Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - Behind-the-scenes tidbits of C+ Detective

Behind-the-scenes tidbits of C+ Detective

1: In the film, Aaron Kwok plays a native of China who was born in Thailand. In the film, Thai is often spoken. Aaron Kwok's countermeasure is to study hard and practice hard. The director hopes that Aaron Kwok can learn to sing Thai songs and strive to become an overseas Chinese in Thailand. Aaron Kwok has been listening to Thai CDs and studying.

There is a scene where a car is chasing an elephant. Aaron Kwok and the stunt master are under great pressure to make it realistic, and they are afraid of actually hitting an elephant. The crew rehearsed many times before they dared to turn it on. Luckily, Aaron Kwok shot twice and passed.

3. Actually, the director originally hoped that Aaron Kwok would have long hair, because the role of "childhood" in the play is also long hair. But just before filming this movie, Aaron Kwok finished a clean-up movie with less hair, so the director suggested that he cut his hair in two layers like most Thais.

4. When shooting this drama, Aaron Kwok not only showed people with vest shorts and sweaty sloppy images, but also jumped into the garbage dump, which Aaron Kwok resisted at the beginning of shooting.

Aaron Kwok was forced to jump into a stinking river while filming the chase scene. This scene made Aaron Kwok allergic to his skin. After the filming, he developed a lot of erythema.

6. Aaron Kwok said that he studied Thai with an interpreter at the scene, and he often spoke in a hurry, and Cantonese swearing came out, which made the director staring at the monitor nervous.

7. Peng Shun has added a scene in which Aaron Kwok and Liao Qizhi are chasing suspects in the city center, and the car crashes into an elephant. Because the weather was quite hot when shooting, the elephant asked the staff to splash water to cool down and refused to lie down and play dead. Later, Peng Shuncai asked someone to buy a basket of watermelons for the elephant to eat, and the elephant was willing to cooperate.

8. Shooting the flying scene, Peng Shun bluntly asked for realistic effect, so there was no road closure, leaving two prop cars to wear on the road, while he and a dozen staff members sat in another car and chased after them.