Hong Kong star Ekin Chen (The Storm Riders, Full Strike, Tokyo Raiders) is back in CGI territory with Legends of the Three Kingdoms, an upcoming action fantasy from director Lv Kejing.
So what can you expect from the film’s plot? Watch the New Trailer below and see for yourself. We’re wondering if the film was actually produced in 1999…
Legends of the Three Kingdoms hits domestically later this year.
On July 10, 2018, Milestone Films will be releasing the Blu-ray & DVD for Hirokazu Koreeda’s 1995 film Maborosi, starring Takashi Naito (Samurai Pirates), Tadanobu Asano (Away with Words), Akira Emoto (Shin Godzilla), Mutsuko Sakura (Tokyo Story), and Minori Terada (Zatoichi Meets Yojimbo). Check out the official details below:
One of the finest films of Japanese cinema, Hirokazu Koreeda’s first feature film Maborosi is a story of love, loss, and ultimately, regeneration.
Haunted by the mysterious loss of her grandmother many years ago, a beautiful young mother (Yumiko, played by Makiko Esumi) struggles to come to terms with the sudden loss of her husband. Yumiko remarries and with her young son moves to her new husband’s home in a remote village on the wild, untamed Sea of Japan. There, she is haunted by the past, but with time and the natural wonders around her, she awakens to find love, understanding, and a sense of peace.
Perhaps the finest Japanese director working today, Koreeda has gone on to create such masterpieces as After Life, Nobody Knows and Still Walking. His feature films reflect back on his beginnings in documentary with a regard to truth and a incredibly humane sense of his characters’ strength and fallibilities.
Working with almost entirely natural lighting, Koreeda’s remarkable and elegent camerawork makes Maborosi one of the most striking visual works in cinema.
Special Features/Specs:
Audio Commentary by Linda Ehrlich, independent film scholar and Associate Professor Emerita from Case Western Reserve University with special thanks to Yuki Togawa Gergotz
Birthplace – a video documentary with actress Makiko Esumi
NEW! English subtitles by Linda Hoaglund with Judith Aley, and the assistance of Linda Ehrlich
On June 22, EJ Entertainment will be releasing E.oni’s The Accidental Detective 2: In Action, a South Korean Action Comedy, to theaters in the U.S. and Canada on June 22. Check out the official details below:
A comic book storekeeper, Dae-man (Kwon Sang-woo of Chinese Zodiac), and the legendary homicide detective, Tae-su (Sung Dong-il of RV: Resurrected Victims), who met on a previous case quit their jobs to open the very first private detective agency in Korea. Despite their high hopes, they soon find themselves with only trivial cases such as spouse infidelity, unpaid debt, and missing cats. Then one day, a woman walks into the office, wanting to find the truth behind the death of her fiancé. Not only that, she also offers them a handsome reward of 50,000 dollars. Dae-man and Tae-su see it as an opportunity to put their true detective skills to work. They bring onboard a third member, Hopper (Lee Kwang-soo of Confession), a Mensa genius and a small-time online private eye, and together they launch a full-fledged investigation on the case. As they dig into what initially appeared to be a straightforward case, disturbing new evidence turns up.
On September 25, 2018, MVD Rewind will be releasing a Special Edition Blu-ray for Angel Town(read our review), the 1990 feature debut of French World Kickboxing Champion Olivier Gruner (Nemesis, Showdown in Manila).
Trouble is the rule in Angel Town, the heart of Los Angeles, where once peaceful streets surrounding a major university have become a cauldron of urban chaos and fear. Gang fights by day – full scale war by night. No one is safe, not even the police. When Jacques Montaine (Gruner), an exchange student and champion kickboxer, tries to protect an innocent family from whom he rents a room, he becomes a target of the psychotic gang leader…
Directed by cult action filmmaker Eric Karson (Black Eagle, The Octagon), Angel Town also stars Peter Kwong (Big Trouble in Little China) and Theresa Saldana (Raging Bull).
