Jincheng Summer Taxis

Jiang Cong
Li Jianhua, Wu Chao, Tan Zhuo, Liu Jie, Liu Yuan, Ding Guangquan, Mi Tie Ceng, Li Mingchen, Liangzi
2007
Mainland China
Completed
Mandarin Chinese
85 minutes
Detailed introduction
This film (drama)Also known as京都夏利,is aMainland ChinaProducerwomen sex,At2007Released in year
。The dialogue language isMandarin Chinese,Current Douban rating6.1(For reference only)。
The Jincheng taxi is forced to exit the Beijing operating market, becoming an important memory in the evolution of Beijing's transportation, much like the rickshaws in the works of Mr. Lao She. Master Xu is one of the few Jincheng taxi drivers. He is friendly and calm, always ready to help without hesitation whenever someone calls on him. Thus, Master Xu lives a simple and serene life, finding joy in this simplicity.
One day, after dropping off a friend, Master Xu was stopped by a young man at the entrance of an alley. The young man, in a hurry, tossed his backpack into the trunk and jumped into the passenger seat, saying he wanted to sleep on the way to Chaoyang Xuant District. Upon arriving at Xuant District, Master Xu woke him up. The young man paid without asking for a receipt and hurriedly got out. His name was Zhou Ke. To win the love of his girlfriend, Xiao Na, Zhou Ke promised her he would ask Master Xu to carve a jade Buddha for her father as a gift for foreign friends.
Zhou Ke realized only when he was about to enter the elevator that he had forgotten the backpack containing the jade Buddha in the car. After a night of frustration, Zhou Ke remembered he had taken a Jincheng taxi. He quickly located the taxi company online and soon met Master Xu, who guaranteed he hadn't seen the backpack in the trunk, but this did not eliminate Zhou Ke's suspicions. Zhou Ke, harboring doubt, took irrational actions that yielded no results and instead led Master Xu to discover the shortcomings of his son, Xu Cong, who was kind-hearted and filial. Putting aside past grievances, when Zhou Ke and his girlfriend returned, Master Xu voluntarily offered to help find the backpack containing the jade Buddha, both to assist Zhou Ke and clear his own name.
Master Xu recalled the day’s events and quickly pinpointed the person who took the backpack to a relic dealer. Zhou Ke, through online messages, soon met the relic dealer nicknamed "Old Ma," whose real name was Hu Di. Hu Di, living off selling treasured family heirlooms, was ultimately not the person with the jade Buddha. Just as Zhou Ke and Master Xu were about to give up, Master Xu's son Xu Cong found the jade Buddha with his good friend, Hu Xiaowei, who had received the backpack from Master Xu as a gift for his comrade's son. With the jade Buddha recovered, all involved experienced a spiritual cleansing, and Zhou Ke gained love through this experience, while Master Xu's family joyfully witnessed their son's healthy growth.