Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Moving ...

The House Where Words Gather has a new home over at LoveHKFilm.com:

http://www.lovehkfilm.com/blog/juiyinjong/

See you there!

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

How I Spent My Summer Solstice

When I started this blog, I promised that I wouldn't bore you with details like what I ate for breakfast or what colour shirt I was wearing today. So, I hope you'll indulge me as I talk a little bit about a banquet I attended last week. I promise that it'll eventually lead to something entertainment circle-related.

Though the Cold Hand of Fate decided to afflict me with cancer, I feel that, for the most part, I've been blessed in my life. Included among my many blessings is the fact that I have one of those TVB families from their light comedy-dramas -- you know, a family that has its squabbles and its foibles but, at the end of the day, they care about one another and frequently gather together for family meals. While the conversation at these dinners tend more toward George Costanza and his fiance Susan talking about shoelaces than witty repartee that includes propitious puns ("Here, eat these long noodles that'll bring you long life"), a good time is usually had by all at these events.

Last Tuesday, the Leung clan got together with the Mak family to celebrate the Tuen Ng Festival (端午節, the Festival of the Fifth Day of the Fifth Moon). According to legend, the Festival celebrates the life and death of Qu Yuan -- a poet during the Warring States Period who drowned himself to protest government corruption. Over the years, the Dragon Boat races and the eating of 粽 ("jung", rice dumplings wrapped in bamboo leaves) have become associated with Qu's death and, subsequently, the festival celebrating it. However, the rationalist in me subscribes to the theory that all this Qu Yuan stuff is used to "tart up" the Festival and that it likely originated in early agrarian society because it coincides annually with the Summer Solstice. If you would like to learn more about the Tuen Ng Festival, here are some links:
While my saliva-deprived self sipped tea and watched everyone else chow down on their rice dumplings (don't cry for me, Argentina, the truth is I never really liked rice dumplings in the first place), kindly Granny Mak walks up to me and hands me a "get well" lucky money packet. When I got home (it's impolite to open a lucky money packet in front of the person who gave it to you), I discovered a nicely-folded $100 Canadian dollar bill tucked inside the red envelope. Considering that I spent Summer Solstice 2006 lying in a hospital bed getting shot up with Cisplatin and 5-Fluorouracil, this year's Summer Solstice was exponentially better than the one last year.

The little windfall has since sparked an angel versus devil debate in my mind. The angel is saying: "Save the $100, put it in some interest-bearing instrument, and, like those bank pamphlets suggest, it will eventually turn into $1000 and feed you when you're 64."

Meanwhile, the devil is tempting me to buy the LEGEND OF THE CONDOR HEROES 1983 DVD set that I've had my eye on with whispers of: "今朝有酒﹐今朝醉 (gam jiu yau jau, gam jiu jui or "if you have wine at dawn, then get drunk at dawn" -- the Chinese version of carpe diem)."

I hate to admit this but, right now, there's a 95% chance that the devil will win the argument. First, you only live once. Second, the angel, in my mind, is being played by Hui Siu-Hung while Anthony Wong Chau-Sang plays the devil. As a result, even though the angel has solid arguments, they're being presented in a hapless and ineffectual way while the devil is all cool and convincing. I've already done some shopping around on the Internet and found a place that's selling the set for only $55 -- not bad for a 59 episode, 15 DVD collection. The only thing stopping me, oddly enough, is the potential for getting my childhood memories crushed by buying the DVDs and being bored out of my skull by the extended "emotional" sequences that were de rigueur for the 1980s TVB adaptations of Louis Cha's works. Too many of those sequences marred the 1980s adaptations of RETURN OF THE CONDOR HEROES (starring Andy Lau Tak-Wah) and FLYING FOX OF THE SNOWY MOUNTAIN (starring Ray Lui Leung-Wai).

Does anyone out there have the LEGEND OF THE CONDOR HEROES DVDs? Are they as good as they are cracked up to be: uncut, contains the opening theme sequences and credits, English subtitles, clear picture and good sound?

By the way, I really need to get different people to play the angel and the devil because the devil is winning far too many of these arguments. Actually, what I really need is an Inner Six -- a sexy but belligerent and antagonistic presence. If I had one, maybe you'd see more posts on this blog -- that is if I don't end up unwittingly contributing to the destruction of humanity.

Image credits: Allen Timothy Chang (rice dumpling image), TVB (LEGEND OF THE CONDOR HEROES DVD cover), United Filmmakers Organization (Hui Siu-Hung from IT HAD TO BE YOU), China Star Entertainment (Anthony Wong Chau-Sang from JIANG HU: THE TRIAD ZONE), R&D TV (Tricia Helfer from BATTLESTAR GALACTICA)

Friday, June 8, 2007

Thoughts on IT HAD TO BE YOU

As my hot flight attendant girlfriend is away (probably out two-timing me), I've got nothing to do but walk Tobias, my imaginary dog, come home, make some horribly expensive coffee, put on a Faye Wong CD and cook myself some instant noodles after putting on a wig and my late wife's dress. With all that done, I have some time on my hands to share some thoughts on IT HAD TO BE YOU.


IT HAD TO BE YOU
後備甜心

Directors: Andrew Lo Wang-Hin, Maurice Li Ming-Man
Cast: Karena Lam Ka-Yan (Jill), Ekin Cheng Yi-Kin (Jack), Eric Tsang Chi-Wai (Jason), Harvey Hu Bing (Chi On), Bobo Chan Man-Woon (Grace), Nicola Cheung Sun-Yu (Moon), Kiki Sheung Tin-Ngor (Jill's Mom)


PRE-CONCEIVED NOTIONS: After watching a slate of "Chinese epics made for the international market", a depressing Ann Hui film and a decent attempt at a classic HK action film, I was ready for something light. My OMNI-2 "Super Cinema Night" recording of IT HAD TO BE YOU seemed to fit the bill. IT HAD TO BE YOU is an UFO film so you have to expect a star-studded cast, interesting characters, a solid story, great production values and a glossy urban setting. After all, UFO is responsible for some films that I look back upon fondly: HE AIN'T HEAVY, HE'S MY FATHER (a classic starring the two Tony Leungs), LOST AND FOUND and the under-appreciated AND I HATE YOU SO. Of course, UFO has had their share of misfires -- like TWELVE NIGHTS and LAVENDER -- but, generally speaking, the UFO label means quality HK romance/drama just like the Milkyway label means quality HK action/drama.


AFTER THE MOVIE: IT HAD TO BE YOU turned out to be one of those middling films that's somewhat disappointing but not particularly vexing. It doesn't lend itself to penetrating analysis so, instead of a full-blown review, I'm just going to write some bullet points on stuff I liked and didn't like then wrap everything up with a few words.


THE GOOD:

- Karena Lam Ka-Yan doing the cute schtick. If you like Karena Lam and you enjoy watching actresses doing the cute schtick then this is the film for you. From beginning to end, Lam has the "pedal to the metal" on the cute accelerator. This means, of course, that if you don't like the cute schtick, then Karena Lam's performance is going to grate on you. More on this later ...

- Ekin Cheng Yi-Kin turns in a solid performance. As Kozo over at LoveHKFilm points out in his review, ol' Noodle sheds his usual "thirtysomething teenager" persona for a mature, level-headed guy persona. This is a welcome development as "Mr. Badminton" turns 40 (40!) this year and watching him continue to play overgrown teenagers would be as disconcerting as watching Kevin Spacey, great as he is, play a twentysomething Bobby Darin in BEYOND THE SEA.

- Kiki Sheung Tin-Ngor gives a nice performance as Jill's Mom. One thing about UFO Films, there are always some solid supporting characters and Kiki Sheung's role is no different. By making Sheung's character deaf, the filmmakers allowed for a nice variation on the typical "leading lady's Mom" character. You're probably tired of hearing me say this but seeing Kiki Sheung play a Mom in this film makes me feel old since I used to watch her play hot girl roles in 1980s TVB series.

After some time away, Sheung has rejoined TVB and can currently be seen with Cecilia Yip Tung, David Chiang Dai-Wai and Sheren Teng Sui-Man in the TVB series THE FAMILY LINK (師奶兵團). The series is being billed as a Hong Kong version of DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES.

- Bobo Chan Man-Woon makes a noble bid to join the likes of Kitty Ting Hao (THE GREATEST CIVIL WAR ON EARTH) and Valerie Chow Ka-Ling (CHUNGKING EXPRESS) in the Hong Kong Movie Hot Flight Attendants Hall of Fame. Lost in the crowd of young HK starlets, Chan retired from the entertainment circle in 2006. As evidenced by her role in this film and her ad for the MTR, it's too bad because I thought she had an air of maturity to her that gave her a leg up on the bubbly, girly-girl types. For example, I wouldn't scoff at the idea of Chan playing a lawyer like I would, did, when I heard Gillian Chung Yan-Tung was playing one in 49 DAYS. In case you were wondering, Chan is currently on a path taken by many of her HK starlet predecessors: involved in a relationship with some rich, business-type guy.


