Eastern Cherries – First Experiences of Asian Cinema: Korea Edition Part III

EasternCherries-11While I can definitively say that Jackie Chan introduced me to Hong Kong/Chinese cinema and that Godzilla opened the door for me to the world of Japanese cinema, it’s a little harder to remember where my appreciation for Korean film began. That’s interesting because I didn’t get into Korean movies until the last decade or so, whereas my interest in HK and Japanese film began much earlier. I think, unlike Japan and Hong Kong, South Korean cinema entered my film viewing habits around the time that Netflix went big. Netflix, for all the crap it gets (some deserved, some not), introduced us to many movies we normally would’ve never had the chance to see thanks to its DVD and streaming services. I am sure that, like many, Oldboy was among the first Korean films that I watched and loved. But I don’t believe that started me down a path of seeking out other Korean cinema. Well, thanks to Netflix’s “You rated this title on this date” feature, I know that I watched a lot of Korean thrillers in the summer of 2007. A few in particular stand out to me now as films that made me go, “hey, what else has this director done?” and in doing so helped me realize that something special was happening in the South Korean film industry.

warner

Bong Joon-ho’s Memories of Murder is a stone-cold masterpiece. I can distinctly remember streaming that from the Netflix app on my Nintendo Wii (yes, Wii!). I bought the DVD that same week, because I had to make the movie mine. It’s a beautiful looking thriller, surprisingly funny, uncompromising in its depiction of human cruelty, and full of plot twists. By the end of the film, I knew I was a fan of Bong Joon-ho and Song Kang-ho – I would see The Host for the first time that same month in 2007, which only cemented my appreciation for both artists (I think I originally watched Memories of Murder because I was so hyped for The Host, actually). As years went on, both Bong and Song continued to make great films, but I still look back on Memories of Murder as their best work, collaboratively or otherwise. Like a Korean Coen Bros. film in its use of humor and darkness. I still maintain that the final scene is one of the best endings ever.

"The Host" Korean Theatrical Poster

“The Host” Korean Theatrical Poster

Though today I tend to believe that Oldboy is Park Chan-wook’s best work, for the longest time I was a big fan of Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance and that started in 2007, too. It’s this strange tale of revenge and desperation where I feel for almost everyone involved, even as they commit some reprehensible acts. One of the things about revenge movies that I struggle to get behind is that the movies often ask us to accept that dozens have to die in order to appease this one person’s quest for vengeance. Harry Brown is a gross movie. Taken is ugly as hell. 2018’s Death Wish? Shiiiiiit. But Park’s Vengeance Trilogy (Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance, Oldboy, Lady Vengeance) depicts revenge as a messy affair. Too many bodies are buried before the end, many of them undeserving of death. And salvation is hard to attain when there are often darker truths lurking beneath the surface. What I like about Park’s revenge movie protagonists is that they often upset and shock us, instead of just being badasses casually expecting our approval. It’s often said that South Korea makes the sort of adult genre entertainment that Hollywood used to make. I don’t believe I’ve ever seen an American film like Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance, though.

I don’t know for certain which film I saw first, but I know director Kim Ki-duk was another filmmaker whose work I fell for early on. 3-Iron is a super stylish film. Samaritan Girl and The Bow are both unsettling yet strangely beautiful. And Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter… and Spring is the work of a master. Kim pisses me off very much with some of the content he’s willing to put on screen. He’s not a director I am willing to watch any day of the week. But my goodness. He’s like an even moodier Takeshi Kitano. If Bong was my introduction to South Korean genre movies and Park was my intro to the dark thrillers, then Kim’s movies were my first taste of Korean arthouse cinema.

As I said, I don’t have as clear of a recollection of any ‘experience’ that opened the door to Korean cinema. But these movies were some of the first that I saw that convinced me I needed to see more. Joon-ho remains my #1 filmmaker from that part of the world and I eagerly await whatever he’s up to next. Just give Bong all the money for whatever big movie sandbox he wants to play in, I’m sure it’ll be great.

Read First Experiences of Asian Cinema: Korea Edition Part I
Read First Experiences of Asian Cinema: Korea Edition Part II
Read First Experiences of Asian Cinema: Korea Edition Part IV

Posted in Features, News |

Psychokinesis (2018) Review

"Psychokinesis" Korean Theatrical Poster

“Psychokinesis” Korean Theatrical Poster

Director: Yeon Sang-Ho
Writer: Yeon Sang-Ho
Cast: Ryoo Seung-Ryong, Shim Eun-Kyung, Park Jung-Min, Kim Min-Jae, Jung Yu-Mi
Running Time: 101 min. 

By Z Ravas

Train to Busan must be the most popular Korean film in America since Oldboy. No, I don’t have any hard data to back that up (although the movie did gross close to $100 million worldwide). But anecdotally, here in the States – where Korean cinema is still something of a niche interest – Train to Busan is the first Korean movie I’ve heard anyone having “water cooler conversations” about since Choi Min-sik stormed down a hallway with a hammer in his hand. No doubt, Train to Busan’s accessibility on Netflix had something to do with its wide reach. Given the film’s massive global success, it’s easy to imagine director Yeon Sang-ho was given something of a blank check when it came time to make his next movie. Now raise your hand if you expected Sang-ho to follow up his fast-paced zombie thriller with…a whimsical comedy about a deadbeat dad turned telekinetic superhero. No one?

Talk about a curveball. Yes, the filmmaker – who began his career in animation – has strayed from the horror genre altogether, writing and directing a movie that could easily fit alongside the Marvel Cinematic Universe if it wasn’t so, well, off-beat and lackadaisical in its storytelling. That’s not a diss: Psychokinesis is a movie imbued with the same kind of ambling quality as it’s protagonist, portrayed by a charming and quite funny Ryu Seung-ryong (The Piper).  

