FILM ARCHIVES

Spoiler Alert: Nobody Has a Nice Day in “Have a Nice Day”

It’s an animated Chinese gangster movie, and an allegory for modern capitalism. What did you expect?

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Jian Liu’s Have a Nice Day has the rough contours of an early Quentin Tarantino film with the particulars of a more arty, meditative mood piece. It’s a twisty-turny crime drama complete with stolen money, vengeful mob bosses, and all sorts of strange coincidences and random dialogue digressions — but what it really seems to be about are the empty streets of a depressed Chinese town, the blinking neon of rough neighborhoods, the ubiquity of screens, and the constant drone of mobile devices (everybody in the movie has a distinct ringtone, and there are a lot of ringtones). Oh, and it’s animated.

The story follows the intricate events that ensue after a young driver named Zhang Xiao steals a bag of a million yuan belonging to mob boss Uncle Liu (whom we first meet gleefully torturing one of his childhood friends). Soon enough, there’s a hit man after the money — not to mention an assorted cast of on-the-make individuals, each with their own intentions and desires.

Zhang himself is planning to use the money to take his girlfriend to South Korea, so that a failed plastic surgery operation can be corrected. Most crime thrillers are about freedom, escape, morality — there’s always someone looking to break free of the system. But here, everybody’s already been corrupted by society, by its financial and cultural demands. Those cellphones constantly lighting up in the characters’ pockets are the central accessory of modern capitalism. Everybody’s always reachable, connected, compromised.

The fact that we’re watching a cartoon adds a welcome layer to the experience. As a live-action film, Have a Nice Day would probably feel both predictable and contrived — the setup is beyond cliché, and the plot’s many unlikely coincidences and intersections are more convenient than convincing. Even the efforts to work broader themes don’t feel particularly new: Go to enough festivals and you’ll find a positive overabundance of movies about the existential despair of the modern urban-dweller. But the surprisingly vibrant, hand-drawn images of Have a Nice Day revitalize the story’s more tired elements. It may not give us anything new, but Jian Liu’s film looks lovely and, at 77 minutes, doesn’t overstay its welcome. And sometimes that’s enough.

Have a Nice Day
Directed by Jian Liu
Strand Releasing
Now playing, Angelika Film Center

Highlights