Movie story revolves around the life, fate of street children, homeless, specializing in selling lottery results every afternoon.Movie story revolves around the life, fate of street children, homeless, specializing in selling lottery results every afternoon.Movie story revolves around the life, fate of street children, homeless, specializing in selling lottery results every afternoon.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 1 nomination
Jayvee Mai The Hiep
- The Husband
- (as Mai The Hiep)
Hai Trieu
- The Compensator
- (as Dao Hai Trieu)
Storyline
Did you know
- ConnectionsRemake of 16:30 (2012)
- SoundtracksChay (AJ Dragon Mix)
Performed by Wowy
Written by Wowy
Produced by Ton That An
Additional production by Jan Stümke
Guitar & keys, drum programming by Jan Stümke
Synths & programming by Ton That An
Mixed by Sam Liao at Sam Liao Studio, Teipei
Featured review
Tran Thanh Huy's fresh and exceptional film is a testament to the blossoming of Vietnamese cinema. His off-kilter shots, handheld moves, and guerrilla camera sequences shot on Saigon's busy streets underscore the fragility of street kid existence and the tragedy of physically and emotionally-challenged "lost" youth.
In this case, 14-year old Rom -- a middleman for illegal lottery ticket sales to impoverished gamblers willing to mortgage their rickety tenement homes for a long shot at riches. It all goes down in a corrugated sheeting world of back alleys, gangsters, superstition and Rom's quest to find his parents who abandoned him as a boy.
It's a brutally competitive life for Rom (Tran Anh) and Phuk (Anh Tu) who egg on customers with claims of winning numbers. A correct guess results in big tips. A wrong one earns a pummeling. Both actors deserve kudos for their portrayals of streetwise adolescents in physically-demanding roles. Thien Kim is perfect as Mrs. Ba, a grandmotherly senior addicted to betting.
Vietnamese censors' slashing of "Rom" to 79 minutes in an act of cinematic vandalism adds to the film's mystique and earns its producers a badge of courage for having bypassed bureaucratic permission to screen it at the 24th Busan International Film Festival where it took top honors, a first for Vietnam. Hopefully, a director's cut will surface someday.
Tana Schembori and Juan Carlos Maneglia touched nicely on similar tropes in 2017's Paraguayan caper film "26 Boxes," but "Rom" now owns the genre.
In this case, 14-year old Rom -- a middleman for illegal lottery ticket sales to impoverished gamblers willing to mortgage their rickety tenement homes for a long shot at riches. It all goes down in a corrugated sheeting world of back alleys, gangsters, superstition and Rom's quest to find his parents who abandoned him as a boy.
It's a brutally competitive life for Rom (Tran Anh) and Phuk (Anh Tu) who egg on customers with claims of winning numbers. A correct guess results in big tips. A wrong one earns a pummeling. Both actors deserve kudos for their portrayals of streetwise adolescents in physically-demanding roles. Thien Kim is perfect as Mrs. Ba, a grandmotherly senior addicted to betting.
Vietnamese censors' slashing of "Rom" to 79 minutes in an act of cinematic vandalism adds to the film's mystique and earns its producers a badge of courage for having bypassed bureaucratic permission to screen it at the 24th Busan International Film Festival where it took top honors, a first for Vietnam. Hopefully, a director's cut will surface someday.
Tana Schembori and Juan Carlos Maneglia touched nicely on similar tropes in 2017's Paraguayan caper film "26 Boxes," but "Rom" now owns the genre.
- private-90505
- Oct 23, 2021
- Permalink
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Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $2,509,318
- Runtime1 hour 19 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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