As the movie opens, Ryu Seung-ryong is living a low-key existence as a security guard. You might call him a slacker, someone who isn’t afraid to skimp instant coffee packets from his employer when they’re not looking. Unbeknownst to him, the daughter who he abandoned years ago is having a much harder time of things. All grown up (and played by Train to Busan’s Shim Eun-kyung), she’s doing her best to run a successful fried chicken restaurant, but some greedy land developers are forcing her and other local business owners out – using any means necessary. When a meteorite from space crash lands and imbues some spring water with superpowers, Ryu Seung-ryong takes a sip and is suddenly given the chance to reconnect with his daughter and perhaps save her from Kim Min-jae’s (The Battleship Island) shady construction company.

That said, Psychokinesis takes its time getting there. Although Ryu Seung-ryong is granted his psychic powers quite early in the movie, director Yeon Sang-ho isn’t really interested in orchestrating comic book battles. Even when Ryu does end up using his abilities, their presentation is not much more outlandish than what we saw Carrie do decades ago, with Ryu waving his hand to send a bunch of rubberfaced goons toppling to the floor. Yeon Sang-ho is much more invested in the estranged relationship between father and daughter, a similar thread that he drew upon in Train to Busan, as well as the tightknit family of business owners in Gangwon Province who find themselves threatened with eviction. 

Fortunately, Yeon Sang-ho has assembled a talented cast, particularly Ryu Seung-ryong – whose gift for physical comedy here frequently reminded me of vintage Jackie Chan (I was continually amazed he was able to find new ways to strain his face and move his body every time he summoned his powers) – and Shim Eun-kyung as his stern but good-hearted daughter. Late in the movie, Jung Yu-mi (Chaw) makes an appearance as the corporate interest pulling the strings behind the evictions, and let’s just say the beautiful actress is afforded the chance to play against type as a truly unhinged villain. 

While it only runs 101 minutes, Psychokinesis still feels a tad longer than necessary, and even as I watched it I had to wonder if part of my enjoyment of the film was the result of residual goodwill from Train to Busan. The climax of the film sees Ryu Seung-ryong taking to the skies in comical leaps and bounds a la Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man, which is fun in of itself, but I doubt very many of us watch Korean cinema because we want it to mimic Hollywood blockbusters – we so enjoy these movies precisely because they tend to deviate from the Hollywood playbook, or at least do them one better. Regardless, in the same way that Ryu Seung-ryong’s affable nature eventually thaws his daughter’s cold heart, Psychokinesis is too likable to judge harshly. Yeon Sang-ho’s background in animation is on clear display: the film’s crisp, visual storytelling means you could watch Psychokinesis on mute and still be able to follow the action and enjoy yourself. 

Perhaps the most exciting thing about Psychokinesis? After following up a relentless zombie flick with a superhero comedy, I have absolutely no idea what Yeon Sang-ho is going to do next. I just know it’ll be interesting. 

Z Ravas’ Rating: 7/10

Posted in All, Korean, News, Reviews | Tagged , , |

‘High Kick Girl’ Rina Takeda goes ‘Drunken Master’

"High Kick Girl" Japanese Theatrical Poster

“High Kick Girl” Japanese Theatrical Poster

High Kick Girl and Karate Girl Rina Takeda joins forces with Japanese girl band You’ll Melt More! for the music video for their latest song “Never Give Up Drunk Monkey.” The song features Rina as a put-upon office lady inspired by the band’s music to strike back against some office misconduct.

You’ll Melt More! is a New Wave Girl group formed in 2012, who perform everything from Rock, Punk Rock, Hip Hop, Electronica and New Wave, and have collaborated with Montreal, Miyavi, Polysics and Guitar Wolf, have a cult following in Japan, Korea and China.

The video (directed by Lipstick’s Ainosuke Shibata) pays an affectionate tribute to Drunken Master and Drunken Master 2, as Rina abandons her Karate-styling for a more fluid Drunken Boxing-style and also features some Hwang Jang Lee and Ken Lo-inspired villainy by Nobutoshi Takahashi, a student of legendary Japanese martial arts movie legend Yasauki Kurata.

Update: The more Rina-centric cut of the music videos been added below:

Posted in News |

Deal on Fire! Kill Zone 2 | Blu-ray | Only $9.29 – Expires soon!

Kill Zone 2 | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

Kill Zone 2 | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

Today’s Deal on Fire is the Blu-ray for Cheang Pou-soi’s Kill Zone 2 (aka  SPL II: A Time for Consequences).

When an undercover cop gets too close to revealing the mastermind of a drug syndicate, his cover is blown. Double-crossed, he’s thrown into a Thai prison, where a guard discovers the inmate – claiming he’s a cop – is a bone marrow match for his dying daughter… and his warden may have an even deadlier operation hidden within the prison walls.

Kill Zone 2 stars Tony Jaa (Skin Trade), Wu Jing (Wolf Warrior), Louis Koo (White Storm), Simon Yam (Wild City) and Zhang Jin (Ip Man 3).

Order Kill Zone 2 from Amazon.com today!

Posted in Deals on Fire!, News |

New action-packed Int’l Trailer for Korean thriller ‘Take Point’

"Take Point" Korean Theatrical Poster

“Take Point” Korean Theatrical Poster

South Korean heavies Ha Jung-Woo (TunnelAlong With the Gods: The Two Worlds) and Lee Sun-Kyun (A Hard Day, Advocate: A Missing Body) are pairing up for Take Point (read our review), a military actioner from director Kim Byung-Woo (The Terror Live).

On the day of the U.S. presidential election in 2024, Ahab and his team of elite mercenaries embark on a secret CIA mission to abduct North Korea’s Armed Forces Minister in an underground bunker below the Korean Demilitarized Zone. However, they get caught in the crossfire which causes tensions to escalate to the brink of World War III.

Updates: A New International Trailer for Take Point has hit the net ahead of its December domestic release. The film will also be getting a limited theatrical run the same month, so check your local listings for details.

Posted in News |

Illang: The Wolf Brigade (2018) Review

"Illang: The Wolf Brigade" Theatrical Poster

“Illang: The Wolf Brigade” Theatrical Poster

Director: Kim Ji-woon
Cast: Gang Dong-Won, Han Hyo-Joo, Jung Woo-Sung, Kim Moo-Yul, Han Ye-Ri, Heo Jun-Ho, Minho, Shin Eun-Soo, Kim Pub-Lae, Lee Dong-Ha, Choi Jin-Ho
Running Time: 138 min.

