Showing posts with label Daniel Wu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daniel Wu. Show all posts

Monday, October 1, 2012

SCMP: Stephen Fung Believes His Tai Chi Trilogy Marks A Great Leap Forward

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By Vivian Chen

Daniel Wu, Stephen Fung - Shaoxing premiere, 9/25

For years, Stephen Fung Tak-lun battled against detractors who saw him as a former pop idol who had, somehow, managed to cross over to filmmaking by directing a few comedies starring his best buddies.

That's probably a closed chapter now: the 38-year-old has completed two instalments of a planned trilogy of special effects-laden martial arts blockbusters - and launched the first as a non-competition entry at the Venice Film Festival last month.

Financed by mainland film giants Huayi Brothers and Taihe Film Investment, the Tai Chi franchise revolves around the rise to greatness of kung fu hero Yang Luchan (played by Jayden Yuan Xiaochan) in late 19th-century China. Tai Chi 0, the first chapter which opens on Thursday, features Yang's struggle to leave home - where he has grown up bullied as the village idiot - to begin his training to become a warrior with the help of several mentors (including one played by Tony Leung Ka-fai), and Yu Niang, a young woman (Angelababy Yeung Wing) he falls in love with.

Angelababy

The antagonist of the film is her husband, Zijing (Eddie Peng Yu-yen), a top-hat-wearing Anglophile who will stop at nothing to beat Yang down.
Eddie Peng, Stephen Fung

"I respect filmmakers who indulge themselves, but I always want to make commercial films that are nicely done," says Fung. " Star Wars and The Lord of the Rings are commercial successes and yet at the same time are still good films that are enjoyed not only by a privileged few."

Tai Chi "is the biggest production I've directed so far, especially as it's a trilogy". Fung says mixing rural Chinese landscapes with industrial-era iconography, such as steam-powered machines, is crucial for the series.

"I find the clash of the East and West during that period of history especially fascinating. The industrial revolution was rolling out like a wildfire in the West. They created machines that looked monstrous in the eyes of average Chinese men who were still primitive in terms of modern technology."

That explains the use of automata in the film, created by the post-production team which had previously worked on Tsui Hark's 2010 mystery epic Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame.

Fung says the visuals are a good match for the film. "I've been allowed a lot of freedom creatively. The village, for example, was shot in not just one but several locations to achieve that whimsical ambience we were looking for."

Creating the weaponry was another source of excitement. "I'm a fan of the Transformers saga and Hayao Miyazaki's animation, so being able to create the machines was a dream come true. The use of robots and machines in fights is not so common in traditional Chinese kung fu films," says Fung, whose films were action-choreographed by Sammo Hung Kam-bo. "I believe that Tai Chi can provide some fresh angles for the audience."
Sammo Hung, Stephen Fung

Now seemingly at ease in the director's chair, Fung says he enjoys both filmmaking and acting. "Being a film director, it's true I work with a team but there's not so much democracy. After all, people are counting on me to make the final call. But as an actor, I'm more passive. I'm paid to follow orders."

Educated in graphic design at the University of Michigan, Fung began his career in showbusiness as one half of pop duo Dry with songwriter Mark Lui Chung-tak, then made his acting debut in 1995 alongside Josephine Siao Fong-fong in Ann Hui On-wah's Summer Snow.

Ever since he made his directorial debut in 2004 with En ter the Phoenix, an action comedy about the heir to a gang boss consolidating his power - also starring Eason Chan Yik-shun, Daniel Wu Yin-cho, Fung and ex-girlfriend Karen Mok Man-wai - the heartthrob-turned-filmmaker has been looking for opportunities on the mainland.

Last year, he co-founded film production company Diversion Pictures with Wu, a long-time friend and colleague.
Daniel Wu

"The company is not limited to producing only films, but will also provide advertising and production services including finding investments for other film projects," Fung says.

Having his own company means more say in quality control for the films he produces: "Daniel and I want to try different things, something edgier. We see the market is ready for this. It's more efficient when I have my own team. So it will all work out more smoothly."

He has chosen Beijing as his base. "You have a big enough market on the mainland that allows films like Tai Chi to be made. I'm able to live my dream, otherwise I wouldn't be able to realise my vision," he says.

Wherever he's based, however, he's not going to sacrifice quality for box-office success, Fung says. "Films like A Simple Life, though funded by Chinese investments, are still Hong Kong films by any definition. That film is very much in the Hong Kong style and is about the city's life.

"[Censors] on the mainland have been more tolerant on historical subject matter and fantasy tales. If you want to make a film that blurs the lines, or touches upon topics that are very sensitive, then you need to be prepared to not have support in the mainland market," the director says.

Working with a hefty budget (US$15 million for part one alone) and a veteran production team, Fung feels he's closer to achieving fame on an international scale.

"I see bigger opportunities than ever now because China is becoming the second biggest box office market behind North America. Obviously, investors will be more conscious of these growing Chinese influences. It's definitely positive for filmmakers in my generation."

The growing global recognition of Chinese cinema is still largely limited to the martial arts genre, however, and Fung says that situation won't change overnight.

