How to Make Millions Before Grandma Dies movie… | Little White Lies

How to Make Mil­lions Before Grand­ma Dies review – a Thai charmer

21 Dec 2024 / Released: 26 Dec 2024

Two people, an elderly woman and a young man, standing in a garden with a wooden shed in the background. The woman is holding an umbrella, and the man is pushing a lawn mower.
Two people, an elderly woman and a young man, standing in a garden with a wooden shed in the background. The woman is holding an umbrella, and the man is pushing a lawn mower.
3

Anticipation.

Thai megahit that's also the country's Oscars entry.

4

Enjoyment.

Touching, funny, see it before the inevitable Hollywood remake.

4

In Retrospect.

A beautifully-judged and performed dramedy that's sentimental without ever being saccharine.

This win­ning com­e­dy about a grand­son whose empa­thy is dri­ven by a size­able inher­i­tance is obvi­ous grist for the US remake mill.

There’s an inevitabil­i­ty that when­ev­er a non-Eng­lish-lan­guage film proves a notable crossover hit inter­na­tion­al­ly, talk of a Hol­ly­wood redo will soon arise. In recent years, an Amer­i­can-set remake of hor­ror Train to Busan is just one of sev­er­al notable projects caught up in stag­gered devel­op­ment with­out mak­ing it to cam­era, despite the Unit­ed States’ train infra­struc­ture being a ques­tion­able fit for that par­tic­u­lar film’s set­up. It’s a hack­neyed thing to say but the inter­na­tion­al films that cross over, to a lev­el that attracts Hol­ly­wood pro­duc­ers, do so because the cul­tur­al specifics of their sto­ry­telling ulti­mate­ly tap into some­thing universal.

That said, it’s inter­est­ing that some of the more suc­cess­ful Eng­lish-lan­guage remakes of recent years – com­mer­cial­ly or with awards bod­ies – have been those adapt­ing films with fair­ly broad premis­es in the first place, where the tem­plate for even a half-com­pe­tent trans­la­tion is already there. While not reach­ing the over $400 mil­lion world­wide gross of French film The Intouch­ables (released as Untouch­able in the UK), Amer­i­can remake The Upside still banked over $100 mil­lion upon release in ear­ly 2019.

And then there’s Bel­gian dram­e­dy La Famille Béli­er being remade as the most puz­zling Oscars titan of late, CODA. A sim­i­lar awards-bait remake fate may befall How to Make Mil­lions Before Grand­ma Dies, a Thai film that’s become an unprece­dent­ed com­mer­cial suc­cess in Asian mar­kets. For much of direc­tor Pat Boonnitipat’s debut fea­ture, you can spot all the ways in which this sto­ry could so eas­i­ly be trans­lat­ed to many oth­er ter­ri­to­ries, par­tic­u­lar­ly the Unit­ed States.

In this case, how­ev­er, it’s not that it’s a for­mu­la­ic tale that comes across like a delib­er­ate ploy to tempt investors in inter­na­tion­al film mar­kets. Far from it, though there are cer­tain­ly some telegraphed ele­ments of pre­dictabil­i­ty in this accom­plished weepie. After an extend­ed fam­i­ly mem­ber dies fol­low­ing a long, debil­i­tat­ing ill­ness, twen­tysome­thing slack­er M’ (Put­thipong Assaratanakul) learns that his med­ical stu­dent cousin Mui (Tontawan Tan­tive­jakul) has scored most of the old man’s mul­ti­mil­lion-dol­lar inher­i­tance, hav­ing been his pri­ma­ry carer.

When he learns of a bleak can­cer diag­no­sis for his some­what estranged grand­moth­er (Usha Seamkhum, a won­der in her film debut) that the elder­ly woman doesn’t yet know about, M sees an oppor­tu­ni­ty to improve his prospects by becom­ing the world’s most devot­ed grand­son. Grand­ma proves exceed­ing­ly tough to please, though M also learns he’s not the only oppor­tunist gun­ning for the inher­i­tance. And Amah is by no means as clue­less as her kin seem to think.

Along­side beau­ti­ful­ly-judged per­for­mances and man­age­ment of a tricky tone, Boon­ni­ti­pat and Thod­sapon Thiptinnakorn’s sen­ti­men­tal but nev­er sac­cha­rine screen­play nails some­thing true and relat­able about all the com­pli­cat­ed respons­es we can have to the like­ly death of fam­i­ly – some of which may dis­gust us, though they stem from ques­tions that nat­u­ral­ly arise amid the prac­ti­cal­i­ties of prepar­ing for the worst. A bond that ini­tial­ly starts from a place of greed can still trans­form into some­thing gen­uine­ly enrich­ing beyond mate­r­i­al gains. To para­phrase advice that cousin Mui gives M, all time giv­en to loved ones is time well spent.

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