54] On 5 March, it became the first film to gross over US$500 million in China[55] and the seventh overall in a single territory.[56] The Mermaid grossed 3.39 billion yuan (US$525 million) in China,[57] Due to its success, its theatrical release in China was extended to June 2016.[58]

The film also found success outside of China, scoring the largest opening day of all time for a Chinese film both in Malaysia ($838,000) and in Singapore ($528,000).[52] It also opened in first place in Malaysia with US$3.8 million (ahead of Deadpool) and in Vietnam with US$2 million. In Singapore it debuted in second place with US$1.6 million.[59] In Hong Kong, The Mermaid broke the local opening day record with HK$4.96 million (US$638,352), surpassing the previous record holder Kung Fu Hustle (HK$4.42 million) which was also directed by Chow.[60][61] As of 3 April 2016, it had grossed US$7.69 million there.[62]

In the U.S., the film grossed $985,000 in its opening weekend – at an average of $28,144 per theater – making it the biggest opening weekend to date for a limited release Chinese-language film.[63]

The Apple Daily, however, reported that Taiwan would not be releasing The Mermaid.[64][65] Taiwanese quota regulations at the time permitted only ten Chinese mainland films to be released in Taiwan in any given year.[66][67] Chinese mainland movies were required to draw lots; only those with numbers 1–10 received permission. The Mermaid drew #44. This was the first time that Taiwan audiences missed a Stephen Chow film, and fans protested against Taiwan's cultural ministry about the matter.[68]

Critical response

Response to the film was generally positive. It earned a 95% score on Rotten Tomatoes based on 37 critic reviews. The website's critical consensus reads, "The Mermaid requires a willingness to embrace the strange, but backs up its wacky flights of fancy with a big-hearted fairy tale and a resonant message."[69] It earned a 69% score on Metacritic.[70]

Glenn Kenny of The New York Times noted that The Mermaid is "no ordinary fantastical rom-com…encompassing as it does weaponized sea urchins, incredibly delicious roasted chickens, man-octopus self-mutilation and other comic oddities."[71] Bilge Ebiri of New York Magazine praised the film, saying that it's "amazing how distinctive and strange Mermaid manages to be, especially given the highly derivative concept - how personal it feels, amid all the absurdist, go-for-broke humor. It deserves to be seen."[72] Dylan Kickham of Entertainment Weekly thought the film was "at its best when embracing the ridiculous, no-holds-barred, farcical comedy that Chow had become known for, thanks to films like Kung Fu Hustle and Shaolin Soccer. From the start, and throughout the middle of the movie, Chow and his actors present a full-force farce."[73] Simon Abrams of RogerEbert.com noted that "It doesn't matter if you don't like subtitles. It doesn't matter if you've never heard of the director. It doesn't matter if you've never seen a Chinese movie in your life. It will make you laugh. Guaranteed."[74] South China Morning Post's film critic Ben Sin gave the film three out of five stars and described it as "a solid dramedy with heart and, more importantly, a message", though he opined that, being Chow's second film where he stayed behind the camera, it "has to be disappointing to Hongkongers".[9] James Marsh of Screen International said that actress Lin "brings a delightfully quirky demeanour to her literal fish-out-of-water" and "the occasionally hokey CGI only adds to the film’s oddball charm."[3] Zhang Rui of China.org.cn commented that "The film has a simple and strong message to deliver: Love can transcend race and other barriers. You could hardly expect to see such a pure fairy tale and such a clean theme in blockbusters for a long time, but Chow has done it with a pure and childlike heart."[75] Elizabeth Kerr of The Hollywood Reporter said that "the fantastical Mermaid delivers its message without a shred of subtlety (and is unapologetic about it) but with considerable charm, wit and darkness to make up for it."[1] MovieXclusive.com gave the film four out of five stars and said that the film "is a complete package – a stellar cast which delivers fun performances, a decent story about environmentalism, and most importantly: a barrelful of laughs guaranteed to entertain the whole family."[76]

Accolades

List of awards and nominations
Award Date of ceremony Category Recipient(s) Result Ref(s)
12th Chinese American Film Festival 2016 Golden Angel Award Film The Mermaid Won [77]
Best Newcomer Lin Yun Won
Asian Film Awards 21 March 2017 Best Newcomer Nominated [78]
Saturn Awards 28 June 2017 Best International Film The Mermaid Nominated [79]