Blu-ray Details:
High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentation of the main feature
Original 2.0 Uncompressed PCM Stereo Audio
Audio Commentary from Director Eric Karson
NEW 2018 Interview with Director / Producer Eric Karson
NEW 2018 Interview with Frank Aragon (“Martin”)
NEW 2018 Interview with Cinematographer John LeBlanc
Archival “Making of Featurette
Archival Interview with Director Eric Karson
Archival Interview with star Olivier Gruner (“Jacques”)
Bloody Spear at Mount Fuji | Blu-ray (Arrow Video)
RELEASE DATE: September 4, 2018
On September 4, 2018, Arrow Video/Arrow Academy will be releasing the Special Edition Blu-ray for Bloody Spear at Mount Fuji, from acclaimed director Tomu Uchida (A Fugitive From the Past). Read on for the official release details below:
Praised by Japanese film critics and much admired by his contemporaries Akira Kurosawa and Yasujiro Ozu, Tomu Uchida nonetheless remains a little-known in the west. His 1955 masterpiece Bloody Spear at Mount Fuji is an excellent entry point for the newcomer.
Set during the Edo period, Bloody Spear at Mount Fuji is a tragicomic road movie of sorts, following a samurai, his two servants including spear-carrier Genpachi (Chiezo Kataoka) and the various people they meet on their journey, including a policeman in pursuit of a thief, a young child and a woman who is to be sold into prostitution.
Winner of a prestigious Blue Ribbon Award for supporting actor and Kurosawa regular Daisuke Kato, Bloody Spear at Mount Fuji is a film deserving of much wider international recognition.
Special Edition Contents:
High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentation
Original uncompressed mono audio
Optional newly translated English subtitles
Brand-new audio commentary by Japanese cinema expert Jasper Sharp, recorded exclusively for this release
Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Corey Brickley
First Pressing Only: Illustrated collector s booklet featuring new writing on the film by critic and filmmaker James Oliver
According to THR, Operation Somalia is a military action flick about a real-life rescue mission mounted by the Chinese special forces against Somali pirates. The film is being penned by Yi Liu, who co-wrote Wolf Warriorand Wolf Warrior II.
As soon as we learn more about Operation Somalia, you’ll be the first to know. Stay tuned!
In Vampire Doll, the first film of Michio Yamamoto’s Bloodthirsty Trilogy, the director made a vampire movie that wasn’t much of a vampire movie. The Vampire Doll is this strange, dreamlike tale of devotion to the undead playing out in a spooky house in the woods. For the second film of the trilogy, Lake of Dracula (aka Bloodthirsty Eyes), Yamamoto crafts a story more in tune with vampire lore – here we get wooden stakes, a coffin, and a dude with pointy fangs who wears a cape. But just like the previous film, Yamamoto is not interested in telling the usual sort of vampire story. For while the surface details all tell you that Lake of Dracula is a vampire horror film, the underlying details tell a story about women’s fear of men.
Akiko (Midori Fujita) is a young teacher and artist. Her latest painting (and we are led to believe much of her previous work) is devoted to an obsession within herself that she cannot understand, depicting a sinister golden eye looking over a lake. Throughout the film, that painting can be seen in the background of many a scene, like an oppressive force always watching over Akiko. In one of the early scenes, her dog Leo runs off ahead of her and she shouts for him to return. The moment, though trivial on the surface because the dog quickly returns, awakens memories of a recurring dream in which Akiko as a child followed her dog (also named Leo) into a house where she witnessed something horrible. She shares the dream with her sister Natsuko (Sanae Emi) and her boyfriend Dr. Saeki (Choei Takahashi) and both write it off as her subconscious messing with her. But we soon learn it is more than that; it’s not a dream but a repressed memory of the moment when her childhood innocence was shattered and a lingering anxiety took over her life.
Things get weird in Akiko’s life when her neighbor (Kaku Takushina), who runs a commercial boathouse, accepts an unexpected delivery of a long rectangular box. The box’s shipment was ordered by a stranger named Dracula (the only mention of Dracula in the film, despite the title) but there seems to be no other record of who it was intended for. Curious, the neighbor opens the box, revealing a coffin, and thus unleashing a vampire onto the lake.
The neighbor is bitten by the vampire and turned into a slave. When Akiko sees the neighbor next, he lunges at her, knocks her out, and drags her off. Akiko doesn’t think it’s the act of a supernatural villain but rather that her neighbor, a friendly man she’s known for a long time now, has suddenly decided to rape her. When she tries to tell this to her sister and boyfriend, they either suggest she misunderstood the situation or shrug it off. And in their disbelief, they become adversaries as Akiko begins to feel less and less safe.