THE BAD:

- Karena Lam doing the cute schtick. Like the fine line between love and hate and the fine line between genius and insanity, there's a fine line between endearing and annoying. In this film, Karena Lam not only crosses that line, she leaves it a speck in the horizon of her rear-view mirror. When you combine the overdone cute act with character quirks like her penchant for charades and her imaginary dog Fluffy, her character loses the sympathy that a leading lady in a romance film needs. Instead of feeling bad for Jill's plight as "the other woman", all you're thinking is that she's a ditzy dope who deserves to be in the situation that she finds herself in.

- Ideas and setups that fizzle instead of sizzle. In addition to setting the cute meter for Karena Lam's character at 100, IT HAD TO BE YOU is filled with plot points and setups that are intended to add charm and romance to the film but are so clearly calculated that it kills the mood instead of enhancing it. The three biggest offenders are:
  • Jill's imaginary dog. This bit really hurts the credibility of the Jill character and the damage that it does isn't worth the payoff at the end.

  • A sequence where Jack and Jill, unbeknownst to the other, sing to a Faye Wong at the same time. The scene is intended to show the audience that the two belong together because they have some sort of great cosmic synchronicity but, by this point in the film, everyone knows that already. As a result, it ends up being a piece of cinematic verbosity that disrupts the momentum of the movie.

  • Eric Tsang Chi-Wai's character in drag. This bit is supposed to set up Jack and Jill for an Oprah "Moment of Enlightenment"™ about life and love but it's too forced and strained for it to be meaningful.
Just as every magic trick has a pledge, a turn and a prestige, every romantic comedy has a situation, a complication and, hopefully, a post-romantic comedy afterglow (a term coined by an old girlfriend from my university days describing the "toasty warm" feeling you get after a good romantic comedy). IT HAD TO BE YOU has an imaginative situation (two people who can be labeled the "third party" in a romantic triangle) but the complications are too laboured and contrived to amount to any post-romantic comedy afterglow. With Ekin Cheng, Karena Lam, Harvey Hu Bing, Nicola Cheung Sun-Yu and Bobo Chan in the cast, it's a good film for stargazing but if you are hoping to get a romantic buzz, you're better off looking elsewhere.


MISCELLANEA:


- When I used to eat French Fries, I liked them without ketchup. I usually ate them with some salt and some pepper. I'd always thought that slathering ketchup on a fry smothered the taste of potato making eating fries meaningless. I mean, would you listen to an iPod while you're sitting in a theatre watching a movie?

Anyway, what does this portend for my love life? Does it mean that I actually don't want love in my life? I guess I'll have to head over to Temple Street some day and consult a fortune teller.

- Fire Lee Ka-Wing plays a character named "Fatty". I hope it's not because people think he's fat but because Lam Chi-Chung (or someone of similar proportion) was originally cast for this role and the powers-that-be were too lazy to change the character's name after Lam dropped out.

- The greatly under-appreciated CRAZY N' THE CITY must have made a deeper impression on me than I thought because once I saw Yan Ng Yat-Yin, I half-expected Chloe Chiu Suet-Fei to pop up on the screen. I have an OMNI-2 recording of COCKTAIL (the Hong Kong movie, not the Tom Cruise one) lying around somewhere. It has both Chloe Chiu and Bobo Chan in it. I think that's next up on the queue.

- Seeing Nicola Cheung Sun-Yu made me look up what's she been up to since I got put on the DL. With no movie or TV credits since 2005, there are reports that she got a day job and supplements her income by doing ads and showing up at store openings and promotional events. There are also reports that she's going to marry her rich boyfriend in October or November 2007. Then again, there's also a report of her rich boyfriend out on the town with another woman.

- From the "Learn Something New Every Day" File: Lo Meng, my favourite entertainment circle muscle man, has an English name -- Turbo. Jet, obviously, was already taken.

Image Credits: United Filmmakers Organization (IT HAD TO BE YOU), Cathay Organisation Holdings Ltd. (THE GREATEST CIVIL WAR ON EARTH), Jet Tone Production (CHUNGKING EXPRESS)

Friday, May 25, 2007

Thoughts on THE POSTMODERN LIFE OF MY AUNT and SPL

Apologies, again, for the long delay between posts. I'm still struggling with finding my writing mojo. For the past week, I have been working on a post about CURSE OF THE GOLDEN FLOWER but it isn't ready yet for publication. I'm unhappy with the tone of a section in it about Zhang Yimou because it reads like I have a grudge against him. It feels like I could have easily started off the section with: "Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die."

I certainly don't have a grudge against Zhang and I definitely don't want to come off like I do so the post is parked in my Blogger draft folder awaiting further work. I hope to have it ready to go before the Chrysanthemum Festival.

In the meantime, here are some thoughts on a couple of movies I watched this past holiday long weekend here in Canada: THE POSTMODERN LIFE OF MY AUNT and SPL.


THE POSTMODERN LIFE OF MY AUNT
姨媽的後現代生活

Official Website: http://www.postmodernlifeofmyaunt.com/
Director: Ann Hui On-Wah
Cast: Siqin Gaowa (Ye Rutang), Chow Yun-Fat (Pan Zhichang), Lisa Lu (Mrs. Shui), Vicki Zhao Wei (Liu Daifan)


PRE-CONCEIVED NOTIONS: None. Apart from some early reports in 2005 that Chow Yun-Fat was "coming back" to star in an Ann Hui On-Wah movie, I missed all the media coverage about this film. I picked up this title mostly to see Fat-Gor in something other than a Hollywood film or a "Chinese epic made for the international market" and because, at eight dollars, the Mainland DVD was conveniently priced for the Leung treasury.

I only developed a pre-conceived notion when I got the DVD. Looking at its cover (right) and reading the little blurb on the back, I came away with the impression that I was in store for a light comedy-drama. The movie description suggests a "late-in-life romance" between a quirky, divorced senior and a "mysterious stranger" who meet in a park. The romance is then jeopardized because the "stranger" may or may not be a con-man. Coupled with the cover image featuring a comically-harried Siqin Gaowa, a charming-looking Chow Yun-Fat, Vicki Zhao Wei [still known mostly for playing the bubbly Little Swallow in (MY FAIR PRINCESS a.k.a. PRINCESS RETURNING PEARL, 還珠格格)] and a collection of background characters who look like they are the Shanghai equivalents of the townies from GILMORE GIRLS, most people would be inclined to expect something like AS GOOD AS IT GETS but from Chinese and female perspectives.

AFTER THE MOVIE: Numbed by the unyielding melancholy of the final third of the film, the only thing I was thinking when I pressed the stop button on my remote was that the phrase "don't judge a book by its cover" can easily be extended to DVDs. Instead of a quirky, heart-warming comedy-drama, viewers are treated to the sad tale of a vibrant, independent woman transformed by circumstance into a lifeless, defeated automaton.


The "bait-and-switch" type trick that the DVD cover perpetrates will undoubtedly gall unsuspecting viewers who were conned into watching the movie. However, I suspect that those who come into the film with eyes wide open will also be disappointed.

There are many movies out there where, going in, you know that things are not going to end well. LETTERS FROM IWO JIMA, the German film DOWNFALL (about the last days of Adolph Hitler) and the HBO movie WIT (starring Emma Thompson as a professor who learns that she has terminal cancer) come to mind. There's a poignancy to those films where, even though the subject matter is depressing, you walk away feeling re-assured about the human condition. This is not the case with THE POSTMODERN LIFE OF MY AUNT. From about the halfway point on, the movie is unrelenting in its sadness as its protagonist, Ye Rutang, has her emotional, financial and physical well-being stripped away. In films of this ilk, there is usually some point, some nuance to the downward sprial that gives the film some insight but in THE POSTMODERN LIFE OF MY AUNT, the point appears to be missing.

There are elements that suggest that there is a method in the sadness. The two "harvest moon" scenes and the relationship between Ye Rutang and her young nephew Kuan Kuan (the only time Ye Rutang perks up in the last half of the movie is in her scenes with Kuan Kuan) hint at something. However, the hints are too faint and make no impact. Ultimately, the only message the viewer gets is "life sucks sometimes" -- a message that most people likely already understand without having to pay for and sit through an 111 minute movie.


Other things that don't really work in the film:
  • The plot point that Ye Rutang abandoned her young family to start her life in Shanghai is touched upon but never explored. You would think that a revelation of that magnitude would lead somewhere but it doesn't.