Hong Kong Film Awards 9 April 2017 Best Film Stephen Chow Nominated [80]
Best Director Stephen Chow Nominated
Best Screenplay Stephen Chow Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Zhang Yuqi Nominated
Best New Performer Lin Yun Nominated
Best Art Direction Chan Kam Ho Raymond Nominated
Best Original Film Song Composer and Lyricist: Stephen Chow
Performer: Deng Chao
(For the song "Invincible")
Nominated
Best Visual Effects Ken Law
Lee In-ho
Kang Tae-gyun
Marco Ng
Nominated

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External links

mermaid, 2016, film, mermaid, chinese, 美人鱼, 2016, chinese, hong, kong, romantic, comedy, fantasy, film, directed, written, produced, stephen, chow, which, stars, deng, chao, zhang, yuqi, show, film, tells, story, playboy, businessman, deng, chao, falls, love, . The Mermaid Chinese 美人鱼 is a 2016 Chinese Hong Kong romantic comedy fantasy film directed co written and produced by Stephen Chow which stars Lin Yun Deng Chao Zhang Yuqi and Show Lo 8 The film tells the story of a playboy businessman Deng Chao who falls in love with a mermaid Lin Yun sent to assassinate him 9 10 11 The MermaidChinese theatrical release posterTraditional美人魚Simplified美人鱼MandarinmeirenyuCantonesemei5 jan4 jyu4Directed byStephen ChowWritten byStephen Chow Kelvin Lee Andrew Fung Ho Miu kei Chan Hing kai Lu Zhengyu Ivy Kong Tsang Kan cheongStory byStephen ChowBased onThe Little Mermaidby Hans Christian AndersenProduced byStephen Chow Jiang Ping Ivy Kong 1 StarringDeng Chao Lin Yun Show Lo Zhang YuqiCinematographyChoi Sung faiEdited byCheung Ka fai Cheng Man toMusic byRaymond WongHuang FuhuaWendy ZhangProductioncompaniesChina Film Group Edko Films The Star Overseas Hehe Shanghai Pictures Co Ltd Beijing Enlight Pictures Shanghai New Culture Media Group Co Ltd Alibaba Pictures Group Limited Shanghai Tianshi Media Co Ltd BinGo Group Co Ltd Alpha Pictures Hong Kong Co Ltd Distributed byBeijing Enlight Pictures China Film Group CorporationRelease date8 February 2016 2016 02 08 Running time94 minutes 2 CountriesChina Hong KongLanguageMandarin 3 4 BudgetUS 60 72 million 5 Box officeUS 553 8 million 6 7 The film was released in China on 8 February 2016 and broke numerous box office records including biggest opening day and biggest single day gross through its seventh day of release The Mermaid had the biggest opening week of all time in China where it became the ninth highest grossing film of all time Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Inspirations 3 2 Casting 3 2 1 Male lead and villain 3 2 2 The Mermaid 3 3 Filming 3 4 Notable cameos 4 Marketing 4 1 Trailers and hunger marketing 4 2 Theme song and music videos 4 3 Finance 4 4 Milestone posters 5 Release 5 1 Box office 5 2 Critical response 5 3 Accolades 6 References 7 External linksPlot EditPlayboy property tycoon Liu Xuan Deng Chao purchases the Green Gulf a coastal wildlife reserve for a land reclamation project and uses sonar technology to get rid of the sea life in the area Unknown to him the Green Gulf is the home of merpeople and the sonar in addition to heavy pollution has caused many of them to die or get sick The few survivors live in an abandoned shipwreck in the gulf and want to assassinate Xuan for his deeds The merfolk send Shan Lin Yun a beautiful young mermaid who has been trained to walk on her fins and hide among humans to seduce and kill Xuan At an extravagant party celebrating Xuan s business success Shan pretending to be a dancer asks him to call her Xuan believing that Shan is an escort calls her number in order to make Ruolan Zhang Yuqi his business partner and ex girlfriend jealous Shan attempts to kill Xuan but all her attempts backfire Xuan decides to escort Shan back home and along the way Shan takes him to a funfair where she works While there Shan shows Xuan there are more important things than money and Xuan is impressed with Shan s simple amusing antics They spend the day together and develop feelings for each other When Xuan finally takes Shan home Shan quickly sends Xuan away before her people can kill him The next day Xuan takes Shan out on another date and proposes to her Xuan admits that even though they only met the day before he already knows that she is the one for him A conflicted Shan rejects him and admits that she was sent there to kill him Xuan kisses her but Ruolan interrupts them Shan runs out and as Xuan attempts to follow her Ruolan stops him Angered Xuan demands Ruolan to cancel their business deal That night as Shan gets into an argument with the other merpeople Xuan goes to Shan s house to talk to her There he discovers that she and her family are merpeople Against Shan s wishes the others capture Xuan and explain that he is killing them