Lake of Dracula is a film about a girl who saw a vampire as a child and then grew up to meet that vampire again and realize the cause for her nightmares, yes. But it’s easy to read it as a film about trauma (of a sexual or a violent nature) leaving a lasting, misunderstood effect on a woman and making her life worse as a result. When totally innocent men step in to help Akiko after she is nearly attacked by the vampire (again, she sees it as a potential rape), she sees even her saviors as potential threats. And because vampires are often the most sexualized movie monster, using the vampire as a way to talk about sexual trauma seems an interesting and obvious choice to me.
Lake of Dracula employs too many of the old school scares like a hand on the shoulder and birds flying out of the bushes to really surprise you with shocks. But the anxiety and suspense it creates as we watch our heroine worrying over locked doors and windows works pretty well. So much of the film rests on the shoulders of lead actress Midori Fujita and I thought she handled the workload well. What’s surprising is that this is the first of only a small handful of films for the actress. Sanae Emi, who plays the sister Natsuko, also had a very short film career, with Lake of Dracula the third and final film of her filmography.
Shin Kishida (Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla) plays the vampire with two modes, entitled playboy in a fancy scarf and bloodsucking monster. The makeup doesn’t play the best when he’s not expressing monstrous intent, but when the fangs come out and the eyes glow gold Kishida makes for an impressive vampire. Kishida’s vamp is not onscreen that often, but in the final act the vampire and the horror effects crew give us more than a few nasty surprises. There is a great moment of body horror as a long-dormant body is disturbed that made me squirm, so props for that.
Riichiro Manabe provides a weird musical score that calls to mind the rubbery squelching sounds of his Godzilla vs. Hedorah score from the same year. Cinematographer Rokuro Nishigaki’s dark, shadowy visuals lack the dreamlike haze of Vampire Doll but still makes the film look better than its budget probably suggested it should. And screenwriters Ei Ogawa (Space Amoeba) and Masaru Takesue (Evil of Dracula) do interesting work by balancing the underlying themes while also having its cast of intellectual characters seriously discuss whether they’re dealing with vampires on a lake.
There’s a point early on in the film where Natsuko teases her sister by saying that she plans to write a paper on the themes of “women’s latent terrors.” Maybe Lake of Dracula didn’t need to spell it out for us but it works regardless. Lake of Dracula is a nervy horror story that looks familiar but has more on its mind than the usual bloodsucking vampire tale.
Director: Billy Chan Writer: Johnny Lee Cast: Joyce Godenzi, Collin Chou Siu Long, Richard Ng, Yuen Biao, Agnes Aurelio, Lam Chung, Billy Chow, Chui Jing Yat, Michael Dinga, Corey Yuen, Sammo Hung Running Time: 90 min.
By Martin Sandison
One of the most rare Hong Kong movies ever made, License to Steal was given a Laserdisc release back in the day, but never made it on VCD or DVD, even in Hong Kong. I managed to get my hands on a copy converted to DVD some years ago, and relished revisiting it for this review. What’s so ironic about this movie is in a simple stunt at the end of the film a stuntman lost his life, one of the only times in Hong Kong film history – and you can’t even own the film! It’s a shame, because this is classic early 90’s fare, enlivened by superb fight scenes and that anything-goes energy.
Hung (Joyce Godenzi, She Shoots Straight), Hsiao Yen (Alvina Kong, Forbidden City Cop) and Ngan (Agnes Aurelio, She Shoots Straight) are professional thieves whose lives are fraught with danger, but they love living on the edge. When Ngan goes against them and their master, leaving the other two for dead, so begins a deadly game of cat and mouse. Swordsman (Yuen Baio, Knockabout) pops up to help the duo and two cops (Richard Ng, Winners and Sinners, and Collin Chou, Red Wolf) get involved as the plot descends in to OTT silliness.
Interestingly, License to Steal is directed by Billy Chan Lung, whose brother Peter Chan has a cameo. The latter is known for his acting roles in classics such as Prodigal Son and Odd Couple, and was on the receiving end of Bruce Lee’s first explosive kicks in The Big Boss. Billy Chan was also a veteran stuntman and Assistant Action director for such luminaries as Sammo Hung. He directs with a sure hand, and has a knack for characters introductory scenes: Both Yuen Baio and Richard Ng’s are masterclasses of framing and atmosphere. The lighting and compositions are of a high standard throughout the film, especially the action and burglary scenes. It’s a bit odd that Billy Chan didn’t really break through as a director for major productions, seeing as his ability is evident.
