Sunday, August 30, 2009

Wet Dreams (2002)

Wet Dreams (2002)

September 3rd, 6:30PM in Garland 104 (2441 E. Hartford)



Set in the 1980's, the film follows a group of friends through Junior High as they deal with events in their lives and encounter complications caused by a new teacher. The film is a teen drama wearing the guise of a teen sex comedy.






South Korea, Director Jeong Cho-Sin, Cast Lee Beon-Su, Kim Seon-Ah and No Hyeong-Wuk, 94 minutes, in Korean with English subtitles.

Friday, August 14, 2009

The Asian film series will soon return



The Asian Film Series will be returning in early September 2009. A wide range of films have been screened durring the previous eight month run of the series and this will continue to be the case in the coming months. Bellow is a small breakdown of the previously screened films broken down by nationality. Further details will be forthcoming, please check this blog for updates.


China (mainland)

-Blind Shaft

-Princess Iron Fan

-Romance of the Western Chamber


Hong Kong

-Air Hostess

-The Eagle Shooting Heroes

-The Greatest Civil War on Earth

-Lady General Hua Mu-Lan

-Mambo Girl

-Miracles

-Scandal


India

-Disco Dancer

-Fire


Japan

-Charisma

-Fall Guy

-Galaxy Express 999

-High and Low

-The Street Fighter

-Village of Eight Gravestones


South Korea

-Fun Movie

-The Good, The Bad and The Weird

-My Wife is a Gangster

-The President's Last Bang

-Ring Virus


Taiwan

-Dragon Gate Inn


Thailand

-Citizen Dog

-Killer Tattoo

-SARS Wars


Vietnam

-The Rebel

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Mambo Girl (1957)

Mambo Girl (1957)

May 21st, 6:30PM in Garland 104(2441 E. Hartford)



This western style musical was an early hit for superstar Grace Chang who would headline many of the best film of the MP&GI studio during the late 1950's to mid 60's. She plays a teenager with a loving family. One day she discovers that she is adopted. Now she begins searching for her biological mother while trying to understand the true meaning of family.





Hong Kong, Director Li Han Hsiang, Cast Linda Lin Dai, Li Jen Ho, Bo Hong and King Hu, 95 minutes, in Mandarin with English subtitles.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Killer Tattoo (2001)

Killer Tattoo (2001)

May 14th, 6:30PM in Garland 104 (2441 E. Hartford)




In Bangkok of the not too distant future, a group of the Thailand's professional assassins enjoy socializing between jobs. They are forced to band together when through a coincidence, one of them becomes the number one target of the Thai underworld.

Suthep-ngam stars as Pae Buffgub, the leader of the assassins. He is better known for the character of Master Thep in the zombie comedy SARS Wars.




This is a action comedy that is firmly tongue-in-cheek and features such characters as a aged Hippy assassin as well as a former assassin that through a head injury firmly believes himself to be Elvis.


Thailand, Director Yuthlert Sippapak, Cast Somchai Khemglad, Thao Rae, Suthep Phongam and Petchtai Wongkamlaow, 114 minutes, in Thai with English subtitles.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

High and Low (1963)

High and Low (1963)

May 7th, 6:30PM in Garland 104 (2441 E. Hartford)


Akira Kurosawa directed this story of a rags to riches Industrialist who's son is kidnapped on the verge of his greatest triumph. In an attempt to save the boy he is assisted by undercover police detectives as they try and discover who has taken the child.

The second to last film before the end of Kurosawa's most prodigious period as a Director, it shows his genius at its full strength. The story also subtly references discrimination of the burakumin, a minority group within Japanese society that are historically held in contempt, not unlike the untouchables of India.


Japan, Akira Kurosawa, Cast
Toshiro Mifune, Tatsuya Nakadai, Kyoko Kagawa and Tatsuya Mihashi, 142 minutes

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

The Eagle Shooting Heroes (1993)

The Eagle Shooting Heroes (1993)

April 30th, 6:30PM in Garland 104 (2441 E. Hartford)


This film is a wide sweeping parody referencing the Chinese Wu Xia (swordplay) genre. It uses many well known Wu Xia films, Novels and TV shows for its subject matter, but in its story it is largely based upon the Jin Yong’s novel of the same name.

