
A Home with a View
Comedy
Overview
The Lo family live in an old flat in the middle of a noisy neighborhood: father, mother, unemployed son, teenage daughter and his elderly, disabled father. Now a billboard is blocking their perfect view of the harbor, and their already chaotic life becomes sheer madness.
Top Cast


Louis Koo
Louis Koo
Wong Siu Choi
Louis Koo
Wong Siu Choi


Francis Ng Chun-Yu
Francis Ng Chun-Yu
Lo Wai Man
Francis Ng Chun-Yu
Lo Wai Man


Anita Yuen Wing-Yee
Anita Yuen Wing-Yee
Suk Yin
Anita Yuen Wing-Yee
Suk Yin


Cheung Tat-Ming
Cheung Tat-Ming
Grandpa
Cheung Tat-Ming
Grandpa


Ng Siu-Hin
Ng Siu-Hin
Lo Bun Hong
Ng Siu-Hin
Lo Bun Hong
Jocelyn Choi
Jocelyn Choi
Lo Yu Sze
Jocelyn Choi
Lo Yu Sze


Lam Suet
Lam Suet
Butcher
Lam Suet
Butcher


Lo Hoi-Pang
Lo Hoi-Pang
Chan Tai Hung
Lo Hoi-Pang
Chan Tai Hung


Anthony Wong Chau-Sang
Anthony Wong Chau-Sang
Cheung
Anthony Wong Chau-Sang
Cheung


Lam Tze-Chung
Lam Tze-Chung
Mr. Lee
Lam Tze-Chung
Mr. Lee
Similar Movies

Isaki Lacuesta presents a social satire in which five common or garden citizens, from a country pretty much identical to our own, see their lives ripped apart by the economic crisis. With nothing more to lose, they come up with a crazy plan to save the Spanish and world economy: kidnap the chairman of the Central Bank and demand that he return everything to the way it used to be.

Simmons, best-known for her photographs of miniature rooms populated by dolls and of oversized objects—such as a house, birthday cake, and pistol—balanced on female legs, both human and fake, brings these characters to life in a three-act mini-musical. The film is inspired by three distinct periods of Simmons’s photographic work: vintage hand puppets, ventriloquist dummies and walking objects enact tales of ambition, disappointment, love, loss, and regret. Working with composer Michael Rohaytn ("Personal Velocity") and cameraman Ed Lachman ("The Virgin Suicides" and "Far From Heaven"), Simmons’s puppets come to life in miniature domestic scenes that echo real life.

Gabrielle is writing an illustrated guide book on sex called 'How To Do It.' At a book signing she meets Saul, an established male writer who is straight. She both loves and hates his work which has seeped into her secular Jewish life from childhood. The more Gabrielle tells him about her book the more he wants to know about her life; the relationship with her younger girlfriend Olivia and her determination to "stop using my penis in sex". As her book takes form, is Saul jealous or desirous? Their friendship is tested as is Gabrielle's relationship with Olivia. The film muses on how we write, how we draw. And the nature of "story" and what it makes us do.


