with his land development project Xuan is about to be killed when Shan helps him escape Octopus Show Lo one of Shan s friends gets mad and realizes that she has fallen in love with him Xuan returns home and after the shock has worn off decides to investigate the consequences of his project He turns off the sonar but tells Ruolan that Shan is a mermaid and reveals where the other merpeople live Ruolan tells Xuan that George her henchman also believes in mermaids and has been trying to find one She is angered at Xuan s lack of affection and vows to kill Shan Xuan tries to stop them but they dismiss him and proceed to the abandoned ship The merpeople are attacked by Ruolan s mercenaries and many of them are killed The merpeople soon realize that the sonar had been turned off and return to the ocean As Shan attempts to escape she is shot and forced onto land Xuan using a jetpack arrives in time to retrieve a badly injured Shan As he is carrying her to the ocean Ruolan angrily shoots him but George stops her before she could injure him any further Shan insists that Xuan leave her but he continues to carry her to safety The police arrive and while Ruolan and George get arrested Xuan collapses from his wounds Three years later a student arrives at Xuan s home to thank him for setting up a scholarship for research into environmental protection The student asks Xuan whether merpeople are real and if the story that he fell in love with a mermaid is true but Xuan denies it Xuan then introduces the student to his wife Lucy who is actually Shan in a human disguise Xuan and Shan encourage the student to travel and explore the world The screen then goes to Xuan and Shan swimming in the ocean along with the other merpeople Cast EditDeng Chao as Liu Xuan 刘轩 Lin Yun as Shan 珊 the film s titular character the Mermaid Show Lo as Octopus 八哥 Zhang Yuqi as Ruolan 若兰 Xuan s business partner the film s main antagonist Kris Wu as Long Jianfei a student who sets an interview with Xuan cameo Lu Zhengyu Fan Shuzhen Li Shangzheng Bo Xiaolong Pierre Bourdaud Ivan Kotik as George Kong Lianshun cameo Bai Ke cameo Chiu Chi Ling cameo Tin Kai man cameo Tsui Hark cameo Wen Zhang cameo Lam Chi chung cameo Yang Neng Zhang Mei eProduction EditInspirations Edit The story was inspired by Hans Christian Andersen s fairy tale of The Little Mermaid in which a mermaid loves a human but Chow wanted to make it a modern interpretation I saw great creative space and development potential from the story 12 13 In another interview Chow said I m actually a big fairy tale fan All my previous titles can be understood as fairy tales In the world of fairy tales the evil are punished and the good see a happy ending I buy that idea 14 Another inspiration comes from Chow s own childhood experiences I lived near the sea at a young age and I looked at the sea every day I was frightened and curious I was very nervous when I swam in the sea and felt there might be something hidden below I ve been fascinated with the mermaid story since then and I felt I could do the film creating the concept 6 years ago and beginning to write the script four or five years ago 15 Casting Edit Male lead and villain Edit Stephen Chow picked Deng Chao to play the film s lead male character Liu Xuan even though Show Lo who played Octopus in the film and had previously worked with Chow in Journey to the West Conquering the Demons was also in the consideration Chow explained that he ultimately chose Deng Chao for the lead role due to his overwhelming popularity in China and he also had confidence in Deng s comedic talent having observed his performances in the slapstick style hit The Breakup Guru 16 Zhang Yuqi first worked with Chow in CJ7 and gained fame from that role They both later fell out in a highly publicized contractual dispute 16 But the personal relationship between them was not intense and Zhang once defended Chow when he was under personality attacks from former disgruntled collaborators and employees When Zhang got a call from Chow she was in a foreign country while her car broke down She said yes to join the cast to play the film s villain and described the role as a personal challenge The Mermaid Edit The selection of the female lead character the Mermaid Shan was one of the most publicized parts of the filming process As reported on Oriental Daily News the then 18 year old actress Lin Yun was selected by Chow and his casting team from over 120 000 participants due to her demure personality in a talent contest held in Shenzhen Reportedly throughout the 13 casting training period Lin Yun caught the casting team s eyes for being calm and collected while other participants tried their hardest to steal the spotlight According to Lin Yun she