"Bringing Me Go" is a Vietnamese-Korean collaboration film, the film was officially released in theaters on August 1, quickly reaching the 61 billion VND mark. Mother Go Forth is expected to soon reach hundreds of billions in revenue and become the next profitable film in 2025.
To be fair, Bringing Mothers to Go Forward has an easy-to-guess script, a new theme, a unique and unfamiliar storytelling style, the films biggest appeal comes from the acting of Hong Dao and Tuan Tran.
Tuan Tran and Hong Dao once played mother and daughter in the work "Mai" with a record revenue of more than 500 billion VND by Tran Thanh. In the movie Mai, Tuan Tran plays Sau - a furry, playful guy who lives off his mother's financial resources. Hong Dao plays a sharp, talented mother who creates a rich collection of clothes.
They in "Bringing their mother away" are characters with completely different colors and fates. Tuan Tran plays a kind son, working as a hairdresser on the roadside, carrying a heavy heart and tears when taking care of his mother - Mrs. Le Thi Hanh, who has Alzheimer's disease and memory loss.
Transforming into characters with opposite fates and colors has created an opportunity for Tuan Tran and Hong Dao to prove the ability of million-dollar actors.
Tuan Tran appeared in many high-profile projects such as Bo Gia, Mai, while Hong Dao also helped many big-make films such as Mai, Chi Dau...
In Mai, the contrasting controversy between Sau and his mother was once considered one of the most expensive scenes of the work. The acting of both Tuan Tran and Hong Dao is realistic, close, and natural, also showing their own rich experience in the way they speak and play the characters psychologically.
In the movie "Bringing Me Out of My Mother", it can be said that the acting of Tuan Tran and Hong Dao became the biggest highlight and biggest attraction of the movie.

The script "taking away your mother" has many loopholes and shortcomings, such as Ms. Hanh quickly regaining her memory and memories when going to Korea, being able to hear - speak Korean after about 30 years of not using it (Hoan is 29 years old), even losing her memory, struggling to live in extreme... Therefore, the breakthrough of the script makes Ms. Hanh in Vietnam and Ms. Hanh in Seoul like two different people.
The old half of the film "Bringing Me Go" poses a big acting challenge for Tuan Tran (as Hoan) and Hong Dao (as Ms. Hanh). The script is full of emotions, tragedy, and details.
Tuan Tran has talented acting scenes. Every time he held a scissors to greet customers on the roadside, Hoan brought different emotions and sufferings. The scene of holding scissors to greet guests with old melodies while trying to hold back so as not to cry but tears still flowing, Tuan Tran depicts the character's suffering, touching the hearts of the audience.
Compared to Tuan Tran, Hong Dao had to " struggle" more when playing the role of Mrs. Hanh, an Alzheimer's disease patient, who lost her memory. Hong Dao has invested heavily in the role of Mrs. Hanh, from appearance to emotions. However, this is still a heavy role compared to Hong Dao's acting ability.
Ms. Hanh's performance of Hong Dao does not resemble that of an Alzheimer's patient, but carries many developments, emotions, and ways of expressing the body of a... crazy person more.
For example, Ms. Hanh chased the ambulance for help when she saw her son having a seizure and fainting on the sidewalk. Ms. Hanh's behavior was strangely simple, making it harder to express language than that of an Alzheimer's patient.
The way the script was built made it difficult for Ms. Hanh to play. Not only did she suffer from Alzheimer's dementia, Ms. Hanh also suffered from many damages, grief, and pain in the past.
In Ms. Hanh's own inner thoughts, there are also fierce struggles between the things to forget and the things that cannot be forgotten. Leaving her son in Korea makes Mrs. Hanh forget everything, but cannot forget the address of the playground she promised her son Ji Hwan to take him to play.
The struggle between forgetful and unforgettable things may have turned Ms. Hanh, under Hong Dao's performance, both crazy and alert.
Above all, the two million-dollar actors showed professionalism when they knew how to divide emotions into scenes. They understand the tragedy of the character, but know how to restrain each performance so that each performance brings a different amount of emotions, which scenes make the audience excited, and which scenes need to push the emotions to a climax for the audience to burst into tears.