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Homerun 2003

   A remake of the award-winning Iranian film Children of Heaven, Homerun is a drama about two poor siblings and their adventures over a lost pair of shoes.

A remake of the award-winning Iranian film Children of Heaven, Homerun is a drama about two poor siblings and their adventures over a lost pair of shoes.

Does Homerun have end credit scenes?

No!

Homerun does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.

Meet the Full Cast and Actors of Homerun

Explore the complete cast of Homerun, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.


Take the Ultimate Homerun Movie Quiz

Challenge your knowledge of Homerun with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.


Homerun (2003) Quiz: Test your knowledge of the 2003 Singaporean film *Homerun* with these ten mixed‑difficulty questions.

What are the names of the Chew siblings?

Full Plot Summary and Ending Explained for Homerun

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Read the complete plot summary of Homerun, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.


In 1965, two poor Singaporean children, Chew Kiat Kun [Shawn Lee] and his younger sister Chew Seow Fang [Megan Zheng Zhi-Yun], live with their mother (Xiang Yun) who is in the late stages of her third pregnancy, and their father [Huang Wenyong], who is deep in debt to a local rice merchant and a provision shop owner. The family perseveres as the father labors long hours doing odd jobs, while the children make the most of what little they have. The weight of their situation shapes every small detail of their daily lives, from how they attend school to how they share scarce resources.

A crisis hits when Kiat Kun accidentally loses Seow Fang’s only pair of shoes after taking them to be repaired. Though a frantic search yields nothing, a karung guni man (a scavenger) had claimed the shoes as unwanted rubbish. The siblings feel abandoned by fate, and their father’s resolve to keep them afloat becomes a beacon of hope. In a move born of desperation and sibling solidarity, their father inspires Kiat Kun to share his shoes with his sister, swapping the shoes between classes so both children can attend school. This arrangement, however, brings its own set of problems: Seow Fang is scolded for wearing oversized shoes, and Kiat Kun finds himself chronically late as he waits for his sister to switch the footwear back and forth.

At school, a wealthy classmate named Tan Beng Soon [Tan Beng Soon] co-leads an amateur soccer team with his friends. The children strike a tentative bargain with Beng Soon to use the other boys’ soccer shoes in exchange for helping with their homework. The deal sours when the boys argue, and Beng Soon pulls away, denying them a place on the team. Without the team’s support, Beng Soon and his friends face punishment for substandard homework. The rift grows, and the school’s climate becomes tense as the two groups clash over loyalties, skill, and the limits of accommodation.

The friction spills into the home as well. Mrs. Ang [Patricia Mok], the math-minded Form Teacher, steps in as the situation spirals: she persuades the fathers—[Mr. Tan] and [Mrs. Tan] (Jack Neo and Phoena Lee) —to come to the school to witness Beng Soon’s private caning inside the staff room, a scene that underscores the stern discipline of the era and the family’s precarious position. In the end, Beng Soon’s father decides to send him away to study in England, hoping to chart a brighter path for his son.

Kiat Kun’s own future seems equally uncertain. The principal contemplates expulsion because of his habit of being late, yet the Form Teacher [Marcus Chin] defends him, a rare show of sympathy that acknowledges the boy’s dire family background. The defense helps him stay in school, and the two siblings cling to this tenuous chance.

A turn of fate arrives when Seow Fang spots a classmate wearing her lost shoes. The two siblings shadow the girl to her home and learn that the classmate’s father is blind and their family is even worse off than theirs. They decide not to reclaim the shoes, yet a few days later Seow Fang discovers the classmate has discarded the used pair at the village garbage dump. The Chews search the dump in a frantic bid to recover what was lost, only to find the shoes damaged when a riot—the trade unionist clash with a police officer—erodes the area. The riot scene involves a rioter [Chung Yiu-Nam], and a police officer [Emil Chau Wah-Kin], providing a stark backdrop to the siblings’ struggles.

Kiat Kun learns that the third prize in the 1965 National Primary School Cross Country Competition is a new pair of shoes. He had been sick on the day the team representatives were chosen, so he pleads with his P.E. teacher [Mark Lee] to let him run. The teacher is initially hesitant but relents when Kiat Kun makes a urgent dash to fetch cough medicine, revealing his running potential. As the race begins, Kiat Kun already suspects Beng Soon will be in the mix, and the field grows crowded with competing hopes.

When the starting gun fires, Kiat Kun pushes himself with a determination that astonishes him and those who know his family’s limits. He seems poised for a respectable finish, perhaps third, but a misstep on a rough patch of ground sends him sprawling toward the front of the pack. He recovers with a surge of effort and ultimately crosses the line in first place, while Beng Soon finishes in third, a small victory that carries huge meaning for the underdog.

As the race unfolds, life continues to test the siblings. Seow Fang’s mother goes into labor, and Seow Fang must race along a dangerous stretch—across broken glass and long paths—to find a midwife in time. Mrs. Chew gives birth to a baby boy on the very day Singapore becomes independent from Malaysia, a historic moment that shadows the family’s personal triumphs. In a gesture of reconciliation born from shared hardship, Beng Soon later brings new shoes for the siblings and departs for London, marking the end of one chapter and the quiet beginning of another.

Throughout the film, the camera lingers on the intimate details of poverty, resilience, and the small mercies that help a family endure. The siblings’ bond is tested and tempered by the daily grind of scarcity, the sting of social divides, and the slow, stubborn progress of a nation waking up to independence. What begins as a struggle over shoes becomes a broader story about dignity, hope, and the power of community to lift a family above circumstance.

Uncover the Details: Timeline, Characters, Themes, and Beyond!

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Homerun Themes and Keywords

Discover the central themes, ideas, and keywords that define the movie’s story, tone, and message. Analyze the film’s deeper meanings, genre influences, and recurring concepts.


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Homerun Other Names and Titles

Explore the various alternative titles, translations, and other names used for Homerun across different regions and languages. Understand how the film is marketed and recognized worldwide.


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