By Z Ravas

A Tale of Two Sisters. A Bittersweet Life. The Good, the Bad, the Weird. I Saw the Devil. Age of Shadows. Over the last 15 years, the work of Kim Jee-woon has come to help define popular Korean cinema. In that regard, he occupies the same rarefied echelon as filmmakers like Chan Wook-park (Oldboy) and Bong Joon-ho (The Host). Even Jee-woon’s brief foray into Hollywood filmmaking, the Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle The Last Stand, is now seen as little more than an unfortunate blip in an otherwise remarkably consistent career. It should come as no surprise that each new film by Kim Jee-woon arrives with a massive amount of hype and expectation; this may go some ways to explain just why his latest work, the Netflix-distrbuted Illang: The Wolf Brigade, has been met with a wave of negative reviews since its release in South Korea last summer, where it underperformed at the box office.

Illang is loosely based on the manga from Ghost in the Shell creator Mamoru Oshii, which itself was adapted into the popular anime feature Jin-Roh back in 1999. The opening twenty minutes of Illang, as weighed down by exposition as they may be, are likely what fans of the anime were hoping to see: in a near-future unified Korea, police in riot gear uniforms clash with unruly protestors and anti-government terrorists known as the Sect. Amid the violence, the Wolf Brigade – a specially trained and heavily armored brand of government response force – are unleashed upon the Sect forces with a hail of machinegun fire. Make no mistake, Warner Brothers (who co-produced with Lewis Pictures) has thrown some money at this film. Illang boasts high production values; the opening’s slick futuristic look and high powered weaponry had me thinking we were in for director Kim Jee-woon’s own take on Paul Verhoeven’s Eighties classic Robocop.

From there, the film temporarily pumps it brakes, and one realizes that the Jin-Roh source material is merely a framework for Kim Jee-woon to tell a standard Korean revenge tale. As it turns out, the higher-ups in the government feel the Wolf Brigade are a little too good at their jobs. Those in power prefer the status quo, as instability and chaos on the streets create the perfect climate to maintain control over the populace. Some shady government types hatch a plan to frame a Wolf Brigade soldier (The Master’s Gang Dong-won) for a terrorist plot so they can use him as a scapegoat to disband the Wolf Brigade entirely. Unfortunately for them, Gang Dong-won is too cunning to fall for their scheme and he evades capture with the help of a former Sect member, played by Han Hyo-joo (Cold Eyes). The story of a well-trained soldier on the run from relentless hit squads with a doe-eyed beauty in tow frequently put me in mind of Lee Jung-beom’s 2014 No Tears for the Dead, and at times Kim Jee-woon seems as though he’s trying his damndest to out-do the action sequences in that film.

Granted, Illang’s emphasis on world building and technical prowess means that the characters frequently recede into the background – in truth, it was halfway through the movie before I realized that Gang Dong-won was meant to be our protagonist. Can you blame me? With megastar Jung Woo-sung’s (Asura: City of Madness) stoic drill instructor and Kim Moo Yeol’s (War of the Arrows) slimy bureaucrat taking up so much screentime, it can be difficult to know who we’re supposed to follow. Kim Jee-woon has a relatively straightforward story on his hands but chooses to focus on its dizzying layers of conspiracy. The director continually runs the risk of muddling a very simple narrative, but then he throws another shootout or car chase your way, and suddenly all that matters is that you’re in the hands of someone who can expertly orchestrate a kinetic action sequence. Jee-woon’s blockbuster style here involves a fluid blend of handheld and steadicam work, jawdropping aerial photography amid hundreds of extras, and a glorious amount of spent bullet casings.

In the interest of full disclosure, it’s been well over a decade since I’ve seen the anime adaptation of Jin-Roh. It’s an animated feature known for its methodical pace, moody contemplation of the relationship between statecraft and terrorism, and frequent allusions to the Red Riding Hood fairy tale. I can understand if fans of the manga and anime feel as though Kim Jee-woon has betrayed his source material by deploying it as window dressing for yet another Korean action/thriller, a genre that is starting to feel more than a little familiar now that we’re eight years after The Man From Nowhere (and a whopping thirteen since A Bittersweet Life). In truth, The Wolf Brigade functions best when it’s not attempting to contemplate whether Gang Dong-won is a wolf in man’s clothing or vice versa, and instead doubles down on Kim Jee-woon’s penchant for ultra-violence: case in point, the film climaxes with a brickwall-busting tussle that tells me Jee-woon has seen and studied John Hyams’ Universal Soldier: Regeneration.

I began this review with a list of some of Kim Jee-woon’s best and most acclaimed works. I can guarantee that Illang: The Wolf Brigade will never be counted among them. But judged on its own merits, as a slick piece of pop entertainment you can watch with the effortless click of a button thanks to Netflix, The Wolf Bridgade is a damn fine action movie and a not altogether bad way to spend a Saturday night.

Z Ravas’ Rating: 7.5/10

Posted in All, Korean, News, Reviews | Tagged , , |

Deal on Fire! Saving General Yang | Blu-ray | Only $9.99 – Expires soon!

Saving General Yang | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

Saving General Yang | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

Today’s Deal on Fire is the Blu-ray for Saving General Yang, a 2013 period action thriller from director Ronny Yu (The Bride with White Hair).

Northeast China, early Northern Song dynasty, AD 986. The Khitan army takes its revenge for a past massacre, abducting General Yang Ye and leaving his wife and seven sons to rescue him – and fall into their deadly trap

The film stars Adam Cheng (Seven Warriors), Yu Bo (The Legend of Qin), Ekin Cheng (Return to a Better Tomorrow) and Vic Chou (S Storm).

Order from Saving General Yang from Amazon.com today! 

