A Little Red Flower | |||||||||||||||
Native Name: |
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Director: | Han Yan | ||||||||||||||
Music: | Zhao Yingjun | ||||||||||||||
Cinematography: | Rui Zhong | ||||||||||||||
Studio: | Lian Ray Pictures | ||||||||||||||
Distributor: | HG Entertainment | ||||||||||||||
Runtime: | 122 minutes | ||||||||||||||
Country: | China | ||||||||||||||
Language: | Mandarin | ||||||||||||||
Gross: | $220.5 million[1] |
A Little Red Flower is a 2020 Chinese romantic-drama film directed by Han Yan from a screenplay he co-wrote with Jinliang Han, Han Li, Jia Jia Wei, and Yu Yonggan. It stars Jackson Yee as Wei Yihang, a teenager who has been in remission following a brain tumor operation years prior, and Liu Haocun as a fellow patient named Ma Xiaoyuan.
The idea for the film was conceived when Yan was working on Go Away Mr. Tumor (2015), a film about cancer patient and comic book artist Xiong Dun. A Little Red Flower premiered on December 31, 2020, and grossed $216 million, setting multiple box-office records in China and becoming one of the highest-grossing films of 2020. The film sparked controversy over its similar plot to the American film The Fault in Our Stars (2014). Unveiled documents revealed that a canceled Chinese remake of the American film had been in development and that A Little Red Flower could have potentially derived from it with no connections or credit to the original source. However, Yan has said that parts of the film were actually inspired by real-life events that he witnessed himself.
Wei Yihang, a cynical and reclusive teenager, has been in remission since his brain tumor operation two years ago. After meeting fellow brain tumor patient Ma Xiaoyuan, Wei begins to open up socially, as the pair share various imaginary travel adventures and try to live life as "ordinary people" which they are unable to be because of their respective illnesses.
At the same time, Wei begins forming a deeper understanding and appreciation of his family, who have unconditionally supported him during his medical difficulties. At one point, Wei sees his grandmother volunteering to sell her house to fund his medical expenses, with his uncles and aunts saying they would do the same, sending his father into tears.
Soon after, Wei is allowed to travel to a lake in Qinghai that he once saw in a hallucination where he was playing with an unknown girl. Ma and Wei set off their journey together. However, Ma faints on the train and is sent to the hospital, where she is given a grim prognosis.
Wei accompanies and cares for Ma during her final days, including shaving his head and conjuring a "potion of no return". During this time, Wei and his mother discuss the difficult topic of death, with Wei's parents recording and sending him a video depicting their life in case of Wei's death. Wei cries as he watches their video, now comforted by the fact that his parents will be able to carry forward even if he is no longer around.
After Ma dies, Wei packs up her belongings. One year later, Wei finishes his classes in college. He then makes a trip to Qinghai by himself, where he finally arrives at the lake he frequently hallucinates. There, Wei sees images of himself with Ma playing in the waters. It occurs to him that those images are not hallucinations, but life in a parallel universe where he, Ma, and all his fellow cancer friends are healthy and living ordinary lives.
A Little Red Flower was directed and co-written by Han Yan, who had previously worked on Go Away Mr. Tumor, a comedy-drama about the life of Xiong Dun, a comic book artist who became famous after creating a popular webcomic shortly after being diagnosed with cancer.[2] As that film tackled a person's individual fight against cancer, Han wanted A Little Red Flower to show how entire families struggled with the same problem, stating that the film was "intended as a spiritual guide and therapeutic support for the audience", and that it was the second part of his "Trilogy of Life".[2] [3]
During production, Han worked with film colorist Hua Cheng to give the film a "natural look", eventually deciding to use the DaVinci Resolve 17 tool to give color to the film and a high quality look.[4] Produced by Yin Lu and Lian Ray, A Little Red Flower began filming on June 12, 2020, in the Shinan District of the city of Qingdao.[5] To prepare for his role, Jackson Yee went to Qingdao one month prior to filming, lost weight in an attempt to become "closer to the character's morbid setting", began searching for information about brain cancer, and consulted a doctor to learn about patients affected by it.[6]
A Little Red Flower was theatrically released in China on December 31, 2020. It grossed US$39 million on its first day and $80.1 million over its three-day-opening weekend,[7] [8] breaking several New Year's Day's box-office records in the country.[9] By its second weekend, the film had grossed $160 million nationwide, becoming the highest-grossing film of 2020, in front of the American releases of Soul and Wonder Woman 1984.[10] It made $11.7 million in its third weekend, and $7 million in its fourth.[11] [12] By its fifth and final sixth weekend, A Little Red Flower managed to gross over $200 million, and was still ahead of both American films, but fell behind on the weekly earnings of Big Red Envelope and Shock Wave 2.[13] [14] The following weekend, the film was overtaken from its number one spot by the $398 million three-day opening weekend record set by Detective Chinatown 3.[15]
Following its release, several filmgoers claimed that the premise of A Little Red Flower was similar to that of the 2014 film The Fault in Our Stars, which had been produced by the American company Fox 2000 Pictures, and had also never been theatrically released in China.[16] The Hollywood Reporter, quoting user posts and comments from Douban, reported on January 13, 2021, that Fox had attempted to create a Chinese remake to The Fault in Our Stars in 2016, with the former president of Fox International Productions, Tomas Jegeus, confirming that a remake was indeed in development at the studio with Yin Lu and Han Yan producing, and Yu Yonggan writing the film's script.[16]
Shortly after, two official film notices announced that the remake was in the works, but after the acquisition of 21st Century Fox by Disney, the studio decided to drop the film in 2018 to work on Dil Bechara, the Indian remake of The Fault in Our Stars.[16] In 2018, a notice was released by the Film Administration for a project titled Hopeless in Love, which would be produced by HG Entertainment and Lian Ray Pictures, with a premise similar to the original remake that had been in development.[16] In 2020, A Little Red Flower was released from the same production companies, and with Yin Lu producing, Yu Yonggan co-writing, and Han Yan directing, but with no credit or mentions to Fox.[16] However, Han said that many of the scenes portrayed in the story were inspired by real-life events that he witnessed himself. One scene portrays how Wei Yihang orders a takeaway meal for a stranger who is walking in a daze on the street after losing his daughter to cancer, which he stated was in fact based on an incident he witnessed at the entrance of the Peking University Third Hospital in Beijing. Both Disney, who acquired Fox, and A Little Red Flower
Award | Date of ceremony | Category | Recipient(s) | Result | |
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Golden Elm Flower Awards | January 6, 2021 | Best New Performer | [17] | ||
Huading Awards | August 12, 2021 | Best Picture | A Little Red Flower | [18] | |
Best Actor in a Motion Picture | |||||
Best New Performer | |||||
Best Supporting Actor | |||||
Best Song | |||||
34th Golden Rooster Awards | December 30, 2021 | Best Director | [19] [20] | ||
Best Actor | |||||
Best Actress | |||||
Best Cinematography |