Wednesday, November 17, 2010

The True Story of Wong Fei Hung (1949)

The True Story of Wong Fei Hung (1949)


November 18th, 7:00PM in Garland 104 (2441 E. Hartford)

Before this film, the Hong Kong martial arts action genre did not truly exist in a recognizable framework to what it would later become. They were fantastical swordplay films, and opera adaptations that were more often then not owing more to their stage roots then cinematic sensibilities. But with the start of the now legendary Wong Fei Hung series starring Kwan Tak Hing, everything would begin to change. These films began to include real martial arts forms and a style of fight choreography that had a realist sensibility. The philological traditions of Chinese martial arts became a central theme of the story, these and other innovations stem from a range of martial artists who worked upon the film.
The success of the Kwan Tak Hing, Wong Fei Hung film, which would eventually go on to number more then seventy films making it the largest film series in the history of world cinema, can be best explained by a look at the historical figure of Teacher Wong. Born in 1847 in Foshan located in Guangdong Province, the place that he would continue to be centrally associated with during his life, he was the son of a prominent martial artist and traditional Chinese doctor. He followed in his fathers footsteps on both counts, eventually opening a clinic called Po-chi-lam. Living to the age of 76, he became famous throughout the region for his medical and martial prowess, and producing many famous disciples. It was one of these by the name of Lam Sai-Wing who was responsible for spreading his legend on a national scale. Lam relocated to Hong Kong sometime after the mid 1920's, taking on a large number of students. As the acknowledged grand master of the school, Wong Fei Hung became a venerated figure. Exaggerated tales of Wong’s life were eventually published as serialized newspaper tales, with Lam providing the content. This was initially how this regional figure began to gain wider renown.
After the end of the Japanese occupation, the prolific Cantonese dialect cinema in Hong Kong began to recover. So that a film version of the life of this popular figure became an obvious choice. Lam had died during the occupation, but his students lived on. Many of them would become involved in Hong Kong cinema as actors, stuntmen and choreographers. Because of this and the multi generation tradition of Hong Kong action performers, virtually every major individual working in Hong Kong action could trace their line of teachers back to grandmaster Wong or to the individuals who worked upon the early films about his life.
For this film, Cantonese actor Kwan Tak Hing plays the tittle role. He had been an actor before the war, working on some of the first Cantonese talkies which were filmed in the United States and later working in a patriotic acting troupe during the war against the Japanese. Legend has it that he was told by the last wife of Wong, who was a consultant on this first entry in the series, that he strongly resembled her late husband. He was also an accomplished martial artist which made him ideal for the series. What he helped create is the legend of Master Wong. Many of the facts concerning the real figure had by this time been lost either through death or the fire that burned down Po-chi-lam and with it all surviving possessions and family records. The cinematic Wong is portrayed as a gentleman and Confucian scholar who fought only as a last resort and always attempted to redeem his enemy instead of destroy them. A range of trademarks were also invented such as the use of the umbrella as his weapon of choice, other areas such as his mastery of the lion dance were taken from the historical figure. At present more then 100 films have been made depicting Wong Fei Hung, everything from Jackie Chan in Drunken Master (1978) to Jet Li in Once Upon A Time in China (1991,) making Wong Fei Hung the most cinematically depicted
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Hong Kong, Director Wu Pang, Cast Kwan Tak Hing, Tso Tat Wah and Yuen Siu Tin, 72 minutes, in Cantonese with English subtitles

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Khalnayak (1993)

Khalnayak (1993)

November 11th, 7:00PM in Garland 104 (2441 E. Hartford)

Ballu (Sanjay Dutt) is a young man who goes on to become a master criminal, the film centers upon his relationship to a police inspector (Jackie Shroff) and the inspectors love interest in the form of Ganga (Madhuri Dixit) who is herself an undercover police officer who must enter Ballu’s world.
A series of controversies flowed around the film including the perceived transgressive sexual tone of on the films nine musical number. Also the arrest of the films star Sanjay Dutt on weapons possession charges and supposed links to terrorists which took place around the time of the films release.
Directed by Subhash Ghai, who is well known for his use of spectacle, typically working on films of epic dimensions. This 1993 film was a major blockbuster of its era.