Yuen’s character seems to be an extension of the one he played in Dragons Forever, with not as much screen time. His character is from Mainland China, which lends a bit of depth to what otherwise is a very one-dimensional film. There seems to me to be a commentary on the idea of a Mainlander lost in Hong Kong being a country bumpkin, but depicted as a morally upstanding man with great kung fu skills; at once a criticism and a compliment. That his name is Swordsman is no joke, with his old school values like a Wuxia character. Seeing as at the time Hong Kong movies were wildly popular in the Mainland, it keeps both the local and Northern markets happy.
Now to the action: The opening Kendo fight and the end one-on-one between Godenzi and Aurelio are so beautifully crafted that, I’m just gonna say it, they top the face-off between the two in She Shoots Straight. Perhaps that film is better overall than License to Steal, but the action in this movie is top class all the way. Both Godenzi and Aurelio have never looked better, which is interesting as the action director is King Lee. A protege of Lau Kar Leung, with whom he worked on classics such as My Young Auntie, here he proves himself in the same league as that Master. Unfortunately despite working on later films such as Deadful Melody again with Yuen Baio, he never emerged as a top choreographer. Another rematch in the film is between Yuen and Billy Chow (they had previously fought in Dragons Forever), and yes I’m gonna say this too, for pure choreography it tops the scene in Dragons Forever. In fact the last half an hour has endless rewatch-ability. Collin Chou’s form and technique never looked better, as he takes on a bunch of heavies, and we are treated to a match between Yuen and him early in the film. While it’s a bit short, there’s no doubt we are seeing two of the greatest screen fighters go toe to toe.
While Sammo Hung serves as presenter of the movie and has a strange cameo as a Frenchman, that’s about the extent of his involvement. Godenzi was his wife at this point, and coming off the back of two major productions wherein she proved her worth as a screen fighter, it’s a shame she didn’t make many more movies. Especially because her natural aptitude for the art is so obvious; she couldn’t have had a better teacher than Sammo Hung. I was in her company two years ago when I interviewed Sammo, and let me tell you, she has aged well.
While a hell of an entertaining 90 minutes, License to Steal misses out from being an absolute classic because a lot of the humour falls flat (the only laugh out loud moments for me come from bad subtitling, such as “Grimace at her like an onion”), and just how silly the film becomes towards the end, giving credence to the idea that Hong Kong movie scripts at the time were written on the set. The tonal shifts, which become part of the charm of Golden Age Hong Kong cinema, are here jarring because the laughs don’t work and parts of the film are a bit dead when there’s no action going on. However if you’re looking for a film from the left field that contains action up there with the best from its actors, look no further.
After his notable stuntwork in films such as Lucy and Now You See Me 2 – not to mention his breakout starring role in Jailbreak and indie The Division– Jean-Paul Ly takes lead in Nightshooters (read our review), a martial arts thriller directed by Marc Price (Colin).
Nightshootersis the story of a film crew, led by stunt man Donnie (Jean Paul Ly) that stumbles upon a gangland hit. “With this film we’re hoping to create some of the best action UK independent cinema has seen. A UK equivalent of The Raid with a healthy splash of the fragmented, humorous characters I’ve always connected with”, says Price (via Filmoria).
Look out for Nightshooters on September 10th on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital Download – and we’re sure a U.S. release will follow. Don’t miss the film’s Trailer below:
Director: No Dong-Seok Cast: Gang Dong-Won, Kim Eui-Sung, Han Hyo-Joo, Kim Sung-Kyun, im Dae-Myung, Yoo Jae-Myung, Yoon Kye-Sang, Kim You-Jung, Choi Woo-Sik Running Time: 108 min.
By Paul Bramhall
Reviewing a movie which is a remake of another is always a tricky job, especially with the current trend for doing so within the Asian region. In the past couple of years alone, purely looking at Korea, we’ve had Luck.Key (a remake of Japan’s Key of Life), Heart Blackened (a remake of China’s Silent Witness), and Believer (a remake of China’s Drug War). If you haven’t seen the original, should you go and check it out so at least you know what it was based on, and if you do, should the review act as a comparison between the two? Well, Korea aren’t through with the trend just yet, and the latest title to be given the remake treatment is Yoshihiro Nakamura’s 2010 production, Golden Slumber, which retains its name for the latest incarnation.