  • Similarly, Vicki Zhao Wei's character has a scene or two that seems to be conveying something but, again, the resonance is too faint and there is no pay off. In fact, the scene where she is taking a smoke break during work feels like a tacked on "let's get Vicki Zhao a Golden Horse nomination" moment. Actually, that whole "Vicki Zhao at work" sequence seems to me to be entirely superfluous to the movie.

  • Chow Yun-Fat's character, Pan Zhichang, is somewhat inconsistent. Alternately charming and buffoonish, the character screams "fictional creation" rather than "credibly-rendered human being". There are moments where Chow's broad acting would elicit chuckles or contemptuous eye-rolling were it not for the fact that it was the legendary Chow Yun-Fat hamming it up on the screen.

Leaving aside room for the possibility that those immersed in Mainland culture may pick up on meaningful nuances that those of us outside of the Mainland cannot, I am hesitant to condemn THE POSTMODERN LIFE OF MY AUNT with "not recommended" status. However, I can safely say that it is probably for devoted arthouse fans and Chow Yun-Fat, Vicki Zhao Wei or Ann Hui On-Wah completists only. Casual fans aren't missing anything by passing up on this movie.

MISCELLANEA:
  • Another sign of the inexorable nature of time: Chow Yun-Fat is now old enough to play an "old man". The first time I saw him, he was playing an idealistic Beijing University student forced into the Shanghai criminal underworld. Now, he's playing an 阿伯 ("Ah Bak", "old man"). Hard to believe that the thirtieth anniversary of SHANGHAI BEACH (上海灘) is only two years and change away.

  • There's a "FACE Audio and Video" logo that pops up intermittently on the top left-hand corner of the screen throughout the movie. What's up with that? Did I somehow end up with a well-made pirated DVD or does this sort of thing happen often with Mainland DVDs? This is the first Mainland DVD that I've watched. I usually get the Hong Kong versions.

SPL (SHA PO LANG)
殺破狼

North American title: KILL ZONE
Official Website: http://www.shapolangthemovie.com/
Director: Wilson Yip Wai-Shun
Cast: Simon Yam Tat-Wah (Inspector Chan Kwok-Chung), Sammo Hung Kam-Bo (Wong Po), Donnie Yen Chi-Tan (Inspector Ma Kwan), Wu Jing (Jack), Liu Kai-Chi (Wah), Danny Summer (Sum), Ken Chang (Lok)


PRE-CONCEIVED NOTIONS: SPL was released before I was diagnosed so I was around for all the media hype surrounding the film. The publicity machine made it sound like it was a return to the mid-1980s/early-1990s Hong Kong action movie heyday (no CGI, no cameo appearances by EEG pop idols, no mercy sir!). Todd over at Twitch called the film: "... one of the finest films to emerge from Hong Kong ever. Period."

On the other hand, I remember the film getting killed by some posters at its Mov3.com discussion board. I also remember that SPL didn't break the benchmark HK$10 million mark at the HK box office so the ol' Sanney-sense started tingling and I suspected that the film would likely fall somewhere in between the high praise and the pessimistic murmurs from the crowd over at Mov3.

Despite the tempered expectations, I held high hopes for the film due to the fact that I've been a longtime fan of both Simon Yam Tat-Wah (even during his GIGOLO AND WHORE, DON'T STOP MY CRAZY LOVE FOR YOU period) and Sammo Hung Kam-Bo. Also, I've had a soft spot for Wilson Yip ever since he had that great streak of BIO-ZOMBIE, BULLETS OVER SUMMER and JULIET IN LOVE from 1998 to 2000. Sadly, Leon Lai Ming and an orangutan stopped the run cold with SKYLINE CRUISERS (official site). If you haven't seen them yet, BIO-ZOMBIE, BULLETS OVER SUMMER and JULIET IN LOVE are three of the better "diamond in the rough" type films from the post-Handover era. Of the three, I liked BULLETS OVER THE SUMMER most but BIO-ZOMBIE is a whole lot of goofy fun.


AFTER THE MOVIE: Sad to say but I think I fall more on the side of the fickle folks over at Mov3 than I do with Todd from Twitch. I would rate SPL somewhere in between mediocre and good rather than good or great -- a C+, maybe a B- but definitely not an A and certainly not "... one of the finest films to emerge from Hong Kong ever. Period."

SPL is an amalgam of three Hong Kong movie sub-genres: the one fateful day/night genre (think ONE NITE IN MONGKOK or THE LONGEST NITE), the heroic bloodshed/honour among men genre (think John Woo movies from the mid-1980s/early-1990s) and the well-tread cops-and-robbers genre. Movies from those genres like ONE NITE IN MONGKOK, A BETTER TOMORROW, HARD-BOILED, EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED and THE LONGEST NITE are the "Rolexes" of Hong Kong cinema. SPL is a "Lolex", a finely-crafted imitation but one that doesn't stand up to closer inspection.

The critical difference between the "Rolexes" and SPL is pacing. The credibility of the story-telling in SPL is reminiscent of the credibility issues and plot holes found in HARD-BOILED and THE LONGEST NITE. However, those films had the energy and pacing to keep you engrossed and exhilarated until the end. It was only after the movie that you begin to think: "hmmm, wasn't it a little ridiculous that Tony Leung Chiu-Wai's character survived that shotgun blast to the chest?". SPL, by contrast, has energy-sapping sections that plod along giving you the opportunity to wonder about things like:
  • The unit headed by Simon Yam's Inspector Chan have footage of Wong Po (Sammo Hung) beating the undercover cop before someone else shoots him. Isn't that sufficient evidence to show that, even though Wong Po didn't pull the trigger, he was complicit in the crime? I'm not exactly sure about the details of the criminal justice system in Hong Kong but it seems to me that Wong Po would have been eligible for some jail time on the basis of the tape even before Chan and his boys decided to doctor it. Who cares what charge you get him on just as long as you do get him -- right? Isn't this a clear-cut "Eliot Ness nails Al Capone for tax evasion" situation?

  • At least twice in the movie, Wong Po is shown to have a legion of henchmen just hanging around on the street in front of his high-rise crime headquarters. Yet, when Inspector Ma (Donnie Yen) arrives after phoning and telling Wong Po that he is coming only ONE guy, Jet (Wu Jing), is there to stop him. Was there no time for a sequence where Donnie Yen effortlessly dispatches anonymous low-level associates before moving on to the sub-boss and then, ultimately, the boss? Wasn't that how the narrative arc went in the classic Bruce Lee action movies? Didn't anyone involved with SPL remember the scene in THE BIG BOSS where Bruce Lee says: "Just keep away. Go on. It's not your fight. Beat it or I'll kill ya' ..."? How hard would it have been to shoot a brief sequence like that? Seems to me that a film that purports to be "an action classic" should have a detail like that covered.


  • Don't get me started on the whole "Inspector Chan has brain cancer" sub-plot. We'd be here for days.
The pacing flaw in SPL reminds me of a great boxer whose skills have been diminished by age. No longer able to dominate and dictate the action for the entire fight, he lays back and relies on occasional flurries of punches to try to "steal" rounds by impressing the judges with furious, flashy spurts of action. Similarly, SPL is punctuated by some great action sequences but, for the most part, plods along flat-footed. Like the great boxer who has devolved into just a good boxer, SPL is not "great" just merely OK. It is a decent time at the movies and certainly worth a watch but it does not deserve to be placed in the pantheon of great Hong Kong action films.

MISCELLANEA:
  • (Spoiler warning, skip this point if you haven't seen the film.) Was anyone surprised that Wong Po (Sammo Hung) wasn't dead after Inspector Ma (Donnie Yen) suplexed him onto the table? As soon as the camera moved in for a tight shot of Donnie Yen and stayed there, I'm sure 90% of viewers realized that Wong Po was going to sit up like The Undertaker and start fighting again.


  • To get a sense of where I fell on the SPL opinion spectrum, I read a bunch of reviews and, to my surprise, discovered that Donnie Yen has a bit of a reputation for being a "preening schmoe". More than one of my fellows web writers mocked Yen's "pretty boy" acting abilities. Where does this reputation come from? I've seen Yen in a bunch of films from ONCE UPON A TIME IN CHINA II and DRAGON INN through to HERO and SEVEN SWORDS and, while he's never going to give you Tony Leung Chiu-Wai level acting, he's not the worst offender when it comes to on screen preening. Heck, back when I had a thing for Kitty Lai Mei-Han and Margie Tsang Wah-Sin (two of Tony Leung Chiu-Wai's ex-girlfriends) I even watched Yen's TVB series A NEW LIFE (命運迷宮). He ain't that bad. At least he's a "legitimate bad ass" when it comes to fight scenes and action sequences -- unlike some other "pretty boys" I could mention.

