Showing posts with label Wheat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wheat. Show all posts

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.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Tokyo: Wheat Cast

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Fan Bingbing








Wang Jiajia, Huang Jue

Huang Jue, Wang Jiajia, Fan Bingbing, He Ping


(Sina.com)

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Wheat in Shanghai, Storm Warriors in Shenzhen

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Fan Bingbing


Director He Ping


Wang Jiajia, Huang Jue

Du Jiayi (right)
CRI: "Wheat" Premieres in Shanghai (Sina.com) (Xinhuanet.com)

CRI: "Forever Enthralled" Bids for Oscar


Storm Warriors in Shenzhen


Ekin Cheng, Charlene Choi


Aaron Kwok, Tan Yan



Charlene Choi
in Shenzhen to promote Storm Warriors (Sina.com)




Sun Honglei and Kelly Lin meet the press in Chengdu
My Fair Gentleman (Sina.com)


Taipei Times - Short takes
Ichi
In feudal Japan, a blind musician with lethal sword skills (Haruka Ayase from Oppai Volleyball and Happy Flight) sets out to find her blind masseuse father, encountering the usual bandits and deadly political intrigue. This is an update of the famed series centering on the blind Zatoichi character, who could be this forlorn young woman’s father. Critics admired the film’s visuals and noted its retention of genre conventions rather than a modern reworking of theme and character, notwithstanding the female lead.

Naoko
Another manga-based film from Japan, this one turns to the curious sport of relay marathons and the relationships among the members of one team. Naoko (Juri Ueno) is a manager for the team, but her ability to deal with the best of its runners is compromised by memories of a fatal accident some years before. Of more interest than the manga-based, baseball-themed Rookies: Graduation, which opened last month, if only because marathons have better scenery.

The Little Finger and the Forbidden Body
A mannered Japanese incest potboiler from 2005, this is being promoted as an earlier feature starring Hiroyuki Ikeuchi (Ip Man). Ikeuchi gets it on — and on — with his sister, only to later block the memory of the experience. But his line of work in a red light district doesn’t let his repressed past stay buried. Actor-director Kei Horie seems to have a thing for grim subject matter. Also known in English as Finger and Body and The Whole Body and the Little Finger — the mind boggles. The Baixue theater in Ximending is the best possible place for a movie like this.




Tuesday, September 22, 2009

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Storm Warriors

Charlene Choi


Ekin Cheng



My Fair Gentlemen - Beijing Premiere


Sun Honglei, Kelly Lin

Making mooncakes - Sun Honglei, Kelly Lin








Director Lee Gui-Yuen, Yuan Xinyu, John Woo, Kelly Lin, Sun Honglei


Fan Bingbing - Beijing, Wheat premiere




Huang Jue


Director Ho Ping



Tsai Ming-liang, known for his highly experimental style, said Tuesday that art movies are shrinking for one reason: the box office drives the movie industry.