Both movies are based on the Japanese novel, also of the same name, and for the Korean version Nakamura’s shoes are filled by Noh Dong-seok. I’ll be upfront and say that by the time the end credits rolled on Golden Slumber, having not seen the Japanese version, I can confidently state that the answer to the question posed in the previous paragraph is no. If the original is even a fraction as annoying and limp wristed as its remake, then I can image becoming irredeemably comatose by the end of it, never to inflict the world with my ramblings ever again. It’s surprising, as if anything Korea is known for its dark and gritty action movies, while Japan is known for its lightweight and safe approach when it comes to its mainstream output.
The point of Golden Slumber being remade at all is a debatable one, especially when you consider that the innocent man on the run trope was already effectively covered in 2013’s Running Man (I mean check out the posters, they’re almost identical!). For whatever reason though, it’s here. For director Dong-seok the remake marks his third time at the helm, after previously directing the dramas My Generation and Boys of Tomorrow, in 2004 and 2006 respectively. Why he’s gone 12 years without making another movie is anyone’s guess, although my own personal one is that the producers likely asked 100 other directors first, and all of them wisely turned it down.
Stepping into the role that Masato Sakai played in the original is popular thespian Gang Dong-won, who most recently showed a more macho side than we’re used to in the thriller Master (not to mention he’s headlining Kim Jee-woon’s recently wrapped Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade). Dong-won is usually a reliable presence onscreen, however here he puts in a career worst performance, making the 105 minute runtime an endurance test to get through. Playing a happy go lucky courier who just wants to “live a good life without hurting others” (yes, that’s an actual line), it seems his biggest goal is to hang out more with the members of the band he used to be in from his younger days. Said band had an affinity for the Beatles song ‘Golden Slumber’, but when life started to get in the way (kids, careers etc.), much to Dong-won’s dismay they decided to go their separate ways. So yes, he’s basically a sulking man-child.
However when he inadvertently wins a Model Citizen award for saving a K-pop star from being mugged (don’t ask), he finds himself with a new found celebrity status. His new found fame sees him receive a call from one of the band mates he’s long lost touch with, played by a (I swear) visibly embarrassed to be there Yoon Kye-sang (The Outlaws). Their meeting is an odd one though, with Kye-sang acting all tense and on edge, a fact which the permanently cheerful and breezy Dong-won seems oblivious to. Only when he takes off in Dong-won’s delivery truck, leaving the good natured courier on the side of the street to witness the assassination of a presidential candidate he’s about to be framed for, does our dim-witted protagonist sense that somethings not quite right.
All of the above thankfully happens within the first 10 minutes, quickly putting paid to the insufferable smiling of Dong-wook, set to equally insufferable acoustic guitar strumming. Instead, we’re left for the remainder with Dong-wook on the run from ‘The Agency’, a poorly defined shadowy organization, responsible for helping the presidential candidate they’re working for ensure he gets into power. The turn of events may have put an end to Dong-wook’s overly cheery demeanour, but we quickly learn that the alternative isn’t a whole lot better. With a constantly quivery bottom lip and puppy dog eyes sulking, we’re left to tolerate his constant snivelling and teary eyed wishes of how he just wants the band to get back together. Indeed, this damn band. Never has a characters motivations sat so awkwardly with the actual plot at hand.
There are numerous occasions when Golden Slumber grinds to a literal halt, purely to indulge in overly saccharine flashbacks to the days when the band was still together, and Dong-won’s innocent flirtations with their number one groupie, played by Han Hyo-joo (who will reunite with Dong-won in Jin-Roh). Watch them in their happier days as they rock out in slow motion, looking at each other with huge grins while the sun gently caresses their faces. We get it, as Bryan Adams once said, those were the best years of their lives. But we have a guy here framed for murder, shouldn’t he be getting to grips with how to clear his name, rather than becoming all teary eyed in a corner and wondering how he can ever bring those days back again? As an exercise in cringing, these scenes set a new precedent.
Even when I wanted to give credit to Golden Slumber, it constantly slapped me in the face. When it’s exposed ‘The Agency’ have footage of Dong-won killing someone, I thought it was the first time for a movie to tap into the recent deepfake trend, the name being used for a new technology that allows for someone’s face to be superimposed on to that of another. But no, wait for it. It turns out ‘The Agency’ recruited one of their members with a similar frame and build to Dong-won, named ‘Silicone’ (seriously), and had him undergo plastic surgery so he has an identical face. After I finished repeatedly bashing my head against a wall to convince myself to keep watching, when I returned it was to a Dong-won versus Dong-won showdown. Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of this scene though, is that I found myself rooting for the bad guy Dong-won, in the hopes that it would make the runtime a little shorter.
