Review | Memories to Choke On, Drinks to Wash Them Down movie review: omnibus feature offers breezy, bittersweet slices of Hong Kong life
- These four short films, three fiction and one non-fiction, are a slightly haphazard but poignant look at life in Hong Kong
- The omnibus was written, produced and directed by husband and wife team Leung Ming-kai and Kate Reilly

3.5/5 stars
It might not sound like much of a pitch for a film to spend its entire 77 minutes watching characters walk, talk and reminisce, but this Hong Kong-set omnibus feature written, directed and produced by the husband-and-wife pair of Leung Ming-kai, cinematographer of such acclaimed films as Murmur of the Hearts and Suk Suk , and Kate Reilly, an American actress, does exactly that. And it manages to hit just the right note.
A breezy, bittersweet tone pervades in Memories to Choke on, Drinks to Wash Them Down, comprising three fictional shorts – all charming, chatty two-handers – and one documentary short that, while interesting, gives the compilation a haphazard vibe. If Leung and Reilly had instead stayed with fiction and added two more segments of matching themes and quality, this could well live longer in local cinema lore, instead of settling as a curiosity item.
It starts with Forbidden City, a disarming account of a day in the lives of an old Chinese woman (Leong Cheok-mei) and her very patient Indonesian helper (Mia Mungil). The former is a dementia patient who keeps telling tired jokes and recalling her early days as a mainland immigrant, and her desire to venture into town on this day is masterfully averted by the latter, who must be one of the nicest maids you’ll ever encounter on screen.
The wistful second story, Toy Stories, sees two young adult brothers take a trip down memory lane at the soon-to-be-sold toy shop that their mother has run in a working-class neighbourhood since they were kids. While one of them (played by Lam Yiu-sing, We Are Legends ) hints at the financial burden of his new life as a father, the other (Zeno Koo Ting-hin, I’m Livin’ It ) has other ideas for the business.