Legend of the Disturbing Bosoms
By 2006, the “wuxia” genre has grown even
hotter and expands even bigger in scale. Feng Xiao Gang,
another of China’s new wave director helmed the
Shakespeare’s inspired “The Banquet (2006)”.
Boasting a score by Oscar-winner Tan Tun, Master Yuen
Woo Ping’s choreography and now international
starlet, Zhang Ziyi as the arrogant Empress Wan, it
was another disappointment down the alley. At times,
stage-like, at times surreal, at times bursting with
energy, it was however the “who-dunnit”
ending that caught viewers with surprise. Jokingly,
netizens suspect it’s the carps during discussion
in forums and chatrooms. One good thing did came up
in the end to our surprise, our reviewer Richard Lim’s
quotes for “Banquet” was immortalized on
the cover of the Code one version of the DVD.
Following
shortly behind was the heart-pounding “A Battle
of Wits (2006)”. Director Jacob Cheung was never
seen as a winner or sorts. He hasn’t had a track
record for box-office success to be honest, more renowned
for arthouse dramas such as “Cages (1993)”,
his last feature film was in 2001 and “Wits”
was his own written for the screen adaptation of a Japanese
manga. Not a potential material for box-office success
in the eyes of many. But Cheung nailed everything right
on the spot including the cast, battle sequences, set
design and most importantly the story. Ultimately, it
was a sincere historical mega production as quoted by
our reviewer John Li.
Zhang
Yimou makes a comeback in December of that year with
“The Curse of the Golden Flower”. The US$45
million budget not withstanding, the stakes are higher
than his prior efforts as it was sort of a finale to
his unofficial “wuxia” trilogy. Attracting
a cast that includes Hollywood/HK mega star Chow Yun
Fat, ex-lover Gong Li and pop prince Jay Chou, “Curse”
was enveloped by a sea of well-endowed bosoms and chrysanthemum,
surprisingly unable to attract the foreign judges and
pitifully left out of the Oscars ending Zhang’s
rumoured bid for the Golden man.
The
Warlords Reigns
The
year 2007 was a slow one. By then, a lot of “wuxia”
tentpole projects were announced or already in the production
process. The only one that was scheduled for opening
was Peter Chan’s “The Warlords (2007)”.
“Warlords” was initially a remake of Chang
Cheh’s classic “Ci Ma (1973)” but
Chan and his team of scriptwriters evolved the script
into taking its own form. Heavyweights Jet Li, Andy
Lau and Takeshi Kaneshiro led the all-star cast with
Tony Ching on board as action director. The movie opens
to rave reviews given that it was director Peter Chan
first foray into the martial-arts genre. Chan who is
renowned for “Comrades: Almost a Love Story (1996)”
and “He’s A Woman, She’s A Man (1994)”
enthralled the audience with his detailed storytelling.
It was an instant hit Asian wide and recently snagged
eight major awards at the Hong Kong Film Awards including
Best Director and Best Actor for Jet Li.
The
Empress. The Dragon. The Cliff
Nowadays,
it’s no longer a cheap affair to make a “wuxia”
film. Gone are the days where the only highlight of
the film is where sword wielding pugilists fly from
tree to tree hanging from a pitiful wire. In today’s
Asian cinema, the budget has hovered to the millions,
not as much as their Hollywood counterparts but increasingly
affordable to hire more manpower and also drive up the
production values. Now we get to see more realistic
visual effects, CG doubles, breath-taking sets, exotic
locations and thousands of men drabbed in golden armour
ready to battle it out. If you notice, the credits now
run longer for Asian titles whereas back in the old
days, the credits disappear before you even attempt
to wipe off the cracker bits off your shirt.
All
thanks to the opening of the China market, the rich
Chinese investors poured in the millions to co-produced
most of the above stated titles with the Hong Kong production
houses. Huayi Brothers, Studio Polybona and Hengdian
Studio among others are encroaching to grab a slice
of the pie. What better way to flaunt your wealth other
than to go into the tantalizing world of the media?
The
first quarter of 2008 alone saw two productions showing
back to back. Tony Ching Siu-Tung once again took on
directing duties for “An Empress and the Warriors
(2008)” after coordinating countless action and
“wuxia” movies over the years. Perhaps distracted
by dozens of production matter on hand, the end result
was embarrassingly bad. Even action-star Donnie Yen
can’t do much in this faltering script.
The
HK/Korea/China co-production, “Three Kingdoms:
Resurrection of the Dragon (2008)” opens one week
after “Empress” fares slightly better. Loosely
based on the “Romance of the Three Kingdoms”,
it’s a simple tale of how a common man named Zhao
Zilong who rises to become an honorable general fighting
for his country. Andy Lau shines in his role and this
is the main reason which makes “Kingdom”
watchable. Sammo Hung who had a starring role here as
well turned in an absurd, disappointing choreography
for the battle scenes.
The anticipation is even bigger
than the pair up of Aliens versus Predator. The two
iconic action heroes of Chinese cinema teamed up for
the first time in this Hollywood funded “The Forbidden
Kingdom”. Jackie Chan and Jet Li indulge themselves
in martial-arts fantasy in a tale inspired by the Chinese
classic, “Journey of the West”. While the
action pieces, clunky plot and awkward dialogues is
less than spectacular, “Kingdom” manages
to score a US$20 million box-office opening in the states
and garner SGD$1.5 million in the opening weekend in
Singapore. Not bad for two self-proclaimed old men.
In summer 2008, we wait with bated
breath for the long awaited John Woo’s epic, “Red
Cliff” starring Tony Leung and Takeshi Kaneshiro.
The Pang Brothers are also filming “Stormriders
2” as we speak for release tentatively next year.
To be fair, most of the above movies stated above were
never critically acclaimed but most of them manage to
lure the audience to the cinemas given the attractive
cast or high production values. The Chinese cinema which
was once touted dead is now very much alive. On the
whole, the “wuxia” genre in fact will never
die, it will only wait for the right time to make its
move just like a good pugilist sharpening his saber
patiently awaiting his opponent.
If you happen to miss page one of
this article >
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The
Banquet (2006)
Movie Review
DVD Review
A Battle of Wits (2006)
Movie
Review
DVD Review
Curse of the Golden Flower (2006)
Movie
Review
DVD
Review
The Warlords (2007)
Movie
Review
DVD Review
An Empress and the Warriors (2008)
Movie
Review
Three
Kingdoms: Resurrection of the Dragon (2008)
Movie
Review
The
Forbidden Kingdom (2008)
Movie
Review
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