wu xia - cannes 2011

Started by pete, May 21, 2011, 06:40:16 AM

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pete

so I haven't been name checking kungfu movies for a few years now
lets get back to it

TRAILER HERE



Set in ancient China, a detective comes across a paper-maker who may or may not be a renegade mass murder.

this is Hong Kong filmmaker Peter Chan's attempt to reinvigorate the martial arts genre. He teams with probably the biggest genre name right now - actor and choreographer/director Donnie Yen, whose signature style is making a dent on the genre and is quickly becoming China's biggest star. I shall do a separate thread of his recent work here somewhere. For now I'll try to link to some of his recent stuff. Good gory stuff.

Peter Chan last directed an epic called Warlords, starring Jet Li (in one of his finest performances), that combines all that exciting epic battle stuff with the nitty gritties of war profiteering, all set in ancient China. It's on netflix. Check it out. Good stuff.

From Hollywood Reporter


CANNES -- Bursting with light and color, and a torrent of martial arts action both swift and savage (arguably the best that lead actor Donnie Yen has choreographed for years), Wu Xia is coherently developed and stylishly directed by Peter Ho-Sun Chan to provide unashamedly pleasurable popular entertainment. Wu Xia created buzz before its premiere with acquisition by The Weinstein Company, which will release the title stateside as Dragon. Almost as picturesque as Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, the film has a chance of expanding overseas audience base beyond Asian genre ghettos.
Set in 1917, on the cusp of China's transition from monarchy to republic, Wu Xia depicts the internal moral struggles of a detective and a paper-maker who may be a renegade mass murderer. Unfolding like a noir mystery in which Colombo meets CSI. It represents Chan's ambition to bridge the gap between Chinese and international tastes by giving a modern spin to the genre, while paying homage to the golden age of Hong Kong martial arts films through the special appearances of legendary action star Jimmy Wang Yu and Kara Hui.
Donnie Yen plays the said paper-maker Liu Jinxi, who has settled in an idyllic, hospitable village in Yunnan for ten years after marrying single mother Ayu (Tang Wei). The peaceful life of his family of four is disturbed when he accidentally kills two robbers who threaten his paper workshop. The incident has detective Xu Baijiu (Takeshi Kaneshiro) sniffing in his backyard. Xu is convinced that Liu's real identity is Tang Long, a runaway member of the 72 Demons, a dwindling clan of Tanguts (former rulers of China's neighboring Xixia kingdom) for whom rape, pillage and massacre are a way of life.
What makes the exposition novel in the genre is the attempt to peel away layers of oriental mystique surrounding martial arts through Xu's quasi-scientific or homeopathic theories of investigation, such as forensic science, physics, acupuncture and qigong, which also adds an endearingly nerdy side to his character. However, the CG-rendered charts of human anatomy are used too frequently until they interfere with the flow of action.
As a self-conscious homage to the brawny, starkly violent martial arts films of which Chang Cheh's classic One Armed Swordsman series (starring Jimmy Wang Yu) is exemplary, Yen's devises close-contact combats with a graphic, muscular, vicious style that aims to kill with a single strike. The three act structure each showcases a climactic combat in distinctly different styles. Liu's fight with a female Tangut (Kara Hui) is the most inventive, as it takes place in an ox pen where they have to skirt nimbly, yet dangerously around a stampede of buffalos.
After going through the motions in a recent string of dramatically unsatisfactory works, Yen and Tang both return to acting form, emoting in a quietly stirring manner. Aubrey Lam's subtle and understated script not only affectingly depict the pure but steadfast bonds of a simple family, but capture the neurosis of both Liu and Ayu, who separately grapple with their scarred pasts and fear that happiness is transient. The most fascinating character, however, turns out to be Xu, for whom the investigation becomes a personal moral and intellectual quest, in which he weighs the impartial efficacy of law against natural human compunctions of remorse and compassion. He too has to exorcize demons from the past, thus deepening the theme of redemption, which applies to Xu as well as to Liu.
Jake Pollock's luscious widescreen cinematography adds a dash of fairytale color to the moist, glossy rolling hills, meadows and bamboo bushes of the ethnically-rich Yunnan countryside. While hard rock score of Peter Kam and Chan Kwong Wing (the composing duo of Bodyguards and Assassins, produced by Chan) tends to be too relentlessly energetic at times, sound is used expertly for maximum threatening effect, especially in the presence of the chief of the 13 Demons (Jimmy Wang Yu).
Venue: Cannes Film Festival, Out of Competition
Sales: WE Distribution
Production companies: The Weinstein Company, UGC, WE Distribution presents a WE Pictures production.
Cast: Donnie Yen, Takeshi Kaneshiro, Tang Wei, Jimmy Wang Yu, Kara Hui
Director-producer: Peter Ho-Sun Chan
Producer: Jojo Hui
Screenwriter: Aubrey Lam
Director of photography: Jake Pollock, Lai Yiu-Fai
Production designer: Yee Chung Man
Music: Chan Kwong-Wing, Peter Kam
Costume designer: Dora Ng
No rating, 110 minutes
"Tragedy is a close-up; comedy, a long shot."
- Buster Keaton

pete

some donnie yen fights


he's got a gnarly battle against 10 karate dudes. beautifully shot.


climatic fight and some pretty wonderfully choreographed mixed martial arts flair thrown in


wwII superhero shit

but so far he's been pretty stuck in the genre. he just starred in a film titled The Lost Bladesman that's showing some promise of depth, and I really can't wait to check out Wu Xia.
"Tragedy is a close-up; comedy, a long shot."
- Buster Keaton

Mr. Merrill Lehrl

A new person took over the programming of a local theater and he's a martial arts nut.  The first movie he programmed was Ip Man 2, and he just showed Legend of the Fist recently too.  This is great, great news for me because for so long all my martial arts viewing experiences have been on a television.  Wu Xia may get a bigger release and it won't be an issue, but it's nice to know there's a guy in my city who'll bring this in regardless.

Wasn't a fan of Warlords but I'm sometimes too tough on period pieces.  But this one is clearly much different, although still a period piece, and as Pete has commented there are a lot of great names involved.

It always bothers me when actors have pearly whites in period pieces, for example.  Donnie Yen has gorgeous laser-white teeth, but I wish they'd muck them up for make believe.
"If I had to hold up the most heavily fortified bank in America," BolaƱo says, "I'd take a gang of poets. The attempt would probably end in disaster, but it would be beautiful."