Showing posts with label Three Guns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Three Guns. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

11.18.2009 - News

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CRI: Classic Fantasy Film Storms back with Dazzling CG Effects
The sequel to 1998 fantasy/kung fu film 'The Storm Warriors' will hit cinemas across Asia on December 10.







Three Guns poster features English title of A Simple Noodle Story. The title is reminiscent of the popular internet parody of Chen Kaige's The Promise, The Bloody Case That Started With a Steamed Bun

Director Zhang Yimou will begin shooting a heart-wrenching romance set in China in the 1970s.
Adapted from a 2008 bestselling novel "Hawthorn Tree Forever", the story revolves around a great unfulfilled love in around 1975 between two "zhiqing," or young, educated urban people sent to the countryside for re-education during China's decade long "cultural revolution."
Zhang will embark on a Nanjing massacre-themed film following "Hawthorn Tree," the report said.



Leon Lai - Frozen


Leon Lai has begun work on Derek Kwok's Frozen. The storyline is unknown. (HunanTV) (Sina)


The demure 23-year-old actress revealed her tendencies to quarrel with Stephen during filming due to their differences in personality. Despite that, she expressed her utmost respect for the latter and shared that she is filled with awe and admiration for him.

Panda Express Premiere

Deng Jiajia


Jane Zhang sang the theme song


Liu Hua
Panda Express Premiere photos (Sina)


Three Guns MV featuring Xiao Shenyang






Charlene Choi attending a Christmas lighting ceremony at Times Square (Xinhua)



Gillian Chung


Gillian Chung celebrates 15th anniversary of Toughjeans brand

Thursday, November 12, 2009

11.12.2009 - News

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[Note to readers: News and Movie updates will be on a reduced frequency and less regular schedule going forward.  In other words, the site will be even less comprehensive than ever. Call it the Limited Edition! ]

CRI: Zhang Yimou Passes as Singer-Songwriter
The director of the Beijing Olympics opening ceremony has written a song called "I'm Just Fictional" ("Wo Zhi Shi Ge Chuan Shuo") for the soundtrack of his new movie, "Amazing Tales: Three Guns".

CRI: Director Jiang Wen's Special Letters
Director Jiang Wen revealed his secret to pool over two of China's most in-demand leading men - Chow Yun-fat and Ge You - in his upcoming film "Let the Bullets Fly."
The November issue of the newly-launched Chinese edition of the men's style magazine "GQ" highlights Chinese director/actor Jiang Wen and his new film "Let the Bullets Fly".

Shanghai's homegrown star comic Zhou Libo will make his silver screen debut in the upcoming sequel of 1990s classic comedy 'Flirting Scholar'.
Newlyweds Leon Lai and Gaile Lok will spend Christmas apart this year


Jacky Cheung


Anita Yuen


Filming for House of 72 Tenants has begun.



All's Well Ends Well 2010 - Sandra Ng, Louis Koo





New Treasure Hunter posters


Poker King opens in Mainland Nov.27



Friday, October 30, 2009

True Legend, Three Guns, Reviews

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Andy On plays the villain possessed by the devil





Guo Xiaodong first time doing martial arts - grades out an '80'


Michelle Yeoh plays a hermit in seclusion living in the mountain



Xiao Shenyang (Sina)

Zhang Yimou's Three Guns HD slide show (4) (Sina)
THR: 'Blood Simple' remake set for December


CRI: "Ip Man 2" Shifts Focus to Life

He Ping's Wheat accused of plagiarising The Robbers/Tang Dynasty Brothers. He Ping was chairman of the jury at the 2007 Shanghai International Film Festival when The Robbers was awarded as having the most market potential. He Ping and director Yang Peng had discussed the script, Bitter Bamboo Grove, at the time. (Sina)


Wang Kuirong in Wang Xiaoshuai's Mosaic tries to capture old Chongqing (Sina)


Hot pot scene with 100 extras

Wang Xueqi and Qin Hao also costar (ifeng) (Sina)

Jackie Chan: The Centurion
The action star celebrates his 100th film

It's been a long time between drinks for Singapore helmer Glen Goei, whose 1999 debut pic, "Forever Fever," a contagious local riff on "Saturday Night Fever," promised to expand the island republic's filmmaking horizons beyond local comedies and festival navel-gazers.

