im anticipating the grandmasters by wong kar wai, you can do what you like

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its possible that this movie will never get made bc lol this is wong kar wai but apparently this video has something to do with it

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OnlUQjUn-8o

also it stars noted dreamboat Tony Leung and its about bruce lee's mentor and is set in the '50s and will prolly feature slow motion smoke exhalation at some point

plax (ico), Monday, 3 January 2011 17:39 (thirteen years ago) link

I thought Ip Man was about Bruce Lee's mentor?

Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Monday, 3 January 2011 18:00 (thirteen years ago) link

Apparently this is about the same guy. Very weird.

Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Monday, 3 January 2011 18:02 (thirteen years ago) link

will there be voiceovers???

dayo, Tuesday, 4 January 2011 00:25 (thirteen years ago) link

maybe!!!

plax (ico), Wednesday, 5 January 2011 01:17 (thirteen years ago) link

With martial arts getting more popular in the Thirties, more people seek to learn them via the professionals at Foshan in Southern China. Some of the experienced masters like to challenge their counterparts and undergoing battles. To have their whole concentration, it is their practice to lock up the venues and no one is allowed to leave during battles. No food and no rest before reaching any results.
Ip Man is a young rich man extremely talented in martial arts, but he chooses to keep a low profile. Yet this doesn't keep him out of these troubles ahead. One day he is trapped in this battleground so he has to use every means in order to get out of there. The masters are amazed by his abilities. Master Kung and his daughter Kung Yi are amongst, and the latter is attracted to this newcomer.
A high warlord is assassinated by his own guard Yi Xian Tian. All masters in Foshan vow to take Tian down no matter what....

plax (ico), Wednesday, 5 January 2011 01:18 (thirteen years ago) link

one year passes...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Ngxn9NzLzs

乒乓, Monday, 5 November 2012 17:40 (eleven years ago) link

looks like trash targeted at mainland yuan unfortunately :`(

乒乓, Monday, 5 November 2012 17:41 (eleven years ago) link

what is this matrixy bullshit

absurdly pro-D (schlump), Thursday, 8 November 2012 20:13 (eleven years ago) link

i have this romantic image of wong keeping his actors on set while he writes new dialogue and considers ways in which the wordless reality of human connection can be made manifest in montage, & now he has turned his meticulous attention to considering how many ways the ripples of thuddering violence can be shown in the dramatic shuddering of surrounding objects

absurdly pro-D (schlump), Thursday, 8 November 2012 20:14 (eleven years ago) link

yeah I think he's cashing in

乒乓, Friday, 9 November 2012 17:48 (eleven years ago) link

some guy on the criterion board talking about how since the trailer just consists of stuff from two action scenes, the rest of the movie must have been too boring to include. so maybe it's long & boring, there's still hope. i can't imagine how it would have taken so long if it was just thrusty masculine fights.

absurdly pro-D (schlump), Friday, 16 November 2012 20:42 (eleven years ago) link

heh I've resigned myself to thinking that some mainland studio boss showed up at WKW's house with a dumptruck full of 100 yuan bills - this still looks like it might be fun in a 'traditional' sense, clearly it's not gonna be an ashes of time type deconstruction of the genre but w/e

here's a trailer w/ subtitles for you gwailo

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKWXnNfAXfM

乒乓, Thursday, 22 November 2012 15:45 (eleven years ago) link

trailers should have a limit cap of 45 seconds.

Van Horn Street, Thursday, 22 November 2012 15:48 (eleven years ago) link

also they should have to exceed hitting the same repeated 1 note

absurdly pro-D (schlump), Thursday, 22 November 2012 17:44 (eleven years ago) link

four weeks pass...

http://i.imgur.com/qHErl.jpg

'i guess'

乒乓, Thursday, 20 December 2012 02:32 (eleven years ago) link

three weeks pass...

friend in hk saw this and says its his best since ITMFL!!

乒乓, Saturday, 12 January 2013 19:02 (eleven years ago) link

crossing my fingers. your friend better not be winding me up!

mh, Saturday, 12 January 2013 19:04 (eleven years ago) link

WKW without Christopher Doyle shooting for him is still kind of a depressing thought

mh, Saturday, 12 January 2013 19:07 (eleven years ago) link

Well or without Mark Lee Ping Bin, but yes Le Sourd's back catalogue is hardly tempting - Will Smith's Seven Pounds is his career highlight.