  • I don't buy the argument that a CAT-III rating prevented SPL from breaking the HK$10 million mark at the Hong Kong box office (it ended up with a HK$7.5 million take). A CAT-III rating certainly wasn't an impediment for ELECTION (HK$15.5 million). In spite of the problems with piracy, illegal downloads, the regrettable prejudice amongst HKers against Hong Kong films and plain ol' general indifference, good movies tend to find a paying audience. SPL just wasn't that good.

  • Should I give Wilson Yip's DRAGON TIGER GATE a go? The promotional pictures over at Mov3 scream "stupid and over-produced" but it's another Wilson Yip/Donnie Yen collaboration. It also has the always entertaining Yuen Wah in it. I'm on the fence. Anyone care to tip me over to one side or the other?
Image credits: Beijing Poly-bona Film Publishing Co. Ltd. (THE POSTMODERN LIFE OF MY AUNT), Golden Harvest (SKYLINE CRUISERS, THE BIG BOSS), Abba Movies Co. Ltd. (SPL)

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

May Day Medley

A medley of items on this May Day 2007 ...

First, the hard drive on my new laptop failed last Sunday while I was surfing Yahoo! Sports and reading up on the NBA basketball playoffs. One minute, I'm reading up on Golden State's chances against Dallas. The next, I get a blue screen of death telling me that's there's something wrong with the computer's kernel. No dramatic warning signs like smoke coming through the keyboard or awful click-click-click sounds as the hard drive worked its magic. Just business-as-usual and then the abrupt blue screen of death.

The next day, I got a hold of a repair guy and he told me that my hard drive suffered a massive failure. He tried mounting it on another system to recover some data but the drive was filled with too many critical errors. I could have had it shipped to Ontario where a data recovery company would give it a try with more sophisticated equipment but it would cost me at least $800. The only things I had on there of value were two years of digital photos (including all of my cancer photos) so it wasn't worth it to me to dip into the Leung treasury to try something that might not even pay off. It's a shame about the pictures but as Ah Poon (left) [Maggie Cheung Ho-Yee's character in PLAIN LOVE II (茶是故鄉濃)] said: "There's a reason Heaven put a person's eyes in the front. It's because people are meant to look forward not back."

I asked to keep the hard drive because, who knows, the technology may exist five, ten years later for me to retrieve the pictures. I leave that up to Providence.

What's galling about the situation is that I bought the laptop in May 2005 but didn't use it from February 2006 to March 2007. This means that I essentially used the computer for only ten months. All things being equal, if I had used it regularly instead of being sidelined by cancer, the repair would have fallen under warranty.

The repair guy said that it was just plain bad luck that the hard drive failed on me. It was probably faulty manufacturing or a weaker than standard part. It certainly wasn't from overuse. Oh well, that's life.

As a result of the calamity, I've been busy these past few days re-installing software and restoring my bookmarks. I also have to figure out what will happen if I plug my iPod into my new hard drive: Will everything on my iPod be erased? Does that mean I have to rip all my CDs again and re-establish my playlists? I'm going to have to hit Google on this one because, surely, I'm not the first person to find themselves in this situation.

There's no way to gracefully segue from my petty technology problems to the Virginia Tech shootings so I'll just jump right in. I was going to write a blog entry on the tragedy a couple of days after it happened but, after being subjected to the exhaustive media coverage, I was reluctant to contribute to the element of "what happened at Virginia Tech was a tragedy that will forever mar the lives of many ... but how does it effect ME?" that I was sensing. However, my friend Charles sent me a link to a story by the Washington Post's Stephen Hunter in which Hunter labours strenuously to "hint" that John Woo movies nudged Cho Seung-Hui into action. Hunter's arguments are so contrived, it saddened me deeply to see that a major paper would run an article with such an egregious premise. Luckily, Charles also sent a link to a rebuttal of the article by New York Times' film critic A. O. Scott.

I realize that articles linking OLDBOY and John Woo movies to the shooting stem from a natural reaction to make sense out of a senseless act. Lamentably, this type of coverage has put Asian cinema in a negative light in the minds of some. Instead of thinking: "I got to check out the film that THE DEPARTED was based on", some people are now thinking: "Isn't that the ultra-violent movie that the crazy guy from Virginia Tech was mimicking?" The worst part of the numerous "OLDBOY made Cho Seung-Hui do it" articles is that Park Chan-Wook's "Vengeance Trilogy" is about the emptiness of revenge and not the glorification of it. Of course, a majority of the writers who lined up to cast blame at OLDBOY missed this salient point because they probably didn't even bother to watch the movie.

One other thing about the tragic affair: In the early moments of the media coverage, when reports emerged stating that the shooter was "Asian", I started thinking to myself: "please don't be Chinese, please don't be Chinese, please don't be Chinese." I knew it was a little silly -- I think North American society has evolved beyond the point where the actions of one Chinese person would taint the perception of all Chinese people -- but I still couldn't help feeling the way I did. I wasn't alone. When I talked to a friend a few days after the shooting, he admitted that he felt the same way. He said his feelings were rooted in the fact that there's already enough tension between China and the United States these days. He didn't want it compounded by having the "nutjob from Virginia Tech" be Chinese. For me, the reaction was more instinctive. This article, "When ethnicity brings an unwelcome focus", from the Los Angeles Times does a good job of explaining my initial unease to the early "Asian shooter" reports.

That's it for today. I'll be back soon with posts on some of the movies I've watched recently: CURSE OF THE GOLDEN FLOWER, MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA, BATTLE OF WITS, THE HEAVENLY KINGS, ELECTION, ELECTION 2, MY NAME IS FAME and THE BANQUET. I just have to re-install my InterVideo WinDVD Player so that I can use some screen grabs.

Sunday, April 15, 2007

The 26th Hong Kong Film Awards

Updated at 10:52 pm

The 26th Hong Kong Film Awards were presented Sunday evening at the Hong Kong Cultural Centre in Tsimshatsui. AFTER THIS OUR EXILE was the big winner with five awards (Best Film, Best Director, Best Screenplay, Best Supporting Actor and Best New Performer). However, its lead actor, Aaron Kwok Fu-Sing, was not able to capitalize on the film's winning momentum as the favourite going into the evening was upset by crowd favourite Lau Ching-Wan (left). Lau, 43, won the Best Actor prize over Kwok for his performance in MY NAME IS FAME. A twenty-four year veteran of the entertainment circle, Lau finally broke his shutout in the Best Actor category after being nominated seven times previously for LOST IN TIME (2003), VICTIM (1999), THE LONGEST NITE (1997), FULL ALERT (1997), BIG BULLET (1996), C'EST LA VIE, MON CHERIE (1994) and THOU SHALT NOT SWEAR (1993). A thunderous round of applause erupted in the Cultural Centre when Lau's name was announced. After shaking hands with fellow nominee Tony Leung Chiu-Wai, Lau made his way on to the stage and joked: "I hope I'm given a little more time. After all, I've waited so long."

He went on to say: "I had a feeling I would win when I saw that the HKFAA (Hong Kong Film Awards Association) picked 'passing the torch' as its theme this year. Because of that, I knew the award would go to a youngster like me. I want to thank Brother Chau-Sang (Anthony Wong Chau-Sang), Brother Sing-Sing (Aaron Kwok Fu-Sing) and Brother Chiu-Wai (Tony Leung Chiu-Wai). I will take the torch and work hard."

Related images:

Gong Li and her cleavage (right) won the Best Actress prize for their work in CURSE OF THE GOLDEN FLOWER. Gong, who did not attend the ceremony, won her first Hong Kong Film Award after being nominated previously for her roles in A TERRACOTTA WARRIOR (1990) and TEMPTRESS MOON (1996). In a phone interview with Oriental Daily News, Gong said: "I'm very surprised. I didn't think that I would win. I thank the HKFAA for giving me something that I've longed many years for. Although I've won many international awards, this is the first time I've won in Hong Kong. Every time I win an award, it has something to do with Zhang Yimou. He really brings me good luck. I have to clarify one thing: There are rumours that I didn't go to the awards because I didn't like the way the HKFA booked my accommodations. I want to let people know that I have a house in Hong Kong and don't need to stay in a hotel. I didn't make it to the awards because I'm working in America."

AFTER THIS OUR EXILE was Patrick Tam Ka-Ming's first directorial effort in sixteen years. His last film was 1989's MY HEART IS THAT EXTERNAL ROSE. Accepting his directing award, Tam told the crowd: "Thank you to the HKFA for supporting me. I wish to thank the cast and crew as well as God for giving me such an excellent gift."

