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Chaotic Crime-Comedy Lucky Grandma on Digital HD 6 November

All bets are off as acting veteran Tsai Chin (“The Joy-Luck Club”,”Memoirs of a Geisha”) swindles a ruthless gang in wildly chaotic crime-ridden comedy “Lucky Grandma“.

Fast-paced and full of heart, laughs and wicked black humour set in the belly of New York's Chinatown, “” tells the story of a cardigan clad, chain-smoking Chinese grandma who, in an attempt to get some cash, goes all in at a casino but lands herself on the wrong side of luck and the law. Having gambled away more than just chips after stealing money from a dead criminal boss, ‘Grandma' hires a rival gangland bodyguard to protect her from a band of violent crooks who are hot on her tail and ready to reclaim the loot.

With a film career stretching back to the fifties, actor Tsai Chi starred alongside Christopher Lee in the cult favourite “Fu Manchu”-film series, was a Bond girl alongside Sean Connery in “You Only Live Twice”, and starred in the ground-breaking portrayal of the lives of Chinese-American women, “The Joy-Luck Club”, but the revered veteran has arguably never been better than as the titular Lucky Grandma, in this frantic crime comedy written and directed by Sasie Sealy.

presents “Lucky Grandma” on Digital HD 6 November

About the author

Rouven Linnarz

Ever since I watched Takeshi Kitano's "Hana-Bi" for the first time (and many times after that) I have been a cinephile. While much can be said about the technical aspects of film, coming from a small town in Germany, I cherish the notion of art showing its audience something which one does normally avoid, neglect or is unable to see for many different reasons. Often the stories told in films have helped me understand, discover and connect to something new which is a concept I would like to convey in the way I talk and write about films. Thus, I try to include some info on the background of each film as well as a short analysis (without spoilers, of course), an approach which should reflect the context of a work of art no matter what genre, director or cast. In the end, I hope to pass on my joy of watching film and talking about it.

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