entered the audition at her friends recommendation and has always admired Stephen Chow 17 The mass audition was from 31 July 15 August 2014 when everyone could submit the CVs to the website for online votes and for the casting team to choose A total of 43 contestants were selected after the first round and then were shortlisted to 13 finalists to participate in the final contest held on 15 September 2014 18 Among them six were chosen to continue in the audition process 19 Lin Yun eventually won the role of the film Filming Edit The Mermaid began filming in October 2014 with shoots taking place in Shenzhen Guangzhou Dongguan and in Beijing Before the filming confirmed cast members include Deng Chao Show Lo Zhang Yuqi and newcomer Lin Yun was from a talent contest held specifically for The Mermaid in Shenzhen 16 The film s production was a well kept secret A major set was built up in a large factory which was used once for glass production in Shenzhen as the shelter of mermaids in the film 20 Reports say that most of the scenes in his latest film have been shot more than 50 times to meet his exacting standards Chow has even personally coached most of the cast on acting from lead stars Deng Zhang Yuqi and Lin Yun to Show Lo 14 as well as other cast members To get the best result Chow once let Deng Chao and Lin Yun eat 150 roasted chickens for shooting a scene 15 Lin Yun said Chow has never shouted at her and would often watch out for her Playing the role of a mermaid Lin often had to put on the safety harness when filming her underwater scenes As she was not used to it she often incurred injuries all over her body and on one occasion Yun nearly became disfigured 21 Filming wrapped up in Beijing on 2 February 2015 20 and then went into post production adding visual effects by Ken Law and his Different Digital Design Ltd as well as by MACROGRAPH Ltd from South Korea both of which worked for Chow s previous film Journey to the West Conquering the Demons 22 23 Notable cameos Edit Directors Tsui Hark and Stephen Chow collaborated for the first time in The Mermaid The two film directors had never worked together during their careers despite each spanning three decades Tsui Hark said they had discussed collaboration for years but Chow was so busy that Tsui had to wait until then At a press conference in Beijing to promote The Mermaid it was revealed that director Tsui Hark and actor Kris Wu would have cameo appearances in the film 24 25 Other notable cameos include actor Wen Zhang who was in Chow s previous blockbuster Journey to the West Conquering the Demons and the comedian duo Kong Lianshun and Bai Ke White K from the popular web series Surprise and the 2015 fantasy comedy film Surprise Marketing EditStephen Chow was on a 20 city tour in China to promote The Mermaid including many fan meetings Nine companies including China Film Group Hehe Shanghai Pictures and Enlight Media invested in the production while four companies Star Overseas Hehe Pictures Maxtimes Culture and Union Beijing Pictures collaborated in terms of marketing and promotion 26 On 24 May 2016 Stephen Chow Deng Chao and Lin Yun joined Chinese government ministers in Wellington for a screening of The Mermaid as the opening of the New Zealand China Film Week at New Zealand s national museum to bring cultural exchange between the China and New Zealand film making communities 27 Trailers and hunger marketing Edit There were three trailers released before The Mermaid s debut In the first trailer the tycoon played by Deng Chao tells police that he has met and been kidnapped by a mermaid In its final 90 second trailer released on 31 January 2016 it showed the love story between Liu Xuan and Shan the two main characters as well as the killing and hunting of the mermaids An interesting twist and a historical link was seen in the second trailer where there was a clue hinting at legendary Chinese mariner Zheng He s voyages in the 15th century 14 However much of the storyline was kept a secret and the trailers didn t reveal too much as the marketing team held the belief to make the trailers less amazing than the actual movie in order to lower the hype and expectation and so that when audiences saw the film they would be surprised 28 Chow also adopted hunger marketing this time to maintain high secrecy and mystery by not letting anyone including theater managers and film critics see the film in advance at any premieres until it actually opened in theaters 26 Theme song and music videos Edit The theme song of The Mermaid is titled Invincible The song was written and composed by Stephen Chow and performed by Deng Chao Film score composer Raymond Wong Shaolin Soccer Kung Fu Hustle CJ7 and Journey to the West Conquering the