Though the least "Hong Kong" of the series -- with the usual local in-jokes and linguistic wordplay virtually absent -- this is the most marketable of the four to date, as well as a timely commentary on the onetime Brit colony's cultural relationship with the mainland.


Taipei Times: History repeats itself as farce
Yonfan’s overly self-conscious ‘Prince of Tears’ treats the White Terror period with a glib sentimentality that can best be described as political terror as soap opera

Taipei Times: City of Life and Death review
Imagining the unimaginable

Old Fish (千鈞一髮)
An unusual Chinese police drama, to say the least. A Harbin cop is forced — and able — to defuse a time bomb thanks to his engineering background, only to find that more and more explosives are being planted in the area, and his superiors want him to keep doing the dirty work. Is Dennis Hopper on the loose? Ma Guowei (馬國偉) plays “Old Fish,” the put-upon policeman, in an award-winning turn. Directed by Gao Qunshu (高群書), who co-directed The Message (風聲), which is currently on release.

Plastic City (蕩寇)
A Chinese crook (Anthony Wong, 黃秋生) and his cooler-than-cool adopted Japanese son struggle to keep their enterprise afloat in Sao Paulo, Brazil, when rivals and the authorities turn on them, including a Taiwanese entrepreneur. Critics said the fascinating idea behind the film and its visual distinctiveness were undercut by avoidable technical problems (dubbing, for starters) and a stereotypically art house divergence from coherent narrative — not to mention stylistic lapses that verge on the silly.

Vengeance (復仇)
Johnnie To (杜琪峰) is a Hong Kong director who has kept pumping out solid action flicks over the years. He probably doesn’t have as much international exposure as he should, but this film may help to change that. The lead actor is legendary French singer Johnny Hallyday, who arrives in Macau after his daughter is nearly killed in a triad hit (the rest of her family is wiped out). Hallyday, now a chef, must draw on his unsavory past to accomplish his vengeful mission — but that past is disappearing as an old injury accelerates his amnesia. Co-stars include the formidable Anthony Wong (黃秋生) as a criminal (again) and Simon Yam (任達華) as a triad boss.

Screen Daily: Far East festivals compete for market attention
US and European buyers were scarce at both events. “There were some US companies in Tokyo but they were looking for remake material, not doing acquisitions,” says Tadayuki Okubo of Japanese studio Toei.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

10.27.2009 - Movie News

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Director Billy Chung, Cherrie Ying (2nd left), Wang Zi (left) promote New Year's action film Wu Lin Xiao Zhuan (lit.Martial Arts Comedy).

Cherrie Ying
The film is a joint Mainland, Hong Kong, Taiwan venture. (Sina) (Xinhua)







Jaycee Chan


Zhao Wei

Mulan cast and crew become honorary citizens of Mulan's hometown Shangqiu, Henan Province. The crew also donated movie props to the city. (Sina)


The Robbers (lit.Tang Dynasty Brothers)
A martial arts comedy starring Hu Jun and Jiang Wu opens November 20 kicks off the New Year early. It has been positively received at the Shanghai and Pusan International Film Festivals. (Sina)


Radish Warrior successfully opened the weekend with $8.7M at the box office (Sina)


Love At Seventh Sight (lit.Seven Days To Fall in Love With You)
Alfred Cheung's romantic comedy opens Nov. 3 and features Mike He and Li Xiaolu (Sina)


The Message has surpassed $220M at that box office and the prequel is set to begin filming next summer. (Sina)


Chinese movie-makers keep faith with martial arts
The Chinese film industry is hoping a little more martial arts magic will woo international audiences over the next 12 months with two productions set to take familiar stories one step further.

First up comes the US$12 million (eight million euro) budgetedThe Storm Warriors, directed by Hong Kong-based twins Oxide and Danny Pang, and set to make its film industry premiere at next month's American Film Market (http://www.ifta-online.org/) as they try to sell it to the world.

The film is taken from the wildly successful Hong Kong comic series Fung Wan (Wind and Cloud), by Ma Wing-shing, which also inspired the Andrew Lau-directed The Stormriders (1998).

That film starred Asian idols Aaron Kwok and Ekin Cheng, and raked in HK$42 million (3.6 million euros) from the local box office that year. It still ranks as Hong Kong cinema's 12th all-time top earner.