Speaking of runtime, while Korean remakes of Chinese movies are known for having extended durations compared to the originals (the remakes of Eye in the Sky and Drug War – Cold Eyes and Believer – being examples), it seems that with Japanese remakes, time is being loped off. Luck.Key slimmed Key of Life’s’s 125 minute runtime by 15 minutes, and similarly here, the originals whopping 135 minute runtime is mercifully cut down to only 105. Well, I guess that’s a positive. Bizarrely Dong-seok still attempts to squeeze in a minor sub-plot of how Dong-won is estranged from his father, which has all of about 2 minutes dedicated to it when we’re already over an hour in, but by that point I’d given up questioning the barrage of poor decisions behind Golden Slumber’s existence.
With a soundtrack which is frequently more exciting than anything happening onscreen, one of the most ludicrously dumb endings in recent memory, and a plot which is dripping in misplaced sentimentality and overwrought histrionics, Golden Slumber is a misfire on just about every level. At one point, our sad sack of a main character solemnly asks “Is it a crime to live kindly?” It’s not, but as the expression goes, sometimes you have to be cruel to be kind. Hopefully, that’s how people take this review.
The career of Cheng Pei-pei has seen her smash through the glass ceiling on multiple occasions. The world of martial arts was never the same after Pei-pei’s breakthrough role in Come Drink With Me in 1966, where she took watching audiences by storm by becoming the world’s first female martial arts star. That would be the catalyst film for Pei-pei to go on and transform the industry into how we know it today.
Since breaking onto the stage in the 1960’s, Pei-pei has gone on to star in more than 50 films, which tells you everything you need to know about this actress and her attitude towards work. They tell you that if you do what you love, then you’ll never work a day in your life and this legendary Chinese actress is the living and breathing example of that saying. In another tribute towards her glittering career, Pei-pei was given CAAMfest’s Spotlight award in May 2018.
The second female martial artist we want to feature is Cheng Pei-pei.
She has one of the most incredible careers as both a martial artist and an actor. She is one of the most celebrated swords-women that has ever taken the screen! pic.twitter.com/cARGLq29nW
When the news broke that Cheng Pei-pei was to be honoured at CAAMfest, the 72-year old took it in her stride and was as gracious as ever as she said: “I am so honoured. It is my honour to come to San Francisco”. Despite being the global superstar that she is, it hasn’t turned this groundbreaking woman into someone who doesn’t recognize the privilege of being singled out in her industry. Despite the fact that this has been happening for over 50 years, Cheng Pei-pei is as humble as they come.
The work that Cheng Pei-pei has done has had a massive effect on the martial arts and kung fu industry, and the fallout is still being felt today. Thanks to the ground she has covered, Pei-pei has opened the door to both men and women enjoying the martial arts film industry, which has created a massive amount of demand. It’s not just on the screen where martial arts has had a spin-off, it has branched out into our everyday lives through technology.
From the making of films, TV shows and even on stage productions, the world can’t get enough, and you can’t help but feel in debt to the role Cheng Pei-pei has played in making this a more inclusive industry. It’s hard to imagine it has branched off into so many different sectors without a woman taking up a prominent role within the industry. Another of the many by-products of the martial arts film industry has been the introduction of kung fu slot games on online casinos. Casinos Killer lists the 10 best online casinos where punters can now enjoy playing martial arts games when they aren’t in front of the TV watching it. This demand is only set to grow in the future.
Few industries have evolved like the martial arts one and, with every new generation coming through, there is the same amount of interest and appreciation. One can only wonder where it will be in fifty years’ time. If you were to ask a 19-year old Cheng Pei-pei in 1966 while staring in Come Drink With Me if she thought her career would have this much of an impact on the industry going forward it’s unlikely she would have said yes. No one could have foreseen just how influential Cheng Pei-pei would go on to become.
It doesn’t look like there will be any letting up at 72, either, with Cheng Pei-pei in good health and harbouring a desire to keep using the life-changing talents she has been given ins some form or another.
On July 24th, 2018, Well Go USA is releasing the Blu-ray & DVD for Operation Red Sea(read our review), a big budget actioner that stars Zhang Yi (Brotherhood of Blades 2), Huang Jingyu (Drug War) and Du Jiang (Mr. High Heels).
