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Dying to Survive

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Dying to Survive
Traditional Chinese我不是藥神
Simplified Chinese我不是药神
Literal meaningI'm Not a Medicine God
Hanyu PinyinWǒ Bú Shì Yào Shén
Directed byWen Muye
Written by
  • Han Jianü
  • Zhong Wei
  • Wen Muye
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyWang Boxue
Edited byZhu Lin
Production
companies
  • Dirty Monkey Films Group
  • Beijing Joy Leader Culture Communication Co.
  • Huanxi Media Group
  • Beijing Jingxi Culture & Tourism Co.
  • Beijing Universe Cultural Development Co.
  • Beijing Talent International Film Co.
Release dates
Running time
117 minutes
CountryChina
LanguageMandarin
Budget$10.9 million[1]
Box office$453 million[2]

Dying to Survive is a 2018 Chinese comedy-drama film[3] directed by Wen Muye in his feature film debut. The film is based on the real-life story of Lu Yong (陆勇), a Chinese leukemia patient who smuggled cheap and generic cancer medicine from India for 1,000 Chinese cancer sufferers in 2004.[4][5] Dying to Survive stars Xu Zheng in the lead role, who also co-produced the film with Ning Hao.

Plot

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An aphrodisiac peddler, Cheng Yong, is in financial trouble. His store has not been making profits for a long time and his father urgently needs a large sum of money for brain surgery.

One day a man wearing thick layers of surgical masks comes to his shop. He asks Cheng to bring a cheap drug from India in return for a large sum of money. Due to patent protection, the Swiss drug imatinib is very expensive and cannot be afforded by most leukemia patients in China. However, an inexpensive generic version of it is available in India.

Desperate for money, Cheng agrees to risk smuggling the drug into China. As more chronic myelogenous leukemia patients start to buy drugs from him, Cheng becomes rich. His motivation starts to change after he witnesses devastated patients whose families had been pushed into poverty by costly cancer treatments walk away with hope for the future.

At the same time, Chinese police notice the availability of the contraband imatinib and vow to crack down on the unlicensed generic drug, as the originator company Nova (reflecting Novartis in real life) sues the Indian government for infringing its patent.

Cast

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  • Xu Zheng as Cheng Yong
  • Tan Zhuo as Liu Sihui
  • Wang Chuanjun as Lü Shouyi
  • Wang Yanhui as Zhang Changlin
  • Zhang Yu as Peng Hao
  • Zhou Yiwei as Cao Bin
  • Yang Xinmin as Pastor Liu
  • Gong Beibi as Cao Ling, Cheng Yong's ex-wife and Cao Bin's elder sister
  • Keith Shillitoe
  • Jia Chenfei
  • Li Naiwen
  • Wang Jiajia as Lü Shouyi's wife
  • Ning Hao
  • Shahbaz Khan
  • Nishith Avinash Shah as Translator

Box office

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On opening day, the film topped the Chinese box office and grossed $49.71 million, including preview screenings.[6] By the end of its opening weekend, the film had grossed $199.58 million,[7] the fourth biggest opening weekend ever in China.[8] As of September 15, 2018, the film has grossed $453 million, becoming the year's third highest-grossing film at the Chinese box office.[9]

Critical reception

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Pang-Chieh Ho of SupChina wrote that Dying to Survive "might be China's best movie of the year". She compared the film's social realist themes to Hollywood film Dallas Buyers Club, Indian film Dangal, and Chinese film Angels Wear White.[10] Though Simon Abrams of RogerEbert.com also compared the film to Dallas Buyers Club, he gave Dying to Survive two out of four stars, criticizing the excessive focus on Cheng to the detriment of the film's message and at the expense of other characters. He stated that "I’d have an easier time accepting the trite, asked-and-answered conclusions... if [the director and co-writers] were more adept at tugging at viewers' heart-strings."[11]

Impact

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The film sparked debate about the cost of healthcare in China. Chinese Premier Li Keqiang cited the film in an appeal to regulators to "speed up price cuts for cancer drugs" and "reduce the burden on families".[12]

Accolades

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Year Award Category Recipients Result
2018 55th Golden Horse Awards Best Feature Film Dying to Survive Nominated
Best Leading Actor Xu Zheng Won
Best Supporting Actor Zhang Yu Nominated
Best New Director Wen Muye Won
Best Original Screenplay Han Jianü, Zhong Wei and Wen Muye Won
Best Makeup & Costume Design Li Miao Nominated
Best Film Editing Jolin Zhu Nominated
14th Changchun Film Festival Best Feature Film Dying to Survive Won
Best Leading Actor Xu Zheng Won
Best Screenplay Han Jianv, Zhong Wei and Wen Muye Won
Best Supporting Actor Wang Chuanjun Won
42nd Montreal World Film Festival Best Screenplay Han Jianv, Zhong Wei and Wen Muye Won
5th Silk Road International Film Festival Best Feature Film Dying to Survive Won
Hainan International Film Festival[13] Best Film Dying to Survive Won
2019 38th Hong Kong Film Awards Best Film from Mainland and Taiwan Dying to Survive Won

References

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  1. ^ "《我不是药神》使北京文化涨停 会不会再现过山车?" ["I am not a drug god" to make Beijing cultural daily limit will reproduce the roller coaster?]. Sina Corp. 3 July 2018. Retrieved 3 July 2018.
  2. ^ "Dying To Survive (2018)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 15 September 2018.
  3. ^ Tartaglione, Nancy (10 July 2018). "'Ant-Man And The Wasp' Zaps $86M In Debut; China's 'Dying To Survive' Prescribes $200M – International Box Office". Deadline. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  4. ^ Hunwick, Robert Foyle (22 December 2014). "Chinese 'Dallas Buyers Club' founder charged with fraud". The Daily Telegraph.
  5. ^ Patranobis, Sutirtho (4 June 2018). "Movie on Chinese patients buying Indian cancer drugs triggers massive pre-release buzz". Hindustan Times.
  6. ^ "Daily Box Office > China (07/05/2018)". EntGroup. Retrieved 5 July 2018.
  7. ^ "Daily Box Office > China (07/08/2018)". EntGroup. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  8. ^ Tartaglione, Nancy (8 July 2018). "'Ant-Man And The Wasp' Zaps $85M In Debut; China's 'Dying To Survive' Prescribes $200M – International Box Office". Deadline.
  9. ^ "2018 China Yearly Box Office Results". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 15 September 2018.
  10. ^ Ho, Pang-Chieh. "'Dying to Survive,' a comedy about illegally importing drugs, might be China's best movie of the year". SupChina. Retrieved 6 July 2018.
  11. ^ Abrams, Simon (9 August 2019). "Dying to Survive Movie Review". RogerEbert.com. Ebert Digital LLC. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  12. ^ "Cancer drug movie strikes nerve in China, becomes box-office hit". Reuters. 18 July 2018.
  13. ^ Fan, Xu (20 December 2018). "New adventure". China Daily.
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