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Monster tribute to a mother's love

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More than a few filmmakers seem to like reflecting on their relationships with their mothers. But whereas many do so through cheesy tear-jerkers, director Soi Cheang Po-sui has gone for a thriller about the making of a monster.

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In Home Sweet Home, the director of such cult hits as Horror Hotline ... Big Head Monster has a family of three move into a new flat. But the mother, May (Shu Qi), realises the tenants aren't alone in the building when she sees something climbing the lift vault.

They refer to the thing as a monster (hence the Chinese title, Gwai Mut), but it's actually a horribly disfigured woman (Karena Lam Ka-yan). She abducts May's young boy - who's the spitting image of the son she lost years ago - and a cat-and-mouse chase begins, during which the monster's past is slowly revealed.

Cheang says that the original idea, which he developed two years ago, was to have a father as the monster. 'But the impact and drama wouldn't be as big, because men seem to be more matter-of-fact when it comes to doing - and being capable of doing - such extreme things,' he says.

Cheang, who made last year's surprise hit Love Battlefield, says the film is dedicated to all mothers, including his own.

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'I remember my mother hated me going into the film industry, and there was a time when I had nothing to do for six months,' he says. 'One day, she just walked over and put $500 on the table without saying a word. I cried. That's my mother - she might have been a hundred times worse off than I was at the time.'

One of the risks in the film was turning Lam - a local box-office darling - into a monster so scary that the image had to be removed from buses last week. Cheang wanted to show how far a mother would go to show her love for her son.

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