
Be with Me
Drama · Romance
Overview
Three tales of love wrap around the true story of a blind and deaf woman named Theresa Chan. In the first an elderly shopkeeper is devoted to his sick wife. In the second, two teenage girls become soul mates and lovers. In the third a chubby security guard tries to find the courage to woo a beautiful woman who works in his building.
Top Cast
Theresa Poh Lin Chan
Theresa Poh Lin Chan
Herself (segment "Meant to Be")
Theresa Poh Lin Chan
Herself (segment "Meant to Be")
Chiew Sung Ching
Chiew Sung Ching
Father (segment "Meant to Be")
Chiew Sung Ching
Father (segment "Meant to Be")
Lawrence Yong
Lawrence Yong
Son
Lawrence Yong
Son
Leong Kooi Eng
Leong Kooi Eng
Mother
Leong Kooi Eng
Mother
Elizabeth Choy
Elizabeth Choy
Herself
Elizabeth Choy
Herself
Seet Keng Yew
Seet Keng Yew
Security Guard
Seet Keng Yew
Security Guard


Lynn Poh
Lynn Poh
Ann
Lynn Poh
Ann
Ng Sway Ah
Ng Sway Ah
Father (segment "Finding Love")
Ng Sway Ah
Father (segment "Finding Love")
Lim Poh Huat
Lim Poh Huat
Brother (segment "Finding Love")
Lim Poh Huat
Brother (segment "Finding Love")
Sanwan Bin Rais
Sanwan Bin Rais
Security Supervisor (segment "Finding Love")
Sanwan Bin Rais
Security Supervisor (segment "Finding Love")
Similar Movies

A 2006 Singaporean film and the sequel to the 2002 film, I Not Stupid. A satirical comedy, I Not Stupid Too portrays the lives, struggles and adventures of three Singaporean youths - 15-year-old Tom, his 8-year-old brother Jerry and their 15-year-old friend Chengcai - who have a strained relationship with their parents. The film explores the issue of poor parent-child communication.

Two Singaporean girls join together to form the Papaya Sisters, a getai group that sings at performances during the seventh lunar month. Big Papaya is estranged from her mother, who disapproves of her performances, whilst Little Papaya is an orphan who suffers from terminal cancer. The two are assisted by Auntie Ling and her son, Guan Yin. The two soon rise to the top of the Singaporean getai scene singing traditional Hokkien songs, but their fame brings along with it the enmity of the Durian Sisters, a rival group of techno-singing Eurasian girls.

Mia, an ex-prostitute, is trapped in a loveless marriage with the abusive Quan (Sunny Pang, who also stars in Headshot in this year’s Festival lineup), a butcher who runs a roast meat shop. When she meets sensitive funeral director Wu, their passion for one another escalates into an affair. But the path to true love is fraught with jealousy, forcing someone to make a deadly move.

This short film was commissioned to commemorate the 60th anniversary of May 13, 1954, in which a peaceful assembly of more than one thousand boys and girls in Singapore was brutally broken up by riot police. The students had gathered to seek exemption for classmates affected by a new conscription law. To continue their protest, 800 students proceed to occupy Chinese High School. The film depicts a possible day in the occupation.

When Singapore surrendered to the Japanese in 1942, the Allied POWs, mostly British but including a few Americans, were incarcerated in Changi prison. Among the American prisoners is Cpl. King, a wheeler-dealer who has managed to establish a pretty good life for himself in the camp. King soon forms a friendship with an upper-class British officer who is fascinated with King's enthusiastic approach to life.
















