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Dragon Boys
Dragon Boys (Chinese: 龍在他鄉) is a CBC Television (CBC) miniseries starring Eric Tsang, Byron Mann, Lawrence Chou, Tzi Ma, Lauren Lee Smith, Steph Song, Darryl Quon, Christina Ma, Jean Yoon, Simon Wong and Chang Tseng. It aired on CBC on January 7 and 8 of 2007.
The film focuses on several stories about Asian Canadian organized gangs, set mostly in Vancouver and Richmond, British Columbia, Canada. One of them involves an Asian-Canadian Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) officer, Tommy Jiang (played by Mann), who is seeking to bring down two Asian gangsters named Willie the Duck and Movie Star (played by Tsang and Chou, respectively), in the process risking losing everything, including his marriage, as he goes deeper into the criminal organization. Eventually, the final showdown occurs between Movie Star and Jiang.
Another story focuses on the Wahs, an immigrant family from Hong Kong. The parents in that family (played by real life husband and wife Tzi Ma and Christina Ma) are concerned about their son Jason (played by Wong), who is constantly the victim of racial bullying. Jason soon receives help, but from a Chinese-Canadian youth with gang connections. They attempt a robbery but fail, and Jason is forced to flee for his life while his father Henry tries to save him.
The third story is about an illegal Cambodian immigrant named Chavy Pahn (Steph Song) who comes to Vancouver to seek a modelling career but is instead trapped in Canada with no friends, no passport and a $30,000 debt. Forced into prostitution at a senior gang member's wife's massage parlour because she cannot pay her debts, she seeks the help of a gang-enforcer (Quon), who befriends her, as means of escape.
In the conclusion of all three stories, Henry Wah receives a gun from Uncle Three later revealed to be his brother. Henry finds, confronts and berates Movie Star but finds himself unwilling to kill Movie Star as it won't make him feel any better. Jiang's investigations and frequent confrontations with Movie Star end up getting him framed and suspended from the RCMP, who receive a false complaint that Jiang was sleeping with a prostitute and had abused her. Jiang, who spends most of his time trying to catch and arrest Movie Star, who ordered a home invasion finally catches a confession from Movie Star, who admits to ordering of a home invasion which belonged to a cleaning lady who worked for Belinda Lok, Belinda who was sent the recording confronts and murders Movie Star after being handed over by Fox Boy to Belinda. Jason who was on the run from being involved manages to finally reunite with his family, as his parents scare off the triad teens who were attempting to silence him. Sorrows a Triad enforcer, protects Chavy Pahn from Fat-Ass and presumably kills him and removes Fat Ass's testicles as proof to Chavy has nothing to fear anymore but Chavy herself learns to become stronger and presumably takes Belinda's position however her relationship with Sorrows remains unclear. Willie Lok, Uncle Three and Au's older brother Lincoln Au discuss a drug deal but its secretly being tape recorded by the RCMP implying that the police will soon close in on them soon, thanks to Belinda who Jiang blackmails into recording their conversation to avoid jail time for murdering Movie Star. Jiang finally gets to see his family again but its left ambiguous if his wife will accept him again.
Before filming for the miniseries began, Mann spent several weeks with Richmond's RCMP detectives to prepare for the role. Besides that, a year was spent researching Asian Canadian gangs in the Vancouver area, in cooperation with the RCMP.
In addition, the series' writer Ian Weir immersed himself in Asian Canadian and Asian American culture before writing the script. He also worked with some in the Chinese community during the script's writing, checking to see what worked and what didn't. This resulted in some of the tongue-in-cheek references made about Chinese stereotypes by some of the characters, such as Jiang, in the miniseries.
The critical response for Dragon Boys have been overwhelmingly positive, in large part due to its depth and realism resulting from the performances of the internationally based cast from Hong Kong, Canada and the United States. According to CBC executives, the producers of the miniseries have been given permission to start a sequel to Dragon Boys. The writers have already started writing the script, and the production is hoping to start filming in the fall of 2007.