Posted in Deals on Fire!, News |

Tokyo Living Dead Idol | Blu-ray (Section 23)

Tokyo Living Dead Idol | Blue-ray (Section 23 Films)

Tokyo Living Dead Idol | Blue-ray (Section 23 Films)

RELEASE DATE: March 5, 2019

On March 5, 2019, Section 23 Films will release the Blu-ray for Yuki Kumagai’s Tokyo Living Dead Idol, starring Super Girls pop group member, Nana Asakawa (Back Street Girls).

Tokyo 27-ku’s the hottest group around, but when singer Kamiya Miku (Asakawa) gets bitten by a zombie, she goes from being on top of the charts to the top of the most wanted lists!

Tokyo Living Dead Idol also stars Yumeri Abe, Runa Ozawa, Yuki Nakayama, Tomoya Yamaguchi and Asami (Gun Woman).

Pre-order Tokyo Living Dead Doll from Amazon.com Today! 

Posted in Asian Titles, DVD/Blu-ray New Releases, Martial Arts Titles, News |

Eastern Cherries – First Experiences of Asian Cinema: Korea Edition Part II

EasternCherries-10As a young kid of 18, I used to watch a British Television film review programme, then presented by Johnathan Ross. A major advocate of Eastern cinema, Ross is a larger than life character with an abundance of knowledge of especially Asian action movies. At the end of one programme there was a clip of the South Korean film Nowhere to Hide, featuring two characters fighting in the pouring rain, with a magnetic aesthetic and wholly different style than I had experienced before. I sat up, and took notice. This was my first exposure to South Korean cinema.

"Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance" Korean Theatrical Poster

“Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance” Korean Theatrical Poster

From then, come my early 20’s, I caught Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance. I had read some about the movie, and it seemed interesting, so I checked it out. While a little impenetrable, the style and atmospheric approach made an impression on me, as well as the unusual narrative. Come Edinburgh Film Festival in 2004, I heard that the second film in the trilogy was to be screened, with director Park Chan-Wook in attendance. For some silly reason I didn’t attend, and regret it to this day, as the film was Oldboy. About half a year later I settled down to watch the film on DVD, and by this point the buzz and great reviews for the film had reached fever pitch. I was completely knocked out, to the extent that it has maintained a place in my top ten ever since, and whenever I revisit the film it retains power and nuance to the point that I love it more every time.

The legacy of Oldboy is plain to see, with the explosion of Korean cinema coming in its wake, and making Park Chan-Wook one of the most recognisable directors on the international film scene. What struck me about the film most is its constant visual inventiveness; at the time I was soaking up classic Hong Kong cinema, which for me is the greatest in these terms ever made. Of course the Korean new wave’s biggest influence was this cinema, and it is reflected but refracted through the Korean gaze, nowhere more evident than in Oldboy. Every shot in the film has a surreal, beautifully strange quality and creates an all-encompassing world, one that involves a more dream-like and operatic but low key feel than a lot of Hong Kong cinema.

Two other aspects stand out for me too: Choi Min Sik’s performance and, of course, that fight scene. I had never seen a fight so raw, brutal and relentless. I would wager that Park was very influenced by the fights in the Hong Kong Heroic Bloodshed genre, with their realism and unnerving violence, but Oldboy took this to another level – so spellbinding is that sequence! Choi’s commitment to the film and his characters suffering (of which there is a lot) is so impactful and thought provoking that it rates as one of the finest in the history of cinema. I caught the new documentary about the film Old Days, and was taken in by Choi’s openness and candid conversation when discussing making the film and how hard it was, especially the fight scene of course. Supposed to be an extra on the forthcoming Blu-ray release, the documentary is now a stand alone film. Any fan of Oldboy should check it out.

fight

Oldboy is the kind of film that has made such an impact on the public consciousness that a lot of people have seen, or at least know of, the film. For me, like Project A and Sword of Doom, it opened up a nations cinema that has consistently since Oldboy’s release produced many classics of the modern age, to the point that arguably (and in my mind definitely) they are the best in international cinema. Parks last in the Trilogy, Lady Vengeance, while a step down is still a disturbing and vital film. Even lesser Chan-Wook films such as Thirst blew me away.

"Sympathy for Lady Vengeance" Korean Theatrical Poster

“Sympathy for Lady Vengeance” Korean Theatrical Poster

The next Korean film I saw in the cinema was Kim Jee-Woon’s A Bittersweet Life, which breathed new life in to the Asian gangster film, and remains quintessential. His I Saw the Devil is my 2nd favourite South Korean film. The best of this nations cinema create new narratives and moral compasses from old genre tropes, and the two films that are greatest at this for me are Oldboy and I Saw the Devil. Both use the revenge story and twist the themes and characterisations to create a modern, complex palette of conflicting morality, one that is without the centralised and predictable way of Hollywood films of the last so many years. In a South Korean film it is difficult to predict what will happen, and which character and narrative resolution there will be, something which went out in Hollywood, with some exceptions, come the 1980’s.

That this renaissance in South Korean film, began by Oldboy, is still going strong some 15 years later is remarkable. New classics such as The Wailing and The Handmaiden prove the breath of fresh air created by that early Noughties surge is alive and kicking. In fact I recently watched Lee Chang-Dong’s Green Fish, which predates Oldboy by some 6 years and is one of the first Korean Noir films, and was struck by its originality and relevance even now. It took me till about 2008 to finally catch Nowhere to Hide, and its new style of action and stylistic power impressed me. This of course led to my love of Korean action cinema, such as the films of Ryoo Seung-Wan (VeteranCity of Violence, The Berlin File), and an admiration for their choreographal style which is influenced by, but very different from, classic Hong Kong stuff. Even a movie as dark and disturbing as I Saw the Devil leaves room for brilliantly staged fights, a combination which I fucking adore.

As South Korean cinema maintains its lofty position, it will be interesting to see what occurs in the coming years; that’s almost two decades in which there have been many classics, but whether any can match the pure adrenalin shot of Oldboy remains to be seen.

Read First Experiences of Asian Cinema: Korea Edition Part I
Read First Experiences of Asian Cinema: Korea Edition Part III
Read First Experiences of Asian Cinema: Korea Edition Part IV

Posted in Features, News |

Run and Kill (1993) Review

"Run and Kill" Theatrical Poster

“Run and Kill” Theatrical Poster

Director: Billy Tang
Writer: Bryan Chang
Cast: Kent Cheng, Simon Yam, Esther Kwan, Danny Lee, Melvin Wong, Johnny Wang Lung Wei
Running Time: 91 min.