Speaking to reporters after the ceremony, Tam was asked for his thoughts about the successful night for AFTER THIS OUR EXILE. Tam: "I can't say getting all the awards was expected or unexpected because there was no way to predict but I feel disappointed for Sing-Sing (Aaron Kwok). He really did a lot for this film. However, awards aren't our main goal. The main thing is for everyone to see the hard work we put into the movie."

Eight year-old Gouw Ian Iskanda won two awards, Best Supporting Actor and Best New Performer, for his role in AFTER THIS OUR EXILE. He was the first actor to win both the new performer award and an acting award in the same year since Karena Lam Ka-Yan (JULY RHASPODY) did it five years ago. To the suprise of many, Iskanda beat out veterans Simon Yam Tat-Wah (ELECTION 2), Nick Cheung Ka-Fai (ELECTION 2) and Liu Ye (CURSE OF THE GOLDEN FLOWER) in the Best Supporting Actor category. Surprised himself, Iskanda had to be prompted to go on stage to collect his second award of the evening. Shellshocked, the child actor was at a loss for words and managed only to say: "I never thought I'd win twice ... I learned a lot from making this film. I'm very happy. I'll continue to work hard."

More composed when speaking to reporters following the ceremony. Iskanda told reporters that he was looking forward to the spoils of victory. Iskanda: "I was going to get a reward of a Nintendo Wii and ten games for winning. Now that I've won twice, I think I should be getting twenty games."

Asked if he was going to be an actor when he grows up, Iskanda replied that he wanted to be a "tennis player" instead.

Related images:
Daniel Wu (Ng Yin-Tso) took home the award for Best New Director (THE HEAVENLY KINGS). He accepted the award with his Alive bandmates Conroy Chan Chi-Chung, Terence Yin (Wan Chi-Wai) and Andrew Lin Hoi because he views THE HEAVENLY KINGS as a group achievement rather than an individual one. Asked if winning the directing award means that he will focus more on directing rather than acting in the future, Wu said that he probably wouldn't because he "feels more comfortable acting". Related image (courtesy Ming Pao Daily):
Sir Run Run Shaw (Siu Yat-Fu) was given a Lifetime Achievement Award for his contribution to Hong Kong cinema. The 100 year-old Shaw did not accept the award in person, however, because he was not feeling well enough to attend the ceremony. Flanked by a contingent of Shaw Studio veterans that included Ti Lung, Gordon Liu (Lau Kar-Fai) and Jimmy Wang Yu, Shaw's eldest son and presumptive heir, Siu Wai-Ming, accepted the award on Shaw's behalf. Related image (courtesy Ming Pao Daily):
A reflection, perhaps, of his sometimes stand-offish relationship with the Hong Kong Film Awards, acclaimed director Johnnie To Kei-Fung was shut out at this year's award despite receiving nine nominations for his films ELECTION 2 and EXILED. To, as he has done regularly in the past, did not attend the ceremony.

Big names Zhang Yimou, Chow Yun-Fat and Jet Li were also not present at the awards.

More from the awards ceremony following the list of results.

RESULTS FROM THE 26TH HONG KONG FILM AWARDS

For a detailed list of the nominees: See the official Hong Kong Film Awards website

BEST FILM: AFTER THIS OUR EXILE 父子
  • Presented by: Vision Film Workshop, Black & White Films Ltd.
  • Executive Producer: Chiu Li-Kuang (邱瓈寬)

BEST DIRECTOR: Patrick Tam Ka-Ming (譚家明) for AFTER THIS OUR EXILE


BEST SCREENPLAY: Patrick Tam Ka-Ming, Tian Koi-Leong (田開良) for AFTER THIS OUR EXILE


BEST ACTOR: Lau Ching-Wan (劉青雲) for MY NAME IS FAME (我要成名)


BEST ACTRESS: Gong Li (鞏俐) for CURSE OF THE GOLDEN FLOWER (滿城盡帶黃金甲)


BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR: Gouw Ian Iskanda (吳澋滔) for AFTER THIS OUR EXILE


BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Zhou Xun (周迅) for THE BANQUET (夜宴)


BEST NEW PERFORMER:
Gouw Ian Iskanda for AFTER THIS OUR EXILE


BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY: Andrew Lau Wai-Keung (劉偉強) , Lai Yiu-Fai (黎耀輝) for CONFESSION OF PAIN (傷城)


BEST FILM EDITING: Eric Kong Chi-Leung (鄺志良) for BATTLE OF WITS (墨攻)


BEST ART DIRECTION: Huo Tingxiao (霍廷霄) for CURSE OF THE GOLDEN FLOWER


BEST COSTUME AND MAKE-UP DESIGN: Yee Chung-Man (奚仲文) for CURSE OF THE GOLDEN FLOWER


BEST ACTION CHOREOGRAPHY: Yuen Woo-Ping (袁和平) for FEARLESS (
霍元甲)


BEST ORIGINAL FILM SCORE: Peter Kam Pui-Tat (金培達) for ISABELLA (
伊莎貝拉)


BEST ORIGINAL FILM SONG: "The Chrysthanthemum Terrace" (菊花台) from CURSE OF THE GOLDEN FLOWER sung by Jay Chou (周杰倫)
  • Composer: Jay Chou
  • Lyrics: Vincent Fang Wenshan (方文山)

BEST SOUND DESIGN: Nakom Kositpaisa for RE-CYCLE (鬼域)


BEST VISUAL EFFECTS:
Ng Yuen-Fai (吳炫輝) , Chas Chau Chi-Shing (鄒志盛), Emil Yee Kwok-Leung (余國亮) , Alex Lim Hung-Fung (林洪峯) for RE-CYCLE


BEST NEW DIRECTOR: Daniel Wu (吳彥祖) for THE HEAVENLY KINGS (四大天王)


BEST ASIAN FILM: RIDING ALONE FOR THOUSANDS OF MILES (千里走單騎) from Mainland China


LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD: Sir Run Run Shaw (Siu Yat-Fu, 邵逸夫)


NOTES FROM THE CEREMONY:

- Despite rumours suggesting that their 18-year relationship was in peril, Tony Leung Chiu-Wai and Carina Lau Ka-Ling attended the ceremony hand-in-hand. The two also presented the Best Film award together. Of late, the couple has been plagued by rumours that Leung left Lau over Lau's alleged "friendship" with Taiwanese tycoon Terry Guo Tai-Ming (Taiwan's richest man and, according to Forbes, the 176th richest man in the world).

Related images:
- Teresa Mo Shun-Kwun was the first celebrity to show up on the red carpet. Mo: "I got here at 6:50 pm and waited around for a while before stepping out yet I'm still the first one here. Showing up early is a bad habit that I have to correct."

For the record, Tony Leung Chiu-Wai and Carina Lau Ka-Ling were the last celebrities to arrive. Related image (courtesy Oriental Daily News):
- The boys from Alive, their musical director Paul Wong Kwoon-Chung and an entourage of twenty to thirty people arrived on a big yellow bus. Daniel Wu brought his girlfriend model Lisa S., Andrew Lin Hoi had his wife on his arm and Conroy Chan Chi-Chung was accompanied by his wife Josie Ho Chiu-Yi. Paul Wong performed during the cermony.

Related images:
FASHION NOTES:

- "Tube dresses" and "clutch purses" were all the rage at this year's ceremony.

- Kelly Lin (Lam Hei-Lui), Huo Siyan (MY NAME IS FAME), Eva Huang Shengyi and Shu Qi turned heads with their eye-catching fashions. Related images:
- Rene Liu (Lau Yeuk-Ying) shocked many by dressing like a man. Related image (courtesy Ming Pao Daily):
- Oriental Daily News asked fashion designer Dorian Ho (official website) to comment on some of the fashions worn by the stars. His thoughts:
- Miriam Yeung Chin-Wai wore an elegant dress designed by Tomas Chan. However, her "rough demeamour" at the ceremony was not a match with the outfit's elegance. Speculating that Yeung is still into her character as a fishmonger for her new film HOOK ON YOU, Ho remarked: "She might as well have done like Rene Liu and dressed like a man."

- On South Korean star Song Hye-Kyo, Ho commented: "Her hair style is old-fashioned and her dress was just average. She doesn't look a bit like a big star. She's very pretty but the way she presented herself tonight was just a disappointment."

- Ho had high praise for EEG personalities Isabella Leong Lok-Si and Charlene Choi Cheuk-Yin. Ho: "Ah Sa (Choi) usually gets criticized for what she wears but she looked pretty good this time. She has a body type that's very hard to dress so what she's wearing is not bad. Besides, she's wearing a brand, J. Mendel, that I really like."

