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  1. Crazy Stone
    2006 · Comedy · 1h 46m

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  1. over $1,500,000. Crazy Stone ( simplified Chinese: 疯狂的石头; traditional Chinese: 瘋狂的石頭; pinyin: Fēngkúang de shítou) is a 2006 Chinese black comedy film directed by Ning Hao and produced by Andy Lau. It was immensely popular, earning 6 million RMB in its first week and more than 23 million RMB (US$3 million) in total box ...

  2. Jun 30, 2006 · Crazy Stone: Directed by Ning Hao. With Tao Guo, Teddy Lin, Hua Liu, Gang Liu. What do you get when you have a precious jewel, a group of bumbling thieves intent on getting their hands on it, the mob wanting a piece of the action, and a loyal but mischievous security guard all thrown together?

    • (4.4K)
    • Comedy, Crime, Drama
    • Ning Hao
    • 2006-06-30
  3. Three thieves try to steal a valuable jade that is tightly guarded by a security chief. But the security guards are not the only obstacle these thieves are facing. An extremely unlucky internationally known master thief is also trying to get a hand on this piece of precious jade.

  4. Jie Du. Man with girl in the limo. Tao Guo. Shihong Bao. Shu Hou. Qingqing. In Theaters At Home TV Shows. Advertise With Us. A team of thieves races to steal a piece of jade before a clumsy master ...

    • (71)
    • Hao Ning
    • Comedy, Crime, Drama
    • Bo Huang
  5. Crazy Stone is a 2006 Chinese black comedy film directed by Ning Hao and produced by Andy Lau. It was immensely popular, earning 6 million RMB in its first week and more than 23 million RMB in total box office in Mainland China, despite its low budget and cast of unknowns.

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  7. With Memento style film structure, Pulp Fiction style story telling, and Snatch style plot and action, the first Chinese dark comedy, The Crazy Stone sets a milestone for Chinese films. The film title says all. It is a crazily hilarious film about three groups of people trying to steal a piece of emerald.

  8. Crazy Stone is a 2006 Chinese black comedy film directed by Ning Hao and produced by Andy Lau. It was immensely popular, earning 6 million RMB in its first week and more than 23 million RMB in total box office in Mainland China, despite its low budget and cast of unknowns. The movie was shot digitally on HD cameras and produced as part of Andy Lau's "FOCUS: First Cuts" series.

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