Demons made the arrangement while the music producer Patrick Tsang who produced records for Faye Wong Eason Chan and more mixed it 29 The song also has a music video in which Deng Chao sings in studio while Stephen Chow Kris Wu and Lin Yun appear to sing the song too Their vocals are never heard as there is only one vocal track by Deng 30 Adam Cheng Lin Yun Stephen Chow and Karen Mok appeared at a press conference in Beijing on 18 January 2016 to release the promotional song You Are the Best in the World for the film The song is Cheng and Mok s cover of the popular old song from the 1983 TV series The Legend of the Condor Heroes The music video of You Are the Best in the World shows a duet by Adam Cheng and Karen Mok with Stephen Chow adding background vocals 31 Finance Edit A rumored deal of a two billion yuan box office guarantee was widely reported by the media The deal would enable Chow and the film s producers to receive a huge chunk of advance income before box office grosses actually hit two billion yuan in China If the gross eventually surpasses that figure the distributors will take priority in collecting dividends 32 Yang Wei Chairwoman of Hehe Pictures admitted there was such deal but she would not reveal the exact number since the details were covered by a secrecy clause in the agreement 26 The box office guarantee model has existed for more than a decade now in the Chinese film industry Chow s last film Journey to the West Conquering the Demons along with many other recent blockbuster comedies such as Breakup Buddies also used this kind of approach It is said The model offers not only risk control securing the production party s interests but also gives distributors priority in financing blockbusters to be as well as showing their confidence in the films future box office performance 32 I can confirm Hehe Pictures is the principal party of the deal and paid all the box office guarantees Yang said 26 Milestone posters Edit As The Mermaid has become the highest grossing film in China a new poster was released to mark the milestone 33 Release EditThe Mermaid was released in China on 8 February 2016 In the U S it was given a limited release by Sony Pictures on 19 February across 35 theaters 34 In the Philippines the film was also given a limited released in theaters on 11 May 2016 simply titled Mermaid with Columbia Pictures Philippines and Edko Films as distributors 35 36 Box office Edit Buoyed by anticipation from fans as well as having the advantage of opening a day after the Chinese New Year The Mermaid earned an opening day record of US 40 9 million at the time this was the biggest opening day for a Chinese film and the second biggest of all time there behind the opening day of Furious 7 37 38 US 1 million came from midnight screenings 39 The film set a record for the fastest film to earn 1 billion RMB US 152 4 million doing so within four days of release 40 41 and also recorded the largest five day gross receipts US 187 3 million 42 Through its seven day opening week it grossed US 275 1 million breaking records for the biggest seven day gross and the biggest opening week of all time in China breaking the record of Furious 7 43 and the third biggest of all time behind Hollywood films Star Wars The Force Awakens US 390 8 million and Jurassic World US 296 2 million 44 It grossed US 120 4 million alone for the three day opening weekend Friday to Sunday the biggest of all time in China and the second biggest three day gross behind the Saturday to Monday gross of Furious 7 45 This along with From Vegas to Macau III US 119 million and The Monkey King 2 US 116 million helped the Chinese box office to break the Guinness World Record for the biggest box office week with 548 million from 8 14 February 2016 43 The previous record was set in the week of 26 December 2015 1 January 2016 when Star Wars The Force Awakens led the box office with US 261 million and the box office that week totalled US 529 6 million 43 The previous biggest Chinese box office week had been set in July 2015 when Monster Hunt Pancake Man and Monkey King Hero is Back combined for a then total US 253 million during their first week 46 On 19 February 2016 12 days after release the film became the highest grossing film in China with 2 45 billion RMB overtaking the previous record holder Furious 7 47 48 49 50 51 52 In its second weekend its receipts fell by 53 to US 55 9 million from 155 704 screenings for a 14 day total of US 419 2 million 53 On 26 February it was announced that The Mermaid had grossed three billion yuan US 459 million on its 19th day since release on Chinese mainland It was the first film ever to launch the three billion yuan club in China s film industry and set a new milestone 