Dragon Boys
Dragon Boys (Chinese: 龍在他鄉) is a CBC Television (CBC) miniseries starring Eric Tsang, Byron Mann, Lawrence Chou, Tzi Ma, Lauren Lee Smith, Steph Song, Darryl Quon, Christina Ma, Jean Yoon, Simon Wong and Chang Tseng. It aired on CBC on January 7 and 8 of 2007.
The film focuses on several stories about Asian Canadian organized gangs, set mostly in Vancouver and Richmond, British Columbia, Canada. One of them involves an Asian-Canadian Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) officer, Tommy Jiang (played by Mann), who is seeking to bring down two Asian gangsters named Willie the Duck and Movie Star (played by Tsang and Chou, respectively), in the process risking losing everything, including his marriage, as he goes deeper into the criminal organization. Eventually, the final showdown occurs between Movie Star and Jiang.
Another story focuses on the Wahs, an immigrant family from Hong Kong. The parents in that family (played by real life husband and wife Tzi Ma and Christina Ma) are concerned about their son Jason (played by Wong), who is constantly the victim of racial bullying. Jason soon receives help, but from a Chinese-Canadian youth with gang connections. They attempt a robbery but fail, and Jason is forced to flee for his life while his father Henry tries to save him.
The third story is about an illegal Cambodian immigrant named Chavy Pahn (Steph Song) who comes to Vancouver to seek a modelling career but is instead trapped in Canada with no friends, no passport and a $30,000 debt. Forced into prostitution at a senior gang member's wife's massage parlour because she cannot pay her debts, she seeks the help of a gang-enforcer (Quon), who befriends her, as means of escape.
In the conclusion of all three stories, Henry Wah receives a gun from Uncle Three later revealed to be his brother. Henry finds, confronts and berates Movie Star but finds himself unwilling to kill Movie Star as it won't make him feel any better. Jiang's investigations and frequent confrontations with Movie Star end up getting him framed and suspended from the RCMP, who receive a false complaint that Jiang was sleeping with a prostitute and had abused her. Jiang, who spends most of his time trying to catch and arrest Movie Star, who ordered a home invasion finally catches a confession from Movie Star, who admits to ordering of a home invasion which belonged to a cleaning lady who worked for Belinda Lok, Belinda who was sent the recording confronts and murders Movie Star after being handed over by Fox Boy to Belinda. Jason who was on the run from being involved manages to finally reunite with his family, as his parents scare off the triad teens who were attempting to silence him. Sorrows a Triad enforcer, protects Chavy Pahn from Fat-Ass and presumably kills him and removes Fat Ass's testicles as proof to Chavy has nothing to fear anymore but Chavy herself learns to become stronger and presumably takes Belinda's position however her relationship with Sorrows remains unclear. Willie Lok, Uncle Three and Au's older brother Lincoln Au discuss a drug deal but its secretly being tape recorded by the RCMP implying that the police will soon close in on them soon, thanks to Belinda who Jiang blackmails into recording their conversation to avoid jail time for murdering Movie Star. Jiang finally gets to see his family again but its left ambiguous if his wife will accept him again.
Before filming for the miniseries began, Mann spent several weeks with Richmond's RCMP detectives to prepare for the role. Besides that, a year was spent researching Asian Canadian gangs in the Vancouver area, in cooperation with the RCMP.
In addition, the series' writer Ian Weir immersed himself in Asian Canadian and Asian American culture before writing the script. He also worked with some in the Chinese community during the script's writing, checking to see what worked and what didn't. This resulted in some of the tongue-in-cheek references made about Chinese stereotypes by some of the characters, such as Jiang, in the miniseries.
The critical response for Dragon Boys have been overwhelmingly positive, in large part due to its depth and realism resulting from the performances of the internationally based cast from Hong Kong, Canada and the United States. According to CBC executives, the producers of the miniseries have been given permission to start a sequel to Dragon Boys. The writers have already started writing the script, and the production is hoping to start filming in the fall of 2007.
