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Spirit of Hong Kong
Hong KongEducation

A fairy-tale ending to screenwriter’s horror story

A terrible car accident gave Yuen Kai-chi the chance to reflect on his career and discover the most important things in life

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Screenwriter Yuen Kai-chi spent two months in a coma after smashing his car into a tree. Photo: Nora Tam
Yu Yuet

In the 2002 Hong Kong movie Time 4 Hope, Nick Cheung Ka-fai plays a screenwriter in his prime who has just won a top film award and movie companies are fighting to hire him.

But one fateful night, a car crash leaves him crippled in one leg. He watches his fame and fortune roll away, along with his girlfriend and the people he’d thought were friends. Just as he thinks all his luck is gone, the luckiest thing happens – he meets a beautiful, sweet nurse, played by Athena Chu Yan, who replaces his disappointment in life with a new understanding of true happiness.

The romantic film was written by screenwriter Yuen Kai-chi, 54, based on his own life story. “It’s pretty much the same, except I’m not as good-looking as Cheung Ka-fai,” he jokes.

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Yuen still remembers his accident – he’d smashed into a tree while drink-driving and was in a coma for two months.

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“After I awoke, I was only upset about my situation for a few days. I was anxious to get back to work,’ he recalls. “But little did I know, the crash changed everything.” As in the movie, he was forced to take a good hard look at his life.

The award he had just won was for the screenplay of A Chinese Ghost Story (1987), which he wrote under the encouragement of renowned director Tsui Hark. He’s most grateful to Tsui for giving him incredible opportunities when he was young – “He was also the first to send me flowers in hospital, despite being in the US” – and holds deep regret for moments he was too immature to show his appreciation.

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