54 On 5 March it became the first film to gross over US 500 million in China 55 and the seventh overall in a single territory 56 The Mermaid grossed 3 39 billion yuan US 525 million in China 57 Due to its success its theatrical release in China was extended to June 2016 58 The film also found success outside of China scoring the largest opening day of all time for a Chinese film both in Malaysia 838 000 and in Singapore 528 000 52 It also opened in first place in Malaysia with US 3 8 million ahead of Deadpool and in Vietnam with US 2 million In Singapore it debuted in second place with US 1 6 million 59 In Hong Kong The Mermaid broke the local opening day record with HK 4 96 million US 638 352 surpassing the previous record holder Kung Fu Hustle HK 4 42 million which was also directed by Chow 60 61 As of 3 April 2016 it had grossed US 7 69 million there 62 In the U S the film grossed 985 000 in its opening weekend at an average of 28 144 per theater making it the biggest opening weekend to date for a limited release Chinese language film 63 The Apple Daily however reported that Taiwan would not be releasing The Mermaid 64 65 Taiwanese quota regulations at the time permitted only ten Chinese mainland films to be released in Taiwan in any given year 66 67 Chinese mainland movies were required to draw lots only those with numbers 1 10 received permission The Mermaid drew 44 This was the first time that Taiwan audiences missed a Stephen Chow film and fans protested against Taiwan s cultural ministry about the matter 68 Critical response Edit Response to the film was generally positive It earned a 95 score on Rotten Tomatoes based on 37 critic reviews The website s critical consensus reads The Mermaid requires a willingness to embrace the strange but backs up its wacky flights of fancy with a big hearted fairy tale and a resonant message 69 It earned a 69 score on Metacritic 70 Glenn Kenny of The New York Times noted that The Mermaid is no ordinary fantastical rom com encompassing as it does weaponized sea urchins incredibly delicious roasted chickens man octopus self mutilation and other comic oddities 71 Bilge Ebiri of New York Magazine praised the film saying that it s amazing how distinctive and strange Mermaid manages to be especially given the highly derivative concept how personal it feels amid all the absurdist go for broke humor It deserves to be seen 72 Dylan Kickham of Entertainment Weekly thought the film was at its best when embracing the ridiculous no holds barred farcical comedy that Chow had become known for thanks to films like Kung Fu Hustle and Shaolin Soccer From the start and throughout the middle of the movie Chow and his actors present a full force farce 73 Simon Abrams of RogerEbert com noted that It doesn t matter if you don t like subtitles It doesn t matter if you ve never heard of the director It doesn t matter if you ve never seen a Chinese movie in your life It will make you laugh Guaranteed 74 South China Morning Post s film critic Ben Sin gave the film three out of five stars and described it as a solid dramedy with heart and more importantly a message though he opined that being Chow s second film where he stayed behind the camera it has to be disappointing to Hongkongers 9 James Marsh of Screen International said that actress Lin brings a delightfully quirky demeanour to her literal fish out of water and the occasionally hokey CGI only adds to the film s oddball charm 3 Zhang Rui of China org cn commented that The film has a simple and strong message to deliver Love can transcend race and other barriers You could hardly expect to see such a pure fairy tale and such a clean theme in blockbusters for a long time but Chow has done it with a pure and childlike heart 75 Elizabeth Kerr of The Hollywood Reporter said that the fantastical Mermaid delivers its message without a shred of subtlety and is unapologetic about it but with considerable charm wit and darkness to make up for it 1 MovieXclusive com gave the film four out of five stars and said that the film is a complete package a stellar cast which delivers fun performances a decent story about environmentalism and most importantly a barrelful of laughs guaranteed to entertain the whole family 76 Accolades Edit List of awards and nominationsAward Date of ceremony Category Recipient s Result Ref s 12th Chinese American Film Festival 2016 Golden Angel Award Film The Mermaid Won 77 Best Newcomer Lin Yun WonAsian Film Awards 21 March 2017 Best Newcomer Nominated 78 Saturn Awards 28 June 2017 Best International Film The Mermaid Nominated 79 Hong Kong Film Awards 9 April 2017 Best Film Stephen Chow Nominated 80 Best Director Stephen Chow NominatedBest Screenplay Stephen Chow NominatedBest