As for Isabella Leong, Ho said: "She frankly deserves some praise. A dress like that, with all those levels, can be very intimidating to wear but, with her height, she pulls it off. It's a good fit. I think she's really improving the way she dresses. Her fashion sense is starting to match the potential that she shows."

Related images:

OTHER IMAGE LINKS:

Courtesy Oriental Daily News: THE BANQUET's Zhou Xun; Chapman To Man-Chat and his wife Kristal Tin Yui-Lei; Stephy Tang Lai-Yan; Tang, Alex Fong Lik-Sun and some of the other former Cookies

Courtesy The Sun: Fellow winners Zhou Xun and Lau Ching-Wan exchange pleasantries; Jay Chou and Tony Ching Siu-Tung; Matthew Medvedev from ROB-B-HOOD; Kara Hui (Wai Ying-Hung)

Courtesy Ming Pao Daily: Zhou Xun accepts her award from presenter Miriam Yeung; Zhou; Anita Yuen Wing-Yi; Jay Chou

Oriental Daily News Photo Gallery Slideshow (Macromedia Flash Required)

Friday, April 13, 2007

Hong Kong Film Awards: Go! Lau Ching-Wan! Go!


My apologies for the long gap between posts. Healthwise, I am doing all right ... though I still spend more time than I'd like to in waiting rooms at various medical facilities. Thanks, by the way, to the three people who wrote in this week to ask how I was doing. It's just that I've been struggling with my writing of late. Before, when I used to do news reports, the articles would write themselves. Now, every paragraph is a grind as I debate questions like: Does anybody besides me find this interesting? Is this too mundane to even mention? Should I cut this part out or leave it in?

For the past three weeks, I've been working on a post about Hong Kong television serials. It started out as a review of CCTV's HEAVEN DRAGON: THE EIGHTH EPISODE but the pre-amble on television serials and how they got me sucked into the HK entertainment circle went on and on and on as I indulged heavily in a trip down memory lane. The post approached 10,000 words and I hadn't even started talking about HEAVEN DRAGON: THE EIGHTH EPISODE!

Consequently, I've decided to shelve that post temporarily and put one up on this Sunday's Hong Kong Film Awards (HKFA). But first, an announcement: I am going to gird up my loins and put up a HKFA report here somtime Sunday afternoon/Sunday evening North American time. It'll be just like the ones I used to do at Hong Kong Entertainment News In Review ... except I won't be wearing an Armani tux (er, Men's Wearhouse knockoff) while I'm typing it out.

Sometime in the near future, I will be posting a revised version of that mammoth treatise on HK television serials so stay tuned.

On to the day's business:

Since I've seen only a handful of films from 2006 and am still catching up on the events of the past year, I don't have any real insight on who I think will win or should win at this year's awards (go here to see list of nominations). However, I will be offering a fine white lamb or, if I can't find one, six pigeons to the Entertainment Circle gods if they make the following happen:

  • A win for Alive's "Adam's Choice" from THE HEAVENLY KINGS in the Best Original Song category. Having seen both THE BANQUET and FEARLESS, the songs from those films don't play as integral a part in their respective movies as "Adam's Choice" does in THE HEAVENLY KINGS. Besides, for a song that is essentially a joke, it's pretty damn catchy.

  • My greatest wish (an additional lamb or six pigeons to the Entertainment Circle gods if it comes true): A win for Lau Ching-Wan in the Best Actor category. Lau has done better work in his storied twenty-plus years career than he did in MY NAME IS FAME but I really hope he wins this year. Chow Yun-Fat (three wins in this category) and Tony Leung Chiu-Wai (five wins -- most ever in the Best Actor category) already have enough awards. Jet Li has his international acclaim and, quite frankly, his Huo Yuanjia is just a slightly different version of other kung fu heroes he's played in the past while Aaron Kwok Fu-Sing is, well, Aaron Kwok Fu-Sing. Webmaster Kozo of LoveHKFilm says that he hears the race is between the Kwokster for his glamourous role as a deadbeat dad and Lau. Here's hoping that the HKFA ignores the award-baiting and allows Lau to come out on top. It will be a little bit of a "Martin Scorsese wins Best Director for THE DEPARTED" situation but, without Lau's sympathetic portrayal keeping it grounded, MY NAME IS FAME could have easily been pretentious and self-serving rather than a delightful love letter to the HK movie industry.

Chinese Lesson of The Day: "Ching Wan" means "high and noble in virtue and ambition". "Ching Wan Jik Seung" (see graphic above) means "may you soar higher and higher" and is used as a well-wishing expression like: 身體健康 (sun tai gin hong, "may you have good health") or the familiar Lunar New Year greeting 恭喜發財 (gung hei fat choi, "congratulations and may you be prosperous").

See you Sunday!

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Thoughts on Isabella: The Movie, The Dog and The Girl

Though they have improved since I last mentioned them back in December, my mind-grapes are still not yet producing any sweet wines. My attempts at a formal review of ISABELLA all turned out to read like they were written by the guys who write CAT-III movies for Sophie Ngan Chin-Man and Grace Lam Nga-Si rather than the refined prose of Cicero. I have to hand it to Kozo, Tim Youngs and Kenneth Brorsson up in Scandinavia for consistently churning out review after review of Hong Kong movies. (I should also mention the crew from Hong Kong Cinema: View from the Brooklyn Bridge: Big Brian and YTSL.) After starting and stopping a few attempts at an ISABELLA review, I developed a deepened respect for those who can express their opinions without giving away what happens in the movie.

Abandoning the formal review, I have decided to go with the new-fangled, 21st Century, "running diary" format. A few words of warning: The running diary contains spoilers (so click here if you want to get to the non-spoiler part) and my "observations" are only slightly more insightful than Paris Hilton saying "that's hot". Instead of offering penetrating analysis, I'm hoping to create the sense that you are sitting on the couch watching the movie with me -- a pot of Ti Kuan Yin tea on the coffee table in front of us. I would offer you some potato chips, nachos, pretzels, popcorn and wasabi-flavoured rice crackers but, these days, I don't have enough saliva to lick a stamp so I don't keep that stuff around any more. There is, however, some strawberry ice cream in the freezer.

On with the show (timings are approximate):


0:00:36: The "Not Brothers" logo is so big, I thought for a second that I put the wrong movie in the DVD player. Speaking of production company logos, I've always thought the one for One Hundred Years of Film is pretty cool -- with the spikes and the picture of Guan Yu.


0:02:45: See, the "Isabella" title card is 1/3 the size of the "Not Brothers" logo.

0:02:57: Who's that creepy glasses-wearing guy hitting on Isabella Leong Lok-Si? Shawn Yue Man-Lok? Man, those "I usually don't like these places" and "give up the forest for a tree" pick-up lines are so lame. What's next? "If your right leg was Christmas and your left leg was Easter, would you let me spend some time up between the holidays?"

"There's a quiet cafe in Taipa" ... but by "cafe" I mean my bedroom and "Taipa" I mean my flat.

0:06:04: Look at all those bottles of Carlsberg beer on the table. I wonder if they are sponsors.

0:07:21: Is that Isabella Leong lying naked next to Chapman To Man-Chat? Ewww ... she's 18, 19 years old so she's of age, but still, ewww ...

0:08:08: Wow, look at that gut on Chapman To. You can tell this isn't one of those disposable "idol" films, no idol would let themselves look unflattering on screen unless it was for a serious film or they were going for an acting award.

0:09:48: An intertitle advancing the plot by using history. Edmond Pang Ho-Cheung used history and intertitles in AV as well. I wonder if this is going to become a part of the Edmond Pang movie drinking game, joining such Pang staples as the main characters smoking like a chimney and brief shots of the back of Tim Youngs' head.

0:10:42: Watching Anthony Wong Chau-Sang eat is making me hungry for hotpot. This scene between Wong and To is an interesting way to fill-in plot though.

0:12:59: Isabella Leong's character isn't 18 yet. Great, statutory rape. Are we supposed to like Chapman To's character? If we are, then this isn't the way to make him sympathetic.

Ordering her to deny ever sleeping with him? What a gentleman.

0:14:07: Hmm ... she's his daughter and her name is Cheung Bik-Yan. Hmm ...

0:15:08: That looks like one of the Boy'z -- Stephen Cheung Chi-Hang. I wonder how Boy'z are doing. If I recall correctly, Kenny Kwan Chi-Ban left and EEG got a new guy to work with Stephen Cheung. Boy bands, the kind that are pre-fabricated by music studios and not the ones that start up organically in a garage band or something, are so hard to get going. After all, you just have to go see the definition for "boy band" in the Urban Dictionary to get a sense of how most people see them. I wonder if Boy'z are still riding Twins' coattail. Things to add to the "got to Google" list after the film.