India, Director Subhash Ghai, Cast Sanjay Dutt, Jackie Shroff, Madhuri Dixit and Anupam Kher, 191 minutes, in Hindi with English subtitles

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

The Monkey Goes West (1966)

The Monkey Goes West (1966)


November 4th, 7:00PM in Garland 104 (2441 E. Hartford)

The Monkey Goes West is an adaptation of the classic 16th century novel A Journey To the West, which is generally regarded as one of the four greatest Chinese novels. It is based upon the 7th century journey of Xuanzang, a Buddhist monk who illegally traveled from China to India in order to bring back early Buddhist texts. This accomplishment was instrumental in reversing the anti Buddhist stance of the then ruling Tang Dynasty.
In this fictionalized account of the journey, human involvement is largely curtailed in favor of a wide range of magical beings. It seems that the flesh of the monk will grant great power to whatever creature eats it. To protect the monk, his phantasmal allies capture the Monkey King, a mischievous being possessing great power. Later other allies join the group and together they journey through one danger after the other.
This particular adaptation of the story was created by the Shaw Brothers studio, which dominated Hong Kong film production of the era. It recounts early events in the novel, including the capture of the Monkey King. It was latter follower by two sequels, Cave of the Silken Web (1967) The Land of Many Perfumes (1968) based around other major events in the novel. In tone they are primarily children’s films, although the outlandish sets and costumes make it appealing to those of any age.

Hong Kong, Director Hoh Mung Wa, Cast Diana Chang Chung-Wen, Ho Fan, Yueh Hua, Paang Paang and Fan Mei Sheng, 111 minutes, in Mandarin with English subtitles

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

The Untold Story (1993)

The Untold Story (1993)

Special Time and Location for this week only of October 28th, 8:00PM in Bolton B52
location information please see this link http://www4.uwm.edu/map/vt-cent.cfm Bolton is the building behind Lubar Hall on N. Maryland ave. The room is located in the basement and includes a theater style set up with a DVD projector.

In the late 1980's changes were made to the domestic Hong Kong film ratings system. This opened up the possibility of films dealing with more adult subject matter, under the highest content ratting, Category 3, generally abbreviated as CAT III. Film of this rating including those dealing with controversial subject matter, either sexual or political such as Wong Kar Wai’s Happy Together (1997.)
But the majority of CAT III films focused upon either sex or violence, so much so that this began to generate its own subgenre or movement. During the heyday of CAT III films almost half of all Hong Kong productions fit into this type. As a genre, they revolve around two impulses, spectacle and novelty. With each new film attempting to outdo the last, this was a genre of ever increasing range of subject.
The Untold Story is one of the famous of these films, helping to affirm the stardom of Anthony Wong, who plays a sadistic madman. The story is supposedly based upon events in Macao in the late 1960's. It deals with a murderer who flees from Hong Kong and then becomes involved in grisly events in a Macao restaurant. For his role Anthony Wong received the Hong Kong Film Award for best actor, a major accomplishment in the story of CAT III. A wave of copycat films and loose sequels followed.
Hong Kong, Director Herman Yau, Cast Anthony Wong Chau-Sang, Danny Lee Sau-Yin, Emily Kwan (Bo Wai), Lau Siu-Ming and Shing Fui-On, 95 minutes, in Cantonese with English subtitles

Monday, October 18, 2010

The Trek (2002)

The Trek (2002)

October 21st, 7:00PM in Garland 104 (2441 E. Hartford)