Supporting Actress Zhang Yuqi NominatedBest New Performer Lin Yun NominatedBest Art Direction Chan Kam Ho Raymond NominatedBest Original Film Song Composer and Lyricist Stephen ChowPerformer Deng Chao For the song Invincible NominatedBest Visual Effects Ken LawLee In hoKang Tae gyunMarco Ng NominatedReferences Edit a b Kerr Elizabeth 14 February 2016 Mermaid Film Review THR com Retrieved 16 February 2016 Mermaid 美人鱼 Review Fmoviemag com 6 February 2016 Retrieved 12 February 2016 a b Marsh James 9 February 2016 Mermaid Review Screen International Retrieved 11 February 2016 Review The Mermaid Features Stephen Chow Behind the Camera The New York Times 19 February 2016 In Mandarin with English subtitles Distributors astronomical bet on upcoming film Mermaid China Internet Information Center 14 January 2016 Retrieved 14 January 2016 The Mermaid Mei ren yu Box Office Mojo com Forbes 31 December 2016 Stephen Chow Top Grossing Hollywood Directors Forbes Retrieved 31 March 2017 星爺起碼袋6億人仔 22 February 2016 Retrieved 25 February 2016 a b Film review Mermaid Stephen Chow s environmental morality tale South China Morning Post Hong Kong 11 February 2016 This Chinese production tells the story of Liu Xuan Deng Chao a young business mogul attempting to clear a recently acquired bay of its marine life for property development Russell Scarlett 8 March 2016 The Mermaid takes 505m to become the most successful film in Chinese box office history Digital Spy Billionaire man destroys a dolphin preserve Beautiful mermaid interferes fighting to protect her underwater land Mermaid plots to kill man ends up falling in love with him Man falls in love with mermaid too 美人鱼 2016 stephen chow the mermaid Archived from the original on 11 February 2016 Retrieved 29 February 2016 龙京 26 January 2016 周星驰 以后别喊星爷了 叫星仔 Chutian Metropolis Daily Retrieved 26 January 2016 看周星驰的 美人鱼 前 这十件事你必须知道 163 com 4 February 2016 Retrieved 4 February 2016 a b c Xu Fan 4 February 2016 Stephen Chow gives away nothing as usual chinadaily com cn Retrieved 4 February 2016 a b 肖扬 4 February 2016 美人鱼 票房破21亿 周星驰称喜欢被叫 星仔 Beijing Youth Daily Retrieved 4 February 2016 a b c Deng Chao Kitty Zhang Star in Stephen Chow s Mermaid jaynestars com 15 October 2014 Retrieved 15 October 2014 Newcomer Lin Yun is Stephen Chow s Mermaid thehivezceleb blogspot de 30 December 2014 Retrieved 30 December 2014 Official website for Stephen Chow s Mermaid audition talent contest mry leshow com 15 September 2014 Retrieved 15 September 2014 Stephen Chow Holds Open Casting Call for Upcoming Film Mermaid cri cn 15 September 2014 Retrieved 15 September 2014 a b 周星驰新片 美人鱼 杀青 163 com 5 February 2015 Retrieved 5 February 2015 Lin Yun The New Star in Stephen Chow s The Mermaid jaynestars com 22 January 2016 Retrieved 22 January 2016 周星驰 美人鱼 演职表 mtime com 5 February 2015 Retrieved 5 February 2015 China finds its Baahubali in Stephen Chow s The Mermaid mediawaledotin wordpress com 17 February 2015 Retrieved 17 February 2015 Legendary Stephen Chow Tsui Hark unite for Mermaid China org cn 1 February 2016 Retrieved 1 February 2016 STEPHEN CHOW PRAISES DISCIPLE KRIS WU Retrieved 22 February 2016 a b c d Zhang Rui 19 February 2016 How Mermaid becomes the biggest success China org cn Retrieved 19 February 2016 Chinese stars bring red carpet glamor to New Zealand film festival English China News Service 21 December 2016 Archived from the original on 21 December 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 对话 美人鱼 营销公司 创纪录高票房解密 qq com 22 February 2016 Retrieved 22 February 2016 Zhang Rui 8 January 2016 美人鱼 宣传曲 无敌 曝光 周星驰亲作词曲 Sohu com Retrieved 8 January 2016 Theme song Invincible for Stephen Chow s The Mermaid Youtube com 8 January 2016 Retrieved 8 January 2016 Stephen Chow s Mermaid releases music video China org cn 20 January 2016 Retrieved 20 January 2016 a b Distributors astronomical bet on upcoming film Mermaid China org cn 14 January 2016 Retrieved 14 January 2016 Gallery Stephen Chow s Mermaid milestone posters China org cn 29 February 2016 Retrieved 29 February 2016 Press release Sony Pictures To Release Chinese Blockbuster Mei Ren Yu The Mermaid In U S Theaters This Weekend PR Newswire SOURCE Sony Pictures Entertainment Sony Pictures is releasing the Chinese blockbuster MEI REN YU The Mermaid in U S theaters this Friday February 19th ColumbiaPicturesPhil 23 April 2016 MERMAID Official Trailer YouTube YouTube LLC Retrieved 24 May 2020 opening exclusively on May 11 at the following Megaworld Lifestyle Malls cinemas Lucky Chinatown Newport and Uptown The Mermaid ClickTheCity Surf Shop Inc Retrieved 24 May 2020 Jonathan Papish 8 February 2016 China Box Office Homegrown Hits Set Single Day Record Panda Hibernates China Film Insider Retrieved 9 February 2016 Patrick