Jedmond, Sunday, 13 January 2013 00:18 (eleven years ago) link

its his best since ITMFL!!

but everything since ITMFL has been terrible. so this less terrible thing could be anything, really.

jed_, Sunday, 13 January 2013 00:51 (eleven years ago) link

2046 wasn't bad

乒乓, Sunday, 13 January 2013 01:01 (eleven years ago) link

2046 was boss

things that are jokes pretty much (Nilmar Honorato da Silva), Sunday, 13 January 2013 01:06 (eleven years ago) link

WKW without Christopher Doyle shooting for him is still kind of a depressing thought

― mh, Saturday, 12 January 2013 19:07 (Yesterday)

misread this as WKIW, he does a lot of that iirc

things that are jokes pretty much (Nilmar Honorato da Silva), Sunday, 13 January 2013 01:06 (eleven years ago) link

2046 was terrible.

jed_, Sunday, 13 January 2013 01:51 (eleven years ago) link

On zing this thread is titled "I'm anticipating the grandma.."

mh, Sunday, 13 January 2013 02:01 (eleven years ago) link

how is telling someone a terrible movie was terrible a zing?

if wkw ever makes another not-bad film i'll be amazed

jed_, Sunday, 13 January 2013 02:05 (eleven years ago) link

zing is the iphone ilx client

things that are jokes pretty much (Nilmar Honorato da Silva), Sunday, 13 January 2013 02:16 (eleven years ago) link

im sure he will make not bad films when he has only really made one bad film

things that are jokes pretty much (Nilmar Honorato da Silva), Sunday, 13 January 2013 02:16 (eleven years ago) link

yeah, that was an observation and not a response to anyone

mh, Sunday, 13 January 2013 02:17 (eleven years ago) link

still haven't seen my blueberry nights out of intense fear

乒乓, Sunday, 13 January 2013 02:20 (eleven years ago) link

it's the kind of film that can make you revisit an artists work and think wtf? these are terrible as well, what was i thinking liking, indeed LOVING, this four years ago,

jed_, Sunday, 13 January 2013 02:27 (eleven years ago) link

if you think 2046 or MBN were bad, I have a bunch of year-end 2012 films to send you.

saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 13 January 2013 02:28 (eleven years ago) link

worse than MBN is off my radar.

jed_, Sunday, 13 January 2013 02:30 (eleven years ago) link

not that i watched the whole thing.

jed_, Sunday, 13 January 2013 02:31 (eleven years ago) link

I think jed_ just out-morbsed morns

mh, Sunday, 13 January 2013 02:31 (eleven years ago) link

*morbs

mh, Sunday, 13 January 2013 02:31 (eleven years ago) link

to bring everybody together here is a statue of zhang ziyi of 2046

http://i.imgur.com/XWZlm.jpg

乒乓, Sunday, 13 January 2013 02:33 (eleven years ago) link

2046 >> ITMFL

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 13 January 2013 03:18 (eleven years ago) link

but I haven't seen either since 2006 so

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 13 January 2013 03:18 (eleven years ago) link

2046 is just flawed, mainly rhythmically, iirc. a lot of the tony leung strands that intermingle with ITMFL are great, & weirdly all the futuro-transport stuff bleeds into the end of days of being wild, in my head (perfidia possibly creating synaptic connections, here). psyched by the idea that this movie's even okay, tbh i'm just gonna settle for expecting some schlocky kung-fu flick but w tony leung, this seems like an okay way to spend a couple hours

hou's martial arts flick's just going into production too, i am mainly psyched for the madness

kristof-profiting-from-a-childs-illiteracy.html (schlump), Sunday, 13 January 2013 03:18 (eleven years ago) link

alfred c'mon don't make me wanna talk shit about 2046 by framing it like that. you actively dislike ITMFL or ?

kristof-profiting-from-a-childs-illiteracy.html (schlump), Sunday, 13 January 2013 03:20 (eleven years ago) link

no! I just preferred 2046. I love Bryan Ferry -- no way I could hate ITMFL.

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 13 January 2013 03:25 (eleven years ago) link

A clever tip of the hat to Ferry in choosing his cover as the theme song; the movie generally has the vibe and pace of a late eighties/early nineties Ferry solo record.

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 13 January 2013 03:25 (eleven years ago) link

Actually the most depressing thing Wong's done recently is Ashes of Time: Redux, every single change shows Wong misunderstanding his strengths. Because DNRing it to hell will not allow the glossy CGI blood to fit in better. And don't get me started on removing the opening fight.

Jedmond, Sunday, 13 January 2013 03:30 (eleven years ago) link

neither versh particularly satisfying imo (though purely on aesthetics it's like maybe the prettiest film i've ever seen?), redux preferable in my head cause when i saw it a drunk christopher doyle jumped onstage after the movie & wrestled the mic from a guy talking about the film

kristof-profiting-from-a-childs-illiteracy.html (schlump), Sunday, 13 January 2013 03:45 (eleven years ago) link

don't have the ferry familiarly to catch yr analogy, btw alfred, but ty for clarifying. really my main memory of 2046 is feeling like it arhythmically, repeatedly ends like four times, so it'a hard to think of it as a single, clean thing to admire, but it's pretty good to watch.