0:16:37: Now Isabella Leong is making me hungry for spaghetti.

0:16:47: Did Cheung Bik-Yan just admit to having sex with someone she knew was her father? Incest. I haven't been this grossed out since Octavia went down on Octavian.

0:17:36: Now we have a shot of Chapman To smoking next to a slot machine. This is one of the things that bug me about Edmond Pang films -- a lot of smoking. I think the characters in AV did this too. I'm with Paul Fonoroff on this one -- it's neither sexy nor cool.

0:17:47: Hmm... simplified Chinese on the slot machine buttons. I thought traditional Chinese was used in Macau? Oh well, another sign of simplified's growing encroachment on the territory of traditional. The only time I was in Macau, 1987, I was too young to be allowed into casinos so I can't say for sure that they haven't always been simplified. I seem to recall that there were slot machines on the ferry to Macau as well but, again, I was too young to be allowed in the roped-off section. Another thing to Google after the film.

0:18:23: For a guy who just found out he slept with his daughter, Shing (Chapman To) is taking it pretty calmly. If it was me, I'd be all nauseous and looking desperately for the memory-wiping service from ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND.

0:19:18: Ah, so Shing didn't sleep with Isabella, er, Bik-Yan. It was a hooker. He's already a crooked cop who fathered a kid when he was a teenager. Incest would have made the character completely unsympathetic and virtually irredeemable.

0:21:54: Isabella Leong's doing a pretty good job of acting. I don't think she has a huge screen presence though. Her "screen magnetism" isn't leading lady level screen magnetism. Your eyes aren't immediately drawn to her when she's on screen. Nevertheless, she's pretty good. A pleasant surprise because with the EEG and pop idol baggage, you sort of expect something different than what you are getting here.

0:22:25: Hey, it's Jim "you f--kin' stupid generation" Chim Sui-Man playing the landlord. The "Jim Chim appearance" is another addition for the drinking game.

Still waiting for the Tim Youngs appearance.

0:23:03: Maybe I've watched too many years of LAW & ORDER and NYPD BLUE but I can't believe the Jim Chim character let Shing up into Bik-Yan's apartment because it was "police business". Let's see, Shing has got a bandage on his forehead and blood on his shirt. How many cops do you see walking around like that? You'd think as cantankerous as that landlord was, he'd tell Shing to come back with a search warrant instead of caving in to Shing's demands.

0:25:25: Isabella Leong is yelling out "Isabella" without a "Chinglish" accent. I'm guessing this means she didn't grow up in Hong Kong.

0:28:12: The "Missing Dog" poster is written in traditional Chinese so I guess that Macau doesn't use simplified after all. Then again, this is a movie so who knows? I'm still going to have to hit Google after the show.

0:28:21: Seeing all those "Missing Dog" posters on the wall just gave me a flashback to the scene in CRAZY N' THE CITY where Eason Chan Yik-Shun and Joey Yung Tso-Yi are taking down posters as Francis Ng Chun-Yu is putting them up. Good times. Do yourself a favour, if you haven't seen CRAZY N' THE CITY yet, look for it. Time well spent.

0:29:25: Shing shows that he's willing to let Bik-Yan stay with him by just handing her a pillow and a blanket.

Communicating without talking. They're already a normal Chinese family!


0:31:06: Is that Josie Ho Chiu-Yi? She looks so different here than from what I've seen of her before. Then again, I haven't really seen her in anything but the papers since TVB's A ROAD AND A WILL (香港人在廣州) and that was, gosh, ten years ago.

0:33:00: Here's Anthony Wong eating again. Now, I'm hungry for noodles. I'm not sure if moving the story along using intertitles and these Anthony Wong scenes is such a good idea. It's making the movie a bit nebulous.

Looking at the photo of Isabella, Bik-Yan and Bik-Yan's mom in the "Missing Dog" poster, Anthony Wong's character says: "Which one am I looking for?"

Anthony Wong kills me.

0:35:29: Shing: Condoms? I don't use them.

Bik-Yan: I know, or else I wouldn't be here. I don't want a sister.

Burn!

0:36:32: Here's Shing buying a gun. Are the Gods of Foreshadowing making an appearance? Introducing a gun in the story ... this can't be a good development for Shing.

0:38:11: Carlsberg beer again. They've definitely got to be a sponsor.

0:38:55: Nice symbolism with Bik-Yan and Shing lugging her bags, in unison, down the street. Father-daughter starting to click and get in rhythm.

0:40:00: Derek Tsang Kwok-Cheung as a nerdy-looking student. He also looks off enough to whack Shing. Another appearance by the Gods of Foreshadowing?

0:40:09: Bik-Yan is ironing her school uniform.

Does this mean we're going to get a shot of her wearing it? You know, for the uniform fetishists out there?

0:40:39: There's the gun again. The Gods of Foreshadowing are starting to rumble ...

0:40:47: ... and here's the uniform shot for the fetishists. The way Bik-Yan is referring to Shing as "her man" is a little creepy.

0:47:28: Bik-Yan: "I won't say anything until my lawyer arrives."

Nice.


0:48:18: This is a nice little scene with Isabella Leong singing along to Anita Mui Yim-Fong's 夢伴 (Dream Companion). The lyrics, about not being able to recapture the past, matches up quite nicely with the plot points of the movie.

Is anyone else having a flashback to the scene where Natalie Portman sings to Jean Reno in LEON (aka THE PROFESSIONAL)?

0:51:58: More father-daughter bonding ... more Carlsberg bottles.

0:52:56: Shing helps a drunk Bik-Yan to bed.

Nice parallel to the stumbling-to-bed scene at the beginning of movie.

0:56:53: Bik-Yan is singing "Dream Companion" again. "Mom loved this song."

Not surprising since it dovetails perfectly to the situation Bik-Yan's mother found herself in. Ugh, this is making me feel old. I remember getting the cassette -- back in the ancient times before CDs and mp3s -- that "Dream Companion" is on -- 壞女孩 (Bad Girl). I was at the HK Coliseum for one of the then record-setting 28 concerts Anita Mui held in late 1987. I can't remember if she performed "Dream Companion" but I remember she did "Bad Girl" and "Why, Why, Tell Me Why?". I also remember her "Arabian princess" look and Grasshopper making an appearance. Man, this means that I may be old enough to be Bik-Yan's father. Sigh ...

1:05:17: I know Bik-Yan is trying to drive all the other women away but acting like Shing is her lover is creepy.

This "Bik-Yan and Shing's women" sequence is going on too long. I just paused the DVD to see who's winning the curling game at the Tournament of Hearts between Team Prince Edward Island and Team Manitoba. Jennifer Jones of Manitoba is leading Suzanne Gaudet of PEI by a score of 8 to 2. It's the seventh end so it's pretty much over for PEI. OK, back to the movie ...


1:08:16: Carlsberg has definitely got to be a sponsor. A girl wearing a Carlsberg shirt has just shown up at the door carrying a bag filled, naturally, with bottles of Carlsberg beer.


Actually, the Carlsberg product integration isn't that bad. It's fairly subtle in this movie. It's not a DRINK DRANK DRUNK situation. In that movie, you had signs for Prime Credit Limited in the background and billboards CGI-ed into the movie. The only way it could have been more noticeable is if the following exchange happened:

Michel (Daniel Wu): Can I have some cash? I need money to buy supplies for the restaurant.

Siu-Man (Miriam Yeung): I just spent our last $1000 on fixtures.

Michel: But how can a restaurant function without food?

Siu-Man: I know, we can get a small business line-of-credit from Prime Credit Limited -- a subsidiary of Standard Chartered PLC. I hear they offer low-interest loans geared toward entrepreneurs like us, one of their many innovative financial products and services aimed at delivering tailor-made and flexible solutions to customers.

Michel: Do you think we qualify?

Siu-Man: We should. I'll check their website, PrimeCredit.com.hk, for details. Or I could talk to some of their friendly and courteous staff at one of the 31 branches they have in Hong Kong, Kowloon and the New Territories.

Michel: Excellent. It would be great if we could get financing from Prime Credit Limited.

1:09:18: That's some fake-looking vomit. Sadly, I know because I became intimately acquainted with vomiting last year.

1:10:30: A lingering shot of Isabella Leong's legs. She's also wearing a school uniform. Am I supposed to be turned on? Because I'm not. Is it because I'm not in the demographic that would find Isabella Leong sexy or is it because Isabella Leong doesn't burn up the screen? I think it's the latter because a shot of Crystal Liu Yifei in a similar situation would probably seize my attention.

1:11:03: The Gods of Foreshadowing smile as "Portuguese food" (a.k.a the gun) makes another appearance.