The Pangs -- who built an international reputation thanks to the success of horror film such as The Eye (2002) -- say they have tried to reinvent the martial arts genre with their production, reuniting Kwok and Cheng and mixing live action and cutting-edge computer generated imagery.

They also claim the story should stand on its own and not be thought of as a sequel, even thought it features the same characters.

The same line is being taken by the people behind the US$29 million (19 million euro) budgeted Shaolin Temple - which shares the same name as the 1982 film that launched the career of martial arts star Jet Li, and is obviously set around the same legendary martial arts school.

The film is set to star box office draws Jackie Chan, Andy Lau and Nicolas Tse -- alongside more than 1,000 monks from the temple.

The film starring Li took in 100 million yuan (9.7 million euros) in China and saw the Shaolin monks start to take their martial arts skills on international tours, a trend which continues today.

But director Benny Chan -- who made the award-winning New Police Story (2004) with Chan -- told Chinese media that while his production shares a number of things in common with Li's film, he plans to move the story of the monastery forward from the seventh century to the early 20th century.

Shaolin Temple will have its fight scenes choreographed by Hong Kong's Corey Yuen (Red Cliff, X-Men) and is set for an end-of-2010 release. (Independent.co.uk)[site flagged for trojan virus]

Friday, October 23, 2009

10.23.2009 - Movie News

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Miriam Yeung, Shawn Yue


Cheung Tat Ming, Shawn Yue
Shooting Pang Ho-Cheung's new film in Tsim Sha Tsui (Sina.com)


Huang Bo in Radish Warrior/Stubborn Radish

Dazzling pink for the men, and garish green for the women. Chinese director Zhang Yimou only wants gaudy costumes worn in his latest film "Amazing Tales: Three Guns"


Storm Warriors slide show (7) (Sina.com)


Gao Kao 1977 becomes Examination 1977, Exam 1977, for US, Turning Point 1977
TURNING POINT 1977 tells the sympathetic story of young people who struggle to determine their own futures.


Jiang Wenli has double cause for celebration.



Golden Rooster's Best Actress for And The Spring Comes and
PIFF's Audience Award for Lan in her directorial debut
(Sina.com)



The singer-actor produces, directs and acts the 20-episode Sci-Fi TV series, which is now in post production. (Props, Sina.com)

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

10.20.2009 - Movie News

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Producer Manfred Wong promotes Stubborn Radish aka Radish Warrior which opens later this month. (Sina.com)

The Message premiere in Taipei, Taiwan



Abu Dhabi - Maggie Q, Tian Zhuangzhuang, Joe Odagiri (The Warrior and The Wolf)

Vivian Chow
Vivian Chow was photographed in a gay bar preparing for her role in Ann Hui's 'Up and Down' 《上上下下》. Ann Hui arranged for Vivian to visit an lesbian bar establishment in Lan Kwai Fong and meet some gay women. Vivian is earning a reported seven figure fee for her role in the film costarring Sandra Ng. (Xinhua)
Vivian Hsu
Vivian Hsu has been cast in the lead of the new film from Cape No. 7 director Wei Te-Sheng, to be produced by John Woo. Vivian will be putting her multi-lingual skills to use as she will be speaking in Japanese. (Sina.com)

Anthony Wong
CRI: Vivid Tang Dynasty Shown in TV Drama

Ning Hao
Ning Hao's latest film 'No Man's Land' is in post-production. It will feature a new side of Huang Bo, who is having a busy year with Cow, Radish Warrior and Crazy Racer. (Sina.com)

Zhang Yimou's Three Guns is also in post-production and expected to be completed next month. The original story has changed and now is said to be three connected stories about paired couples and their quarrels. Staff have had to sign confidentiality agreements with $1M fines. Zhang Yimou has spent a great attention to the colors of the costumes discarding the originals and having them redone. Zhang is also busy working on his Turandot production at the Bird's Nest. (Sina.com)

CRI: 'True Legend' to Open during Chinese New Year
Yuen Woo-Ping's new film about 19th-century hero Su Qi-Er (Beggar So) will open in Chinese cinemas around mid-February in time for the Chinese Lunar New Year, the movie's producers announced on Monday.
Moviegoers will also be able to see a few scenes featuring the late Hollywood actor David Carradine, who was known for his role in the "Kill Bill" series. Director Yuen invited Carradine to work on his film after a pleasant collaboration in "Kill Bill" for which Yuen was the stunt advisor.