By Paul Bramhall

The best Category III movies usually come with a reputation that precedes them, and Run and Kill certainly fits that criteria. Multiple versions in existence because of cuts made to secure distribution in various territories? Check. A particular scene known for its shocking notoriety in the world of Category III flicks? Check. Simon Yam? Check. When the company you keep includes the likes of Dr. Lamb and The Untold Story, then the audience for Run and Kill should have a good idea of what they’re letting themselves in for.

Run and Kill reunites several cast members from the previous years Dr. Lamb, mainly Kent Cheng, Simon Yam, and Danny Lee. This time they fill the shoes of an average joe pushed over the edge, a relentless psychopath, and a straight laced cop (who barely clocks 2 minutes screen time – Lee’s presence is likely explained by the fact that, if a movie needed a straight laced cop in the early 90’s, it had to be him). Directed by Billy Tang, after briefly flirting with the straight-up action genre, in the form of the Jet Li starring Dragon Fight from 1989, it was Run and Kill which marked Tang as a Cat III director who didn’t pull any punches. He’d go onto to direct the likes of Red to Kill and Brother of Darkness, although for many it was his first foray into the genre that remains his most accomplished work.

Kent Cheng had been a supporting actor since the mid-70’s, starting with the Shaw Brothers, and for many he will be most recognizable as playing Butcher Wing in Once Upon a Time in China. Certainly not an actor who could ever be accused of not eating his fill, Cheng’s portly appearance has made him a mainstay of Hong Kong cinema even to this day, and in 1993 alone he featured in 9 movies. Apart from featuring in 3 of director Poon Man-Kit’s productions (Lord of East China Sea and its sequel, plus Hero of Hong Kong 1949), he also played a cop partnered with Jackie Chan, in the kung-fu clowns first foray into more serious territory with Crime Story. However it was Run and Kill that gave him his first legitimate leading role, having been in the industry for nearly 20 years.

Playing a jovial family man, proceedings open as we meet Cheng getting ready to leave for work. That classic HK synthesiser soundtrack, the overly chirpy type that sounds like it’s been extracted from a kids coin operated amusement ride, assaults our ears as we watch him joke around with his daughter and bother his pretty wife (Cat III diva Lily Lee). However when he arrives home early one day as an anniversary surprise, he’s shocked to find her engaged in some energetic shenanigans with another man. While drowning his sorrows in a bar, he ends up pouring his heart out to a lady of the night, who offers to hook him up with a friend who can “arrange for things to happen.” Drunk to point of almost passing out, by the time the meeting happens, Cheng’s stupor leads to him inadvertently requesting for his wife to be murdered.

With no memory of the previous night, Cheng is understandably surprised when a pair of machete wielding assassins barge into his apartment the next day, and turn it into a bloodbath (the assassins are even more surprised, not only at the fact Cheng is there, but that he puts so much energy into trying to stop them). As he learns the truth, it also comes with the realisation that he doesn’t have the money to pay the triads (who are headed by Shaw Brothers legend Johnny Wang Lung-Wei) for the unintended hit. After fleeing to China, his neighbour, a former Vietnamese soldier offers to help. However it soon becomes clear they’re both in way over their head, with the neighbour meeting an excruciatingly painful death. Unfortunately for Cheng, said neighbour was the last surviving family member of Simon Yam, who suffers from a serious case of PTSD. Blaming Cheng for his brother’s death, he swears to kill both Cheng and his family as revenge. 

So in short, Run and Kill is the story of one man having a very, very, bad day. The story’s structure takes an interesting approach, with Yam’s character initially seeming almost incidental, to what’s suggested will be the main plot of Cheng trying to re-pay the triads. However once Yam realises his brother is dead, his presence barges into Run and Kill like a wrecking ball, his only mission to wipe out both Cheng and his nearest and dearest. It’s an intense performance, and even more amazing when you realise that this was just one of 16 movies Yam featured in during 1993 (suddenly Cheng’s 9 seems lazy in comparison).

It’s once the cat and mouse game begins between Cheng and Lam that director Tang really hones in on his Cat III instincts. Like many of the infamous Cat III flicks, Run and Kill is based on a true story, the facts of which are used both to justify the excess of what’s shown on screen, as much as they are to bask in the cruelty of them. Arguably Run and Kill’s biggest asset is its commitment to subverting the usual cinematic tropes we’ve come accustomed to seeing. We all know the setup – the villain is about to do something unspeakable to one of our protagonists nearest and dearest, something you couldn’t imagine for a second would ever be shown onscreen, while the protagonist begs that they’ll do anything for them to stop. Then, just before that unspeakable moment is about to happen, the villain withdraws.

That doesn’t happen in Run and Kill, with Yam not only following through on his threats, but taking a sadistic amount of pleasure in them. This all comes to a head in the most notorious scene (spoiler alert: if by some chance this is the first time you’re reading about this movie, skip the rest of this paragraph), which has Yam setting fire to Cheng’s young daughter, despite her frantic pleas for him to stop, while Cheng is tied up in front of her. It’s one of those scenes which is so unique to HK Cat III movies (specifically those in the early – mid 90’s), in the sense that you’d likely never find a scene that comes close to it in most western cinema. Watching a child get set alight requires a strong stomach, and it leaves a distinct sense of discomfort while watching it. However in true HK style, things get even more absurd when Cheng then proceeds to carry the charred black carcass around with him, at one point even using it to shoo away a rat.

This is perhaps the attraction for many of the more extreme Cat III productions, they tread a line which frequently takes the viewer into places they never wanted to go, but then also have the ability to yank them back out of it, usually with some ridiculous scene that reminds you that, hey, this is just a movie. One thing that can’t be argued is that, by the time Run and Kill arrives at its finale, you want nothing more than for Cheng to send Yam straight to hell. With Cheng in a position where he has nothing left to lose, he puts in a performance so drenched in sweat (I mean literally, buckets of it) and desperation, you actually believe he has a chance to do just that.

