- 16/3/08
- 3,367
- 1,279
Xin lỗi chứ riêng cái tít câu khách đã nói lên 2 chữ về bộ phim: "RẺ TIỀN" 

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

Núi Gãy :-W


nó được đi liên hoan film thì phải suy nghĩ lạiXin lỗi chứ riêng cái tít câu khách đã nói lên 2 chữ về bộ phim: "RẺ TIỀN"![]()

Xin lỗi chứ riêng cái tít câu khách đã nói lên 2 chữ về bộ phim: "RẺ TIỀN"![]()
Rẻ hay ko thì vé cũng nhiêu đó giá thôi. Đừng cãi nữa. ^^xem đi đã hẵn nói nó rẻ tiền hay không.


Chắc ko được giải gì đâu.Touted as one of the first Vietnamese films to depict homosexuality both explicitly and positively, Ngoc Dang Vu’s Lost in Paradise is a contemporary tale of living on the margins of Vietnamese society. Khoi is a fresh-faced 20-year-old who makes his way to Saigon, where he befriends Dong and his boyfriend, Lam. They take the first opportunity to make off with Khoi’s cash and belongings. But when Dong is abandoned by his boyfriend and winds up on the streets hustling for money, he runs into Khoi again, and they strike up an unlikely romance.
While the actors were cute, I have to say Lost In Paradise was quite disappointing and unoriginal. We're never given any real reason to believe the romance between Khoi and Dong. The former seems to sit around home all day nursing injuries and doing little else, while the latter, Dong, continues his self-destructive hustling on the streets of Saigon. Dong's inability to leave behind prostitution is just one of many illogical plot developments. Worse, the dialogue is unbelievably on the nose. Why show a character's love when you can just say it? Queer film has evolved long past these feeble stereotypes in most parts of the world, but sadly not in Lost in Paradise.
Thôi thì xem cảnh nóng cũng được.