Brzeski 9 February 2016 China Box Office Stephen Chow s Mermaid Powers Record Single Day The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 9 February 2016 Rob Cain 8 February 2016 Stephen Chow s Mermaid Leads Chinese Box Office To 101 Million New Year s Day Bonanza Forbes Retrieved 9 February 2016 Rob Cain 12 February 2016 China s Roaring February Box Office Is Double North America s Forbes Retrieved 12 February 2016 Jonathan Papish 12 February 2016 On Screen China Mermaid Makes Billion Yuan Splash in Just 4 Days China Film Insider Retrieved 12 February 2016 Patrick Brzeski 12 February 2016 China Box Office Stephen Chow s Mermaid Nears 200M at Record Pace The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 12 February 2016 a b c Patrick Brzeski 15 February 2016 China Box Office Breaks World Record With 548M in One Week The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 16 February 2016 OPENING WEEKS Box Office Mojo Retrieved 16 February 2016 China Box Office February 12 14 2016 Box Office Mojo Retrieved 16 February 2016 Rob Cain 15 February 2016 How China Just Scored The Biggest Box Office Week In The History Of Movies Forbes Retrieved 16 February 2016 Furious 7 390 910 000 gt Monster Hunt 381 860 000 Box Office Mojo com The Mermaid Mei ren yu 526 848 189 gt Furious 7 390 910 000 Box Office Mojo com 美人鱼 2016 movie douban com in Chinese Douban Retrieved 24 December 2015 Zhang Rui 19 February 2016 Mermaid takes crown of highest grossing Chinese film China org cn Retrieved 19 February 2016 Patrick Brzeski 19 February 2016 China Box Office Stephen Chow s Mermaid Becomes Highest Grossing Film Ever The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 20 February 2016 a b Nancy Tartaglione 20 February 2016 The Mermaid Becomes China s Biggest Movie Ever Will Hit 400M At Weekend Deadline Hollywood Retrieved 20 February 2016 BOX OFFICE DATA FOR FRIDAY 19TH FEBRUARY TO SUNDAY 21ST FEBRUARY 2016 SUNDAY FIGURES ARE ESTIMATES AS OF 21 30 CST Box Office Retrieved 21 February 2016 再创纪录 美人鱼 上映19天大破30亿 sina com cn Retrieved 26 February 2016 Frater Patrick 5 March 2016 The Mermaid Reaches 500 Million at Chinese Box Office Variety Retrieved 6 March 2016 Busch Anita 6 March 2016 Zootopia Is Disney Animation s Biggest Debut Ever In China Russia Mermaid Makes History With 503M In China Int l Box Office Sunday Deadline Hollywood Retrieved 6 March 2016 Box office revenues set new record in Q1 China org cn 4 April 2016 Retrieved 4 April 2016 美人鱼 延长放映至6月8日 发行方 给市场提供一种可能 China org cn 3 March 2016 Retrieved 3 March 2016 Anita Busch 16 February 2016 Deadpool Zoolander 2 How To Be Single All Jump Higher Int l Box Office Final Deadline Hollywood Retrieved 17 February 2016 贏晒 美人魚 破香港開畫票房紀錄 hk on cc 11 February 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2016 Vivienne Chow 18 February 2016 Grossing more than 2 billion yuan in nine days Stephen Chow s The Mermaid set to become mainland China s highest grossing film ever www scmp com Retrieved 19 February 2016 The Mermaid Box Office Mojo 3 April 2016 Retrieved 30 December 2016 Brad Brevet 21 February 2016 Deadpool Tops 490M Worldwide Risen Witch amp Mermaid Open Strong Box Office Mojo Retrieved 21 February 2016 更新 文化封閉 台灣無緣看周星馳 美人魚 Apple Daily 周星馳 美人魚 遇陳規攔路 今年台灣上映無望 Apple Daily 周星馳 美人魚 大陸電影 台灣過年確定看不到了 ETtoday 東森新聞雲 美人魚 被視為中國片 台灣過年看不到星爺 Liberty Times 自由時報 蔡明華 林詳澤 謝孟哲 宋卉凌 20 February 2016 美人魚 票房狂掃百億 台灣因 這些 無緣上映 SET News Retrieved 20 February 2016 The Mermaid Mei ren yu Rotten Tomatoes The Mermaid Metacritic Kenny Glenn 19 February 2016 Review The Mermaid Features Stephen Chow Behind the Camera New York Times Retrieved 19 February 2016 Ebiri Bilge 20 February 2016 The Overlooked Mermaid Is a Hilarious Fantasy New York Retrieved 20 February 2016 Abrams Simon 19 February 2016 The Mermaid EW review Entertainment Weekly Retrieved 20 February 2016 Abrams Simon 21 February 2016 Movie Review The Mermaid RogerEbert com Retrieved 21 February 2016 Zhang Rui 19 February 2016 Mermaid A modern fairy tale with Chow s flavor China org cn Retrieved 19 February 2016 MERMAID 美人鱼 2016 MovieXclusive com 8 February 2016 第十二屆中美電影節星光熠熠 開幕式暨金天使獎頒獎典禮耀動洛城 cafilmfestival org Retrieved 15 May 2017 11th Asian Film Awards Nominees 2017 21 March 2017 Retrieved 17 April 2017 McNary Dave 2 March 2017 Saturn Awards Nominations 2017 Rogue One Walking Dead Lead Variety Retrieved 2 March 2017 Nomination List of The 36th Hong Kong Film Awards in Chinese External links EditThe Mermaid at IMDb The Mermaid at Metacritic The Mermaid at Rotten Tomatoes Portals Film China Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Mermaid 2016 film amp oldid 1122698439, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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