A group of students and naturalists journey into the dense Thai jungle in an attempt to locate a mythical new species of elephant. But things begin to go badly when they discover that everything in the jungle seems to want them dead in the most painful ways possible.
The Trek has a relatively strait forward pattern of seek and destroy, the students seek and everything else destroys. But it in the spectacle of the attacks ranging from insects, spiders, giant snakes and gunmen. The counterpoint to this is the subplots involving the students and their personal relationships including several westerners that have become mixed up in the expatiation leading to predictably absurd results.
Thailand, Directors Chanchai Pantasi, Cast Danai Smuthkochorn, Paul Visut Carey, Eilidh MacQueen, Manaswee Krittanookul and Supaksorn Chaimongkol, 103 minutes, in Thai with English subtitles

Monday, October 11, 2010

Night on the Galactic Railroad (1985)

Night on the Galactic Railroad (1985)


October 14th, 7:00PM in Garland 104 (2441 E. Hartford)


The range of style and subject matter of Japanese animation is far greater then the fraction of it that has become well known in the United States, and this film is a striking example of that fact. Night on the Galactic Railroad is an examination of ideas of existence, life and death seen through the eyes of a child. The central character is Giovanni, a young boy who lives a quiet life caring for his mother in what seems to be a small Western European town at the turn of the nineteenth century. One night a phantasmal train arrives to take him and his best friend on a metaphorical journey through space and time.
Stylistically, the film is slow moving and surrealistic in tone. These factors are what fuel its champions and detractors. The subject matter is also rather heavy, but it would be unfair to say that it is not a film accessible in tone to a great many children. It also deals with a range of philosophical beliefs including both the Christian and Buddhist conceptions of death, as well as a range of episodes that have a distinctly metaphorical bent.

The film is based upon the 1927 novel Night on the Milky Way Railroad by Miyazawa Kenji. For those that are not familiar with his work, he is a man who is widely considered to be the greatest Japanese poet of the early twentieth century. The film is a faithful adaptation of one of his most popular works. During his short life he lived in rural Japan and had a deep interest in varying philosophical disciplines including Buddhism. The majority of his work including the novel in question was only discovered after his death. But a major chan in the adaption from the novel to the film comes from noted avant-garde playwright Minoru Betsuyaku who pinned the script. He transformed all of the characters into cats. Before seeing the film many tend to find this discouraging, but in reality it actually greatly complements the material by giving the characters an unreal, slightly abstract quality. There is also a nod in the film to Miyazawa Kenji’s love and fervor towards Esperanto, many of the signs in the film are posted in both it and the fictional language of the cats.
This isn’t the only work of animation that was based around Miyazawa Kenji’s life and works, in honor of the centennial anniversary of his birth the 1996 animated film Spring and Chaos was produced. It was a loosely biographical film detailing events in the poets frequently tragic life and depicts the writing of the novel that Night on the Galactic Railroad was based upon. Other works that have an acknowledged debt to this source material include Leiji Matsumoto’s well loved Galaxy Express 999 manga, which spawned a range of feature films and a TV series.
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Japan, Director Gisaburo Sugii, Cast Mayumi Tanaka and Chika Sakamoto, 108 minutes, in Japanese with English subtitles

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Lady Terminator (1986)

Lady Terminator (1986)

October 7th, 7:00PM in Garland 104 (2441 E. Hartford)

It is true that you can learn a lot about a culture from its popular forms of entertainment, and without a doubt this applies as much to the absurd as to the series.
While other cinematic forms exist in Indonesia, the only area that has received any kind of world wide exposure are the Exploitation, Super Hero and Horror films produced primarily from the mid 1980's to mid 90's. The aforementioned films are legendary for their otherworldly strangeness, mixing the serious with the camp.
In Lady Terminator a long dead witch possesses the body of a young lady, who it seems is not a lady but an anthropologist. Now she hunts the descendant of the man who originally killed her, now the only person who has the power to stop her return. Instead of taking a few elements from The Terminator, the film brazenly copies entire sequences and frequently one-ups them. This can be said to be the spirit of this kind of remarkably unhinged romp, which for the right audience is a genuine treat.

Indonesia, Director Jalil Jackson, Cast Barbara Anne Constable, Claudia Rademaker and Christopher J. Hart, 82 minutes, in English