The plot in short involves a super powerful martial artist known as Western Poison aka Ouyang Feng (Tony Leung Chiu Wai) who overthrows a king and attempts to take his thrown with the help of his cousin the Queen. The third Princess flees in order to find help in defeating Western Poison and has many comic misadventures before encountering and gathering all the heroes that together will be strong enough to defeat Ouyang Feng.

There have been many Jin Yong adaptations including Tsui Hark's Swordsman trilogy (1990-93), Royal Tramp I & II (1992) and A Deadly Secret (1980) but this film is one of the most unique. Another explanation for the films tone is that it is a Newyear Film, that is, a film designed to be released at the festival time of the Chinese newyear. Newyear films tend to be low in seriousness and comic in tone. It’s a release slot similar to the American Christmas film or Summer Blockbuster.
The Eagle Shooting Heroes was shot practically on the back of the Wong Kar-Wai Wu Xia epic Ashes of Time (1994) using most of the same cast with few exceptions, also both films are based upon the same source material. Even with this being the case they could not be more different. Ashes is a slowly paced, art house drama and Eagle is a over the top slapstick parody film, although both are excellent for what they are.
The cast is made up of some of the top A list stars of the era including Brigitte Lin Ching-Hsia, Joey Wong, Maggie Cheung, Jacky Cheung, Tony Leung Ka-Fai, Tony Leung Chiu-Wai, Leslie Cheung and Kenny Bee. In addition to this the talent behind the camera is just as pronounced. Directed by Jeffery Lau Chun Wai who made his name with such comedy classics as The 92 Legendary La Rose Noire (1992) and The Haunted Cop Shop (1987). Wong Kar-Wai comes in as Executive Producer and the film was made under his personal JetTone label. This might seem an odd mix, one of the worlds most renowned art house directors involved with a project like this. In fact he had previously collaborated with Lau on several films through the 1980's. James Wong, one of the most accomplished composers ever to work in Hong Kong cinema (his credits include the soundtracks to A Chinese Ghost Story and A Better Tomorrow) gives his usual high level of performance with a series of great comic themes. Lastly Sammo Hung manages the fight choreography with impressive flare and many winks and nods to the classic Wu Xia films of the 1960's.
The Eagle Shooting Heroes remains one of the comic high points that comes just at the cusp of the near collapse of the Hong Kong film industry in the early to mid 1990's. Even though it’s a film parodying a specific genre with many in jokes most viewers will still find it very enjoyable even if they don’t always understand every reference.
Hong Kong, Director Jeffery Lau Chun Wai, Cast Brigitte Lin Ching-Hsia, Joey Wong, Maggie Cheung, Jacky Cheung, Tony Leung Ka-Fai, Tony Leung Chiu-Wai, Leslie Cheung and Kenny Bee, 100 minutes, in Cantonese with English subtitles.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

The Good, The Bad and The Weird (2008)

The Good, The Bad and The Weird (2008)

April 23rd, 6:30PM in Garland 104 (2441 E. Hartford)



Perhaps the most eagerly awaited Korean film of the last five years, the story involves a train traveling through Northern Korea and Manchuria in the 1930's. Three men a drawn together, a thief, a bandit and an assassin. Together they have the power to safeguard or destroy a national treasure.

The film is billed as the first Korean western and like another recent East Asian wester, Tears of the Black Tiger it really makes a genre its own with a unique vision. There is good reason this is one of the most popular Korean films of the last decade, watch it and findout for yourself.

South Korea, Director Kim Ji-woon, Cast Song Kang-Ho, Lee Byeong-Heon, Jeong Woo-Seong and Yoon Je-Moon, 139 minutes, in Korean with English subtitles.