1:11:50: This lighthouse sequence is supposed to signify something but I'm too dim to see it. Can someone out there enlighten me?

1:17:09: The Gods of Ominousness have taken over from the Gods of Foreshadowing as some bad guys deliver a message to Shing. I fear we're headed for a tragic ending. When it comes to dramas, Hong Kong Cinema is the Lucius Vorenus of cinemas -- given a choice between a happy outcome and a miserable outcome, always pick the miserable outcome.

1:20:59: More creepy talk, from Bik-Yan, of Shing as her lover rather than her father. Derek Tsang is a pretty decent actor. He's completely different here than he was in AV. Finally, a "son of ..." actor that makes you forget he's a "son of ..." actor. By the way, if you didn't know, Derek Tsang is Eric Tsang Chi-Wai's son.

1:21:52: "As long as it is presentable, it'll do."

Nice callback to the 拜神 (worshipping spirits) scene at 0:59:00.

1:25:08: Hey, it's Vincent Wan Yeung-Ming! Miu Yan-Fung (苗人鳳) from TVB's crappy 1999 remake of FLYING FOX OF THE SNOWY MOUNTAIN. So Shing isn't Bik-Yan's father. Interesting.

1:27:20: Ella, Bik-Yan's mother, comes out from the abortion clinic not seeing young Shing.

I thought for sure we'd see Young Shing hiding behind a wall or something as the camera pulled away. It'd make his seem like less of a jerk and further his redemption arc.


1:29:21: Bik-Yan starts crying and says, "don't leave me", to Shing after revealing that she found Isabella.

Perhaps the cisplatin has eaten away the sentimentality cells in my heart because this scene is leaving me cold. I know it's supposed to be a moment of great emotion but I'm just hitting here with my eyebrow cocked like a Vulcan saying: "fascinating". Again, maybe it's because I'm dim, but the Isabella the Dog symbolism isn't doing anything for me.

1:32:05: Shing tosses the gun away into the reservoir.

I guess we aren't going to get a tragic ending after all.

1:32:55: Derek Tsang's character, the nerdy school guy, confronts Shing in an alley.

Maybe I spoke too soon. This looks like a "I'm going to save Bik-Yan by knifing her evil boyfriend in the gut" situation.

1:33:50: Ah, so it wasn't a tragic knife scene but an Oprah "Moment of Enlightenment"™ scene.

1:35:12: Dinner sequence between Bik-Yan and Shing.

This whole sequence is filed with symbols of change -- from the story behind the Rolex to the home-cooked meal (instead of the take-out that they ate at the beginning). It's a nice scene but it would have been more powerful if the Rolex was introduced earlier in the film. You know, if Shing told one of his lady friends not to touch his Rolex or something. Here, the Rolex bit sort of feels tacked on.

1:36:20: "Promise me, when I get out, let's quit smoking."

So the smoking is a symbol too. OK, but it was still a bit annoying to see on screen -- especially since Bik-Yan's mother died from lung cancer. You'd think watching a loved one die of lung cancer would be a powerful deterrent against smoking.

1:43:30: Bik-Yan sobs as she holds Isabella.

This dog thing still isn't doing anything for me. Why isn't it working? I've got two eyes and a heart.

1:44:35: Bik-Yan is still creepily referring to Shing as her man. What's that about?

Credits: Pauline Yeung was the "tea lady" for this film. It's not the kind of credit you'd see in a Hollywood film. One of the things you have to love about Hong Kong.

Tim Youngs shows up in the "producers would like to acknowledge" section. Does this qualify as a Tim Youngs appearance for the Edmond Pang movie drinking game? Yes, I think it does.

By the way, in case you were hanging on the edge of your seat, the Jennifer Jones rink won 9-4.

CLOSING THOUGHTS: With ISABELLA, Edmond Pang Ho-Cheung continues his climb to the top ranks of Hong Kong movie directordom. It is, without question, a well-made film. The music, the lush cinematography and the acting are all first-rate. However, the storytelling left me cold. The father-daughter plot and Shing's arc of redemption were supposed to be emotionally moving but somehow ended up feeling empty and shallow. My brain registered all the tugs at my heart strings and sent the appropriate messages to my heart telling it to feel something at the end of the film but, somewhere along the way, there was a malfunction at the junction and all my heart felt was that I should watch WHERE A GOOD MAN GOES -- another bad man-turns-good movie set in Macau -- again someday. I think the problem lies in the writing for the Bik-Yan character. She doesn't feel authentic. She seems more like a vehicle for the film's agenda than a credible, actual person and -- in a film like ISABELLA that relies heavily on mood and atmosphere -- it disrupts the rhythm and flow of the movie.

Nevertheless, watching ISABELLA is an enjoyable experience. You don't go away feeling resentful about having wasted your time. A sentiment, sadly, that I've felt all too often after watching a HK film. Moreover, the scene where Bik-Yan sings "Dream Companion" to Shing is being enshrined in my pantheon of "Memorable Hong Kong Movie Scenes" alongside scenes like: the standoff between Tony Leung Chiu-Wai and Mad Dog in HARD-BOILED, Chow Yun-Fat and Ti Lung looking down at Hong Kong's night-time skyline in A BETTER TOMORROW, Anthony Wong Chau-Sang hitting the top of the car in INFERNAL AFFAIRS, the climactic shootouts in EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED and PTU, the almost rape scene in WHERE A GOOD MAN GOES, the scene where Yuen Qiu and Yuen Wah reveal themselves to be masters in KUNG FU HUSTLE and Faye Wong breaking into Tony Leung Chiu-Wai's apartment in CHUNGKING EXPRESS.

As for Isabella Leong Lok-Si, it's too early in her career for anyone to crown her or condemn her. She gave a good performance in this film but I wonder if it's a case of underpromise and overdeliver. With ISABELLA, you have a situation where a widely-hyped prospect that EEG has been grooming for years (I remember translating articles about Isabella Leong way back in 2002 when she was a mere 14 years-old) coming off the commercial crapfest that was BUG ME NOT! starring in a movie with the cutie-title ISABELLA. Naturally, you go in thinking that this film is going to stink like previous pop idol movies. Imagine Mariah Carey's GLITTER being called MARIAH or Britney Spears' CROSSROADS being called BRITNEY. But then, against expectations, you get a serious film with a serious performance and you end up thinking to yourself: "wow, this girl has got game." I wonder, though, if this perspective is making people overestimate Isabella Leong's abilities. It's sort of like how a football team follows-up a 2-14 season with an 8-8 season. An 8-8 record is still mediocre but, compared to 2-14, it's pretty good.

Don't get me wrong, I'm not trying to be a "crow-mouth" (烏鴉口) caw-cawing and pooh-poohing Isabella Leong. She's part of the Leung/Leong/Liang clan so I'm rooting for her and hoping she does well. I'm just saying let's hold off on anointing her as the next Maggie Cheung Man-Yuk or the next "Box Office Queen". First, as I said during the running diary, I don't think she has leading lady type screen charisma. She doesn't command your attention like Zhang Ziyi or Shu Qi or Cecilia Cheung Pak-Chi. Second, I think her singing is more Robin Sparkles "Let's Go To The Mall" than Anita Mui "Debts of the Heart" (心債). Third, I don't think she's as popular as she appears. EEG "froze" her back in October for "temper tantrums". If she was popular and, more important, profitable, EEG wouldn't have suspended her. Using another sports analogy, if the star player on a team gets arrested for a DUI, management usually says: "oh, we can't cut him, 'innocent until proven guilty', 'we have to let due process play out' and all that". However, if a back-up player finds himself in trouble with the law, it's usually: "he's a cancer on the team, we have to cut him immediately". The fact that EEG thought they could afford to freeze her means that she probably isn't raking in Twins money or Joey Yung money. She's since been reinstated, however, so maybe her clout is growing. EEG initially announced that her suspension was to last a year but it ended up being only three months.

In any event, there is no doubt that Isabella Leong has great potential. Here's hoping that her management makes judicious decisions that allow her to maximize her potential both artistically and commercially. Here's hoping that she doesn't succumb to the "too much, too soon" syndrome and end up finding herself in a Lindsay Lohan situation. So say we all ... at least all of us Leungs.

Reader Feedback Time: What did you guys think of the running diary format? Too inane?

I'd love it if someone would share their opinion and enlighten me on the lighthouse scene and the whole dog allegory thing.

Do you think Isabella Leong has high-wattage screen charisma?

Plus, if you were moved by ISABELLA and think that I'm a cold-hearted bastard for not feeling anything, maybe you could help melt my icy heart by telling me how this film got to you.

Image credits: Media Asia (ISABELLA), Long Shong Entertainment Group (DRINK DRANK DRUNK)