"If you watch Hollywood, you want to see big blockbusters. You'd be shocked if they suddenly made a kung fu film starring only Caucasian actors. It's the same with Chinese cinema. If you make one romantic film hit, you might have your moment, like Jeremy Lin did in the NBA, but it doesn't mean you can change the perception just like that." (SCMP)

TimeOutHK: Tai Chi Zero


Angelababy in Shaoxing
Daniel Wu's 38th birthday - Sept. 30


Wednesday, September 12, 2012

9.12.2012 [Roast Pork Sliced From A Rusty Cleaver] (飲水思源)

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LATimes: Chinese pay for product placement in Hollywood movies

TimeOutHK: Karen Mok interview
My next big project is my first English album and it’s jazz. This has been my dream for as long as I can remember. Our take on this jazz album is to also retain our Chinese identity. So we have some Chinese elements in the album. I play the guzheng and we put that in as well. It’s a completely new sound we’re trying to create.

Karen Mok's micro film/advert for Cadillac shot on Route 66


Daniel Wu gets Tom Cruise-y for Cadillac





Posters for the recently opened (in August) Mainland horror film "Horrible Hotel"(?). The B-list cast includes Cecilia Cheung look-a-like, Gong Mi, and the pulchritudinous Zhao Ming, Anya, comic actors Li Jing and Dong Lifan. Hong Kong singer-actor and Wang Lee Hom clone, as well as Kelly Chen's brother, Victor Chen is the nominal hero.




Gong Mi, Victor Chen


Nightgown scene

Wet tee-shirt scene

Chinese Klansman?


Monday, March 26, 2012

3.26.2012 - News [Roast Pork Sliced From A Rusty Cleaver] (飲水思源)

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Variety: Studio complex puts China in the picture
Huairou Film Base hopes to lure Westerners
In a recent coup for Huairou, Keanu Reeves signed on to shoot "Man of Tai Chi," a $32 million contemporary chopsocky and tai chi actioner that will film here. The cast includes Tiger Chen and Karen Mok, with Reeves as a bad guy -- and martial arts choreography by Yuen Woo-ping ("The Matrix").

Local auds didn't flock to "City of Life and Death" in expected numbers, partially because Lu made the Japanese general in the war movie a real character.
Now the director wants his vision to appeal to auds in the booming China market as he gets ready to unveil "The Last Supper," a costume drama about two warring generals, toplining mainland-friendly stars Liu Ye, Daniel Wu and Taiwanese thesp Chang Chen.
FBA: Audience invited to all or nothing Supper
Qin Lan as Empress Lu in "The Last Supper", opening July 5th

Qin Lan

Liu Ye, Qin Lan, Daniel Wu, Chang Chen at recent Beijing press conference (Sina)
Daniel Wu

Liu Ye

Chang Chen (Sina-gallery)

Trailer for "The Last Supper"

Gong Li will play Empress Wu in "Tang Dynasty Mystic/Mystery Map"
Two versions of the film are in the pipeline, with Jacob Cheung Chi-Leung directing and Tony Ching Siu-Tung producing and filming to begin in July. An international US-China version hopes to get Danny Boyle to direct with an unnamed actress in the lead.


First stills from Guan Hu's black comedy "Design of Death"
A quack doctor (Simon Yam) performs an autopsy to determine whether the cause of a death is a murder or an accident. The setting is an ancient village in the mountains.
Simon Yam


Yu Nan atop a coffin

Huang Bo

Alec Su (Sina)

CF: China's First Banned Film Released after 60 Years
After its premier in 1951, the film was soon caught up in ideological disputes, which saw it pilloried as being pro-capitalist, a severe accusation in an era characterized by its black-and-white politics. However, Mao Zedong's criticism of the film, in which he labeled it as carrying a message detrimental to the principles of socialism, was perhaps the main reason behind the banning of the film.



Jackie Chan, Elaine Ng (Sina), 2

 
 

WaPo: Hong Kong selects new leader after tumultuous contest
After a boisterous but highly undemocratic contest featuring feuding tycoons, dark rumors of closet communism and a host of scandals over sex, gangsters and an illegal wine cellar, Hong Kong elites on Sunday selected a wealthy, China-backed populist as the new leader of this former British colony.
SCMP: Leung wins chief executive race
“We, Hong Kong people, have no rights to cast our votes, We come here just to voice our anger,”
"We already have no right to vote in the real election. Why should we be deprived of our rights even in a fake one?"

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Daniel Wu - November Issue Comfort Magazine [Roast Pork Sliced From A Rusty Cleaver] (飲水思源)

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This post was produced by Roast Pork Sliced From A Rusty Cleaver: http://yellowcranestower.blogspot.com










(Sina)

Thursday, August 25, 2011

The Last Supper - Press Conference

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Lu Chuan held a press conference for the almost completed The Last Supper. He revealed the actress playing a key role, Concubine Yu. The actress, He Du Juan, was deemed by the media as not very pretty. In addition, she was introduced as a 20 year-old actress but online searches revealed that she was born in 1987 and originally named Du Juan.


Director Lu Chuan

Daniel Wu

He Du Juan

Qin Lan, Liu Ye

Qin Lan
Chang Chen

Huo Siyan
Sha Yi

Li Qi
Nie Yuan

Gao Jie

Tao Zeru

He Du Juan




(Sina-gallery), 2