MBN is obviously, jude-lawishly bad in parts but is not nearly as repulsive as suggested itt, fwiw

kristof-profiting-from-a-childs-illiteracy.html (schlump), Sunday, 13 January 2013 03:49 (eleven years ago) link

I know it's dreadfully cliche in every way imaginable but I love Chungking Express. One of my favorite films.

mh, Sunday, 13 January 2013 04:13 (eleven years ago) link

Well if Doyle jumped out and tackled me everytime I watched my copy of Redux....

Jedmond, Sunday, 13 January 2013 04:19 (eleven years ago) link

I think ITMFL is a close to perfect movie and I love and admire it. 2046 is not perfect at all, it's ragged and too long, but I think it's the more interesting of the two movies. It's Godfather pt. II.

something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 13 January 2013 04:28 (eleven years ago) link

I don't know, will probably have to wait for the deluxe blu-ray or whatever. But the intertitles are entertaining in their own way, since they mostly illustrate the ridiculousness of imposing too much structure on WKW. It's like, long dreamy inconclusive sequence, followed by "And then Japan invaded."

something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Monday, 2 September 2013 04:28 (ten years ago) link

morbius it's all over the torrent sites, don't complain about technological incompetence

i didn't like this much at all. i thought wong's customary blurred/languid/just generally hyper-stylized camerawork and editing kind of took all the energy and concreteness out of the action stuff which is really the genre's raison d'etre.

i kind of feel like the fire's gone out in him.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Monday, 2 September 2013 04:48 (ten years ago) link

Really? I though the action scenes were great. They made me think about how much of his approach is about watching bodies in motion. He aestheticizes human beings.

something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Monday, 2 September 2013 12:41 (ten years ago) link

(granted, this isn't really a Kung Fu movie, any more than any of his genre films are really genre films.)

something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Monday, 2 September 2013 12:43 (ten years ago) link

yeah the fight scenes were fantastic

乒乓, Monday, 2 September 2013 12:44 (ten years ago) link

tipsy you sort of wrote what i had been thinking about this movie - i think i've lost all possible critical distance from WKW so what he makes, i watch, and i love.

乒乓, Monday, 2 September 2013 12:45 (ten years ago) link

he's like wes anderson in that way except he still has a decent hit rate

乒乓, Monday, 2 September 2013 12:45 (ten years ago) link

i don't think i ended up watching the american version, though that's out in theaters now. i enjoyed that this wasn't a kung-fu flick by the rules, that the fire stoking the engine had seemed to go out by the last half hour.

乒乓, Monday, 2 September 2013 12:47 (ten years ago) link

2046 >> ITMFL

Give it up. This isn't happening.

midnight outdoor nude frolic up north goes south (Eric H.), Monday, 2 September 2013 12:49 (ten years ago) link

i like how the end strips away the romanticism from the genre - these transcendent, gong fu super luminaries are forced to retire to backwater hong kong, where they smoke opium and kick the asses of local street toughs for just a handful of hong kong pennies

乒乓, Monday, 2 September 2013 12:53 (ten years ago) link

trying to figure out what i thought of this.

was the plot intentionally fragmentary and elliptical in the typical WKW fashion or was that due to the cuts?

did like this as yet another story about an affair that never actually materializes.

ryan, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 00:39 (ten years ago) link

the domestic release was also confusing, believe me

乒乓, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 00:40 (ten years ago) link

ah ok then. looking forward to seeing that version.

i do think there were some possibly historical/allegorical levels to this that went right over my head. but there's something undeniably interesting about the fact that WKW basically bends the genre almost entirely to his will. zhang ziyi and tony leung remain eternally beautiful. i think in isolation from his other films this may have had a greater impact on me.

ryan, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 00:45 (ten years ago) link

it's a very lyrical film for sure

i'm trying to imagine what a wes anderson helmed kung fu movie would be like now

乒乓, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 00:55 (ten years ago) link

haha that is literally impossible to imagine.

i think WKW def belongs with Malick and Anderson (along with some of others surely) in a category of filmmakers who obsessively repurpose a very distinct style to create a body of work that almost creates its universe of signifiers that carry across individual films.

ryan, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 01:01 (ten years ago) link

yeah def - i tried to write a paper about that in college but decided to be a bum instead

乒乓, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 01:05 (ten years ago) link

i realised while i was watching this that when i am watching wkw movies i am always wishing they were other wkw movies. maybe it is an impatience to get to the end product that's circuitously delivered, or maybe