While intricately choreographed action is about as far off Run and Kill’s menu as a happy ending is for Cheng, the work of action directors Huang Pei-Chih (brother of Tong Gaai) and Chan Shiu-Wa (here making his debut in a short lived action director career) is admirable. There’s a number of scrappy, hard hitting scuffles that incorporate some painful looking falls, and let’s face it, choreographing someone of Cheng’s size was never going to be about athletic exchanges. When Yam embodies an almost terminator like level of determination pursuing Cheng through an abandoned factory in the finale, the punishment dished out is both seen and felt, which is a true sign of quality action direction.

Today the Cat III shocker is close to extinction, with only the likes of 2017’s The Sleep Curse (from Cat III stalwart Herman Yau) providing a fleeting return to the genres glory and gory days of old. While many critics may look down on the genre, titles like Run and Kill prove that there can be more to them than blood and boobs, with Cheng delivering a powerhouse performance of a man whose circumstances put him through the psychologic wringer. As a director Billy Tang never quite reached the same heights again, although admittedly he tried pretty damn hard with Red to Kill, and likewise no other movie was able to deliver that same punch in the gut, try as they might (who can forget the fetus in the jar from God of Gamblers Return!?). For a reminder of when HK cinema had no restrictions on the punches it pulled, Run and Kill is one of the best, just don’t watch it on a full stomach. 

Paul Bramhall’s Rating: 7/10

Posted in All, Chinese, News, Reviews | Tagged , , , , , |

Nightshooters (2018) Review

"Nightshooters" Theatrical Poster

“Nightshooters” Theatrical Poster

Director: Marc Price
Writer: Marc Price
Cast: Jean-Paul Ly, Adam McNab, Nicky Evans, Rosanna Hoult, Richard Sandling, Kaitlyn Riordan, Mica Proctor, Hung Dante Dong, Nicholas Aaron, Ben Shafik
Running Time: 100 min.

By Martin Sandison

Hot on the trail of his self-directed short The Division, Jean-Paul Ly (Jailbreak) has achieved the seemingly impossible: starred and choreographed in a low budget, great British-made martial arts film, Nightshooters – ok, ok, it’s not a purists martial arts film – it incorporates comedy, gangster and horror elements, a hybrid of the sort we’re seeing more of these days. In fact, I just went to see the Scottish zombie-horror-comedy-musical Anna and the Apocalypse, which I thoroughly enjoyed, and is making waves internationally. You’ll notice I called the latter Scottish and the former British. Here at COF we don’t get political on your asses much, but let me tell you as a Scotsman (of the sentimental kind, Mr. Bramhall), we need to get the fuck off this sinking ship. Anyway, to Nightshooters

Donnie (Ly) is a stuntman/actor working on a guerrilla shoot. His director Oddbod (Nicky Evans, Shameless), crew members and another actor, Harper (Doug Allen, Band of Brothers), are struggling to finish before the morning, when the building they’re shooting in is set to be demolished. Camera operator Jen (Kaitlyn Riordan, If I Were You) captures a crime occurring across the way in a parallel building, gangsters burning a man alive. Led by Tarker (Richard Sandling, Zapped), the goons go after our heroes, leading Ly to use his martial arts skills to maximum effect.

A one location action film premise certainly worked for The Raid, and to a lesser extent Jailbreak. Here this trope is explored in a maximally entertaining way, with real invention and tension. There is of course the audience involvement with guessing which characters will survive and which will be killed off; the movie succeeds in keeping you in that game right until the credits. A tight 100 minute running time leaves room for plenty of each genres styles, and surprisingly they all hit the mark.

Nightshooters is brimming with humorous lines and sight gags, such as an arm cut off to be thrown into a villains head, and the dialogue is very British in its sarcasm and profanity. Expect plenty of “fucks,” and the use of the dreaded C-word – I know you American folks don’t like that word much, in the UK (especially Glasgow, where I live), it’s a term of endearment! One Welsh gangster is consistently hilarious in his characters line delivery and ineptitude, and Oddbod serves up some nice comedic wordplay.

While leaving room for all of the aspects previously mentioned, the movie serves up a banquet of hard-hitting, wondrously choreographed fight scenes that are well placed in the narrative and serve as Ly’s calling card. Very much in the vein of modern low budget martial arts films, the fights are filmed in mostly wide shots with long takes, Undisputed 3-style. Ly’s form has never been in question – here he outdoes himself. All of the fights show more than significant improvement on Jailbreak and The Division, with a crisp, clean approach that gives the viewer true martial fulfilment. His enemies are superb fighters in all; Hung Dong gets a rematch with Ly after their bout in The Division that tops that encounter, with intricate knife fighting the icing on the cake.

Ly told me himself the film’s budget was so tight that some of the fight direction was choreographed on WhatsApp! (instead of flying Hung from London to Manchester). A short 2-on-1 with Ly taking on Hung and Marcus Shakeshelf (one of the stunt co-ordinators on Wonder Woman) is feverish in its intensity, and features some superb ideas in action choreography, such as Ly being flying kicked mid air by Hung. A great set up for the final match up made me anticipatory as fuck, with British stuntman Karanja Yorke making an effectively nasty villain who you want to see Ly mess up. The fight doesn’t disappoint. What marks Ly a class above some modern martial arts onscreen fighters is his approach to handwork. While maintaining an intricacy and 80’s Hong Kong-style, he manages to be completely fresh and exciting.

Another aspect I loved was seeing just how many references the filmmakers can cram in to the movie. Ly’s character being called Donnie is an obvious one. I noticed Evil Dead, Day of the Dead, numerous Jackie Chan films and there’s a nice joke reference to Scott Adkins, with whom Ly worked with on Doctor Strange. An immense strength of the film is how well drawn the characters are; you really care about the crew and want them all to survive. There is even room for development, especially Harper, who begins a coke-addled idiot who has his own picture as a phone cover (LOL!) and becomes a stoic, empathetic man as the situation worsens.