Director Dante Lam (Unbeatable) might just be the hardest working man in Hong Kong cinema. The filmmaker has been reliably turning out hard-hitting films that have helped expand the scope of the action/thriller genre in Hong Kong – his most recent film, Operation Mekong, recently made waves in the U.S. – and now – Lam is expected to do the same with: Operation Red Sea.
According to the official synopsis (via Variety), “the Jiaolong Assault Team, one of the special forces of the world’s largest military force, People’s Liberation Army, is given a potentially fatal assignment, leading a small eight-man unit to evacuate Chinese residents from a North African republic in the throes of a coup d’état.”
Special Features/Technical Specs:
Deleted scenes
Original trailers
Original Mandarin audio and optional English and Mandarin subtitles
Today’s Deal on Fire is the Blu-ray for David Leitch’s Atomic Blonde(read our review). The movie was previously known as The Coldest City, the title of Antony Johnston’s 2012 graphic novel, from which the film was based.
In Atomic Blonde, Charlize Theron (Mad Max: Fury Road) plays Lorraine Broughton, an undercover MI6 agent who is sent to Berlin during the Cold War to investigate the murder of a fellow agent and recover a missing list of double agents.
Atomic Blondealso stars James McAvoy (Split), John Goodman (The Big Lebowski), Til Schweiger (Inglourious Basterds), Eddie Marsan (The World’s End), Sofia Boutella (Kingsman: The Secret Service), Toby Jones (Captain America: The First Avenger) and Daniel Bernhardt (Logan).
Director: Lee Hae-Young Cast: Cho Jin-Woong, Ryoo Joon-Yeol, Cha Seung-Won, Kim Ju-Hyeok, Jin Seo-Yeon, Park Hae-Joon, Kim Sung-Ryoung, Kim Dong-Young, Lee Joo-Young Running Time: 123 min.
By Paul Bramhall
Five years after Cold Eyes, a Korean remake of the Milkyway Image thriller Eye in the Sky, another of the Hong Kong production company’s titles receives the same treatment, this time in the form of Believer. The source material is Johnnie To’s 2013 crime flick Drug War, which was notable for also being his first foray into Mainland movie making. The choice to remake this title in-particular is both an easy and challenging one at the same time. While Drug War delivers a suitably gritty slice of cops vs drug dealers, propped up by To’s trademark stylish shootouts, it’s also just as well regarded for the skill in which it circumnavigated the Chinese censors. Incorporating a number of subtle narrative choices, and even some selective casting, despite its themes To’s skilful handling of the material allowed it to be shown in the Mainland.
With no such restrictions to worry about for the remake, Believer essentially had 2 paths to go down. Either go for a straight up remake, or use To’s original as a foundation to create something more. Thankfully director Lee Hae-yeong has decided to go with the latter, and for the most part, it’s a decision that reaps considerable rewards, both for those familiar with Drug War (such as myself), and those that’ll be watching it with no prior knowledge of its origins. Believer marks Hae-yeong’s fourth time in the director’s chair, after helming the comedies Like A Virgin and Foxy Festival, and most recently the period horror thriller The Silenced. His first time working with a full-blooded action thriller, Believer is easily destined to be the movie that puts him on the map, as he displays a skilled hand at maintaining a consistently tense pace throughout.
Behind the scenes, Hae-yeong has an ace up his sleeve in the form of his co-writer Jeong Seo-kyeong. A frequent collaborator with Park Chan-wook, and one of the scribes behind The Truth Beneath (for me the best Korean movie of 2016), Seo-kyeong’s dialogue elevates the quality of any director she works with, and here is no different. Together the pairs script takes Believer into places that To’s version wouldn’t be allowed to touch with a barge pole, incorporating several shades of grey into the characters motivations and choices. The same applies to the direction itself, with no government restrictions to be concerned about over the amount of violence onscreen, Believer cranks up the gore in a handful of brief but memorable scenes.
Stepping into the roles of Sun Hong-Lei and Louis Koo, as cop and drug dealer respectively, are Cho Jin-woong and Ryu Jun-yeol. Jin-woong is an actor who’s been around for as long as the Korean wave, however has recently come into his own in recent years. From a stellar turn as the lead in the psycho-mystery Bluebeard, to his roles as the villain in the likes of The Handmaiden and A Hard Day. Here he’s visibly slimmed down, and makes for an excellent choice as the detective who’s been on the trail of the mysterious “Mr. Lee”, the head of Korea’s largest drug syndicate that no one has ever met or seen. In comparison Jun-yeol is more of a newcomer on the block, however is already cementing a reputation as being a considerable talent onscreen, thanks to recent roles in the likes of The King, A Taxi Driver, and Heart Blackened (another Chinese movie remake).