Acting-wise, most of the cast quit themselves well: Ly a likeable, humble hero; Adam Mcnab (The Summoner), as the boom operator (he uses it well as a weapon), emoting very convincingly; and strong central female performances from Riordan and Rosanna Hoult. Unfortunately, Sandling, as the lead villain, brings a touch of the amateur to the production. Tarker is a nasty, murdering piece of shit, but the way Sandling plays him comes across as a big teddy bear, who you can imagine enjoying a pint with. His performance isn’t all bad, as he handles the comedic elements well. Director Marc Price (Colin, a zombie film I now must see) shows a sure hand in direction, balancing all of these aspects brilliantly, and is destined for greater things on the evidence of this movie.

In the grand tradition of recent British cinema such as The Cornetto trilogy and Attack the Block, Nightshooters is a wildly entertaining slice of B-movie fun, made for peanuts compared to some soulless Hollywood fare we as audiences are so used to zoning out to. Sure it’s got some faults, but the film revels in and celebrates them, turning in on itself to plant itself firmly in the 21st century.

Jean-Paul Ly is at the vanguard of modern onscreen fighters and a sure sign that the film (and him) don’t take things too seriously – this is proven as he snorts a bag of cocaine before the final fight. It’s hilarious, and may be a “first” for a martial arts film. Nightshooters is out on limited edition Blu-ray from now until the 26th of December, so beg, steal or borrow!

Martin Sandison’s Rating: 8.5/10

Posted in All, Asian Related, News, Other Movies, Reviews | Tagged |

Deal on Fire! Confucius | Blu-ray | Only $8.99 – Expires soon!

"Confucius" Blu-ray Cover

“Confucius” Blu-ray Cover

Today’s Deal on Fire is the Blu-ray for Confucius, starring Hong Kong screen legend, Chow Yun-fat (Cold War II, Hard Boiled).

Chow Yun-fat stars as Confucius in the inspiring, action-packed saga of a leader whose wisdom and cunning were more powerful than any sword. In this sweeping battlefield epic, Confucius finds his lands threatened by the fires of war. After leading the nation’s most powerful army to victory against hordes of invaders, the new hero finds even greater danger in the jealous eyes of the aristocrats he fought to protect

Confucius also stars Zhou Xun (True Legend), Chen Jianbin (Driverless), Ren Quan (Panda Express), Lu Yi (Stool Pigeon) and Yao Lu (Detective Dee).

Order Confucius from Amazon.com today! 

Posted in Deals on Fire!, News |

Nick Cheung’s ‘The Trough’ now on Blu-ray from DDDHouse

"The Trough" Theatrical Poster

“The Trough” Theatrical Poster

Now available on Blu-ray from DDDhouse.com is The Trough (read our review), an ultra-stylish gangster flick from Hong Kong actor/filmmaker Nick Cheung (The White Storm).

Yu Chau (Cheung) is a cop who has gone so deep undercover within the triad. When he accidentally kills one of his pals in an operation, he runs off into the boonies to lick his wounds. Upon his return, he teams up with fellow officers to catch a triad Boss, only to unveil collusion with government officials at the highest level. Yu Chau once again faces the dilemma of taking the law into his own hands…

The Trough also stars Yu Nan (Operation Mekong), Xu Jinglei (Shinjuku Incident) and Jie Hong (The Sorcerer and the White Snake).

Order The Trough today from our trusted retail partner, DDDhouse.com.

Posted in News |

Eastern Cherries – First Experiences of Asian Cinema: Korea Edition Part I

EasternCherries-09The irony isn’t lost on me that, considering I now devour more Korean cinema than any other countries output, unlike Hong Kong and Japan my first taste of it didn’t have me hook, line, and sinker. If anything, my introduction to the world of Korean cinema left me equal parts perplexed, but with an unshakable feeling that I wanted to see more. Looking back now I think I know why. While I’d gotten into Hong Kong and Japanese cinema when their Golden Era’s had already long past, leaving a seemingly unlimited back catalogue to explore, in the case of Korea my first taste came just as it was on the cusp of entering into its own Golden Era (or in other words – what would popularly become known as ‘The Korean Wave’).

Fox Lorber's John Woo 2-Pack VHS Cover

Fox Lorber’s John Woo 2-Pack VHS Cover

The funny this is, I’d often waxed lyrical about how fantastic it must have been to have experienced the classics of Hong Kong and Japan at the time they actually came out. Now in 2018, I understand that identifying a countries output as its Golden Era is something that can only be done from the viewpoint of looking back, and is rarely something that can be labelled in the present moment. With the benefit of hindsight, I would say the 15 years spanning 1999 – 2014 were Korea’s Golden Era, and they were years that I was lucky enough to be around for the same way I’d wished I was around for Hong Kong and Japans.

However when I viewed my first Korean movie back in 2001, I somehow felt that I’d been a victim of false advertising. At the time I’d been devouring Hong Kong action cinema like it was going out of fashion, and one of my most revisited purchases was a 2-DVD box set released by Fox Lorber of John Woo movies, which I’d imported from the States. The movies in question of course, were The Killer and Hard Boiled, and as an introduction to John Woo, it was impossible to beat (I’d spend several of the following years attempting to track down new copies of the Criterion releases of both titles, but that story is for another time).

Nowhere to run

So you can likely imagine my delight, when local UK distributor Tartan Video added a title to their slate, that came with a cover proudly announcing – “A SURE-FIRE HIT FOR FANS OF ‘HARD BOILED’” and “IS HOLLYWOOD READY FOR THE NEXT JOHN WOO?” I didn’t care if Hollywood was ready or not, but I certainly was, and the image of 2 men brawling in a torrential downpour, which the quotes were splattered over, only sealed the deal. The movie in question was Nowhere to Hide, and despite its 2001 DVD release in the UK, it was actually made a couple of years prior, in 1999.

"Nowhere to Hide" Korean Theatrical Poster

“Nowhere to Hide” Korean Theatrical Poster

It’s safe to say that I didn’t think Nowhere to Hide was anything like a John Woo movie, however despite not delivering on the sleeves promises, it left an impression that set me on the path to being a lifelong fan of Korea’s output. Regardless of the misguided expectations, even at the time I knew the opening 8 minutes were something special, and it’s an opening which I still class as one of the greatest even to this day.

While the initial scene gets plenty of attention, which has Ahn Sung-ki (who doesn’t have a single line) assassinating Song Young-chan on a rain soaked set of stairs, set to the Bee Gees ‘Holiday’ (and even inspired a Giordano commercial starring Jeon Ji-hyun), it only gets better from there. As the credits appear onscreen we follow Park Joong-hoon’s dungaree adorned cop, sporting possibly the most distinctive swagger ever put on film, as he gate crashes a gangsters beat-down, all set to punk band Cherry Filter’s rendition of the trot song ‘Hae Ddeul Nal’. Joined by then new face on the block Jang Dong-gun, what follows is a monochrome assault on the senses of flashy editing techniques and electrifying sound design, incorporating slow-motion, jump cuts, step-printing, still frames, and just about anything else you can name. Anyone who watches the opening to Nowhere to Hide, isn’t likely to ever forget it.

Hearing the distinctive Korean tone and intonation for the first time also set it apart from anything I’d watched previously, and combined with the unique aesthetic, there was something unmistakably alluring about this newfound world of cinema. However finding other titles to explore Korea’s output wasn’t so easy back at the start of the millennium, with 2003 being the year that really opened up the floodgates for much of Korea’s output (thanks to the likes of Park Chan-wook’s OldBoy, Kim Jee-woon’s A Tale of Two Sisters, and Bong Joon-ho’s Memories of Murder). Even Shiri, another movie from 1999 that was largely credited as Korea’s international breakthrough, didn’t get a release in the UK until 2003, also by Tartan Video.

So for close to 2 years, while there seemed to be an unlimited number of Hong Kong and Japanese movies to watch, I found myself barely watching more than a handful of other Korean productions. Thankfully 15 years on it’s very much a different story, with the Korean Film Archive actively releasing plenty of material from the pre-1999 era (indeed for anyone that got into Korean cinema in the early 00’s, you could be mistaken for thinking the industry didn’t exist before 1999), giving the countries rich cinematic history the exposure it deserves.

"Two Cops" Korean Theatrical Poster

“Two Cops” Korean Theatrical Poster

It took around 10 years for me to watch Nowhere to Hide again, then fully aware of who the actors are. Little did I know in 2001 that both Park Joong-hoon and Ahn Sung-ki had already made a couple of movies together – Chilsu and Mansu from 1988, and Two Cops from 1993. After Nowhere to Hide they’d go onto to feature in 2006’s Radio Star, and Sung-ki had a cameo appearance in Joong-hoon’s 2013 directorial debut Top Star. It made me enjoy Nowhere to Hide even more, and appreciate many of director Lee Myung-se’s visual perks that perhaps I didn’t fully absorb at the time, because I was constantly waiting for some double handgun action to explode off the screen. I think Nowhere to Hide is probably the first usage of CGI blood in an Asian production, and the end fight in the rain soaked abandoned coal field remains one of the most visually striking finales put on film.

For the Korean Film Festival in Australia in 2014, Park Joong-hoon was flown in as the special guest, there to introduce Top Star. I still remember seeing him in a bar during a rare quiet moment, and every instinct in my body wanted to ask him for a photo, the plan being to recreate the iconic scene in which he and Ahn Sung-ki punch each other in the face at the same time (yes, I was going to be audacious enough to be Ahn Sung-ki). However nerves got the best of me, and I never went through with it, not even a standard lame selfie. Still one of my life’s regrets.

Ahn Sung-ki and Park Joong-hoon in "Chilsu and Mansu"

Ahn Sung-ki and Park Joong-hoon in “Chilsu and Mansu”

While both Ahn Sung-ki and Park Joong-hoon remain active in the Korean film industry, with close to a century of work between them, director Myung-se unfortunately hasn’t been as lucky. While he gave his unique visual style to both The Duelist in 2005 (which also featured Ahn Sung-ki) and M in 2007, what was set to be a spy caper set for a 2013 release titled Mister K found him at loggerheads with the production company, at a time when they were already in the midst of filming in Thailand. Stating irreconcilable differences, Myung-se left the production, leaving the studio scrambling for a replacement director, which eventually came in the form of frequent assistant director Lee Seung-joon. Mister K was eventually released as The Spy, and was met with almost universal disdain. Myung-se hasn’t worked since the incident, marking a real loss to the industry.

Regardless of all that’s happened since its release, I’m sure there are other fans of Korean cinema out there whose love affair with the industry started with Nowhere to Hide. In the UK at least, it was the first legitimate Korean title to get distribution by a well-known label, and while Shiri tends to take all the glory for giving Korean cinema its international breakthrough, out of the 2 it’s Nowhere to Hide that I find more frequently going into the DVD player. It’s one of those titles which has yet to make it to Blu-ray, however when it does, you can count me in for a first day purchase.

Read First Experiences of Asian Cinema: Korea Edition Part II
Read First Experiences of Asian Cinema: Korea Edition Part III
Read First Experiences of Asian Cinema: Korea Edition Part IV

Posted in Features, News |

Deal on Fire! Iron Protector | Blu-ray | Only $7.49 – Expires soon!

Iron Protector | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

Iron Protector | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

Today’s Deal on Fire is the Blu-ray for Iron Protector (read our review), aka Super Bodyguard, a martial arts movie directed by and starring Yue Song (King of the Streets).

After the death of his clan master, Wu-Lin (Yue Song) leaves the village for the City of Stone-cold to protect the daughter of the richest family in the city, Fei-Fei. When the city s most dangerous gang attempts to kidnap Fei-Fei, Wu-Lin is forced to fight them alone and discovers an even more sinister power is taking over the city.

The film also stars Wrath of Vajra’s Shi Yanneng (aka Xing Yu) and Special ID’s Collin Chou.

Order Iron Protector from Amazon.com today!

Posted in Deals on Fire!, News |