While Jin-woong retains the determined cop characteristics that Hong-Lei embodies in Drug War, Jun-yeol is given a character with significantly more depth than Koo’s sweaty take in the original. Again the only survivor of a drug factory explosion, one which also claims the life of his mother, in Believer this plot device gives Jun-yeol the motivation to join forces with Jin-woong and catch Mr. Lee, believed to be responsible for the blast. In that regard it’s possible to draw comparison to Drug War, in that the villains remain more interesting than the heroes, which is no more so on display than with the introduction of a Korean Chinese gangster, played with relish by the late Kim Joo-hyuk.
A largely perfunctory role in Drug War, here Joo-hyuk makes the character a standout of the entire movie. Much like Jin-woong, Joo-hyuk is another actor whose been around for a while, but only recently made an impact with a string of stand-out performances in the likes of The Truth Beneath, Yourself and Yours and Confidential Assignment. Sadly his role in Believer was to be his last, as shortly after filming wrapped he was involved in a car accident in October 2017, which ultimately claimed his life. His final role is a career high point, as an LED light averse, eye ball chewing psychopath. Joo-hyuk is the centre piece of the double-deception hotel meeting sequence, that Hae-yeong seems to acknowledge was done so well in To’s original, it doesn’t need too much tweaking. The scenes crank up the tension considerably, and sets in motion a series of escalating action scenes and blindsides.
Much like Cold Eyes did for Eye in the Sky, so Believer adds an additional 15 minutes to the duration of Drug War, but unlike Cold Eyes, here the extra runtime feels justified. This mostly comes from the addition of a character that’s introduced mid-way though, played by Cha Seung-won, of Man in High Heels fame. As heir to a shipping company that studied to be a pastor overseas, his character is a colorful one, but his addition to the mix does make things feel a little overcrowded. This is especially true with the inclusion of the mute drug manufacturers, also carried over from Drug War, but here cast as brother and sister. The relationship dynamics the pair have with Jun-yeol are interestingly tweaked from their original incarnation, and are effectively played by Kim Dong-young (also in A Hard Day) and Lee Joo-young.
Thankfully though Hae-yeong doesn’t allow the additional characters to slow the pacing, and the simmering tensions that are kept on the boil from almost the opening scene, eventually culminate in a full-blown shootout at the 75 minute mark. It’s an impressively staged action sequence, with suitably thunderous sound design from the machine gun fire, and feels like a rewarding payoff to everything which has come before. The finale also decides to take a completely different approach to Drug War, which is too its credit, as the change in direction also makes it difficult to compare the two. Rather than being a black and white case of a cops vs drug dealers shootout, the room to add complexity allows for some interesting twists and character choices to play out. Admittedly viewers accustomed to this type of genre may see some of the plot turns coming before they’re signposted, but they’re still effectively executed.
It’s during the finale that it’s possible to sense just how much enjoyment Hae-yeong is having with the material, with the gratuitous but enjoyable decision to also include a pair of one-on-one fight scenes that run in parallel, finally allowing for some female fisticuffs amongst a largely male dominated picture. The closing moments of Believer make for an interesting choice, eschewing the big bang ending and closure that Drug War delivers, instead we’re presented with a scene which leaves things open to audience interpretation. It’s a bold move, and likely those that were infuriated with the ending of Inception may well have the same feeling here, but personally I believe the scene achieves what it sets out to do, which is to make us think.
Remaking a well-regarded movie is always going to be a difficult task, even more so when that movie has been made by an auteur like Johnny To. However with Believer, Hae-yeong and his cast haven’t just re-interpreted the original for a Korean audience, there are occasions when it’s possible to argue they’ve surpassed it. For those that feel remakes aren’t worth your time, then this may just be the movie to change your mind, and who knows, it may even make a Believer out of you.
Park Hoon-Jung (director behind New World, writer of I Saw the Devil) returns to dark territory with The Witch, an upcoming action-thriller that releases domestically later this month.
According to TFS, Witch tells the story of a girl who, after premature memory loss and a violent upbringing, finds herself in a situation where she must fight against dark and unknown assailants.
The Witch stars Kim Da-Mi (Marionette), Choi Woo-Sik (Okja), Jo Min-Soo (Pieta) and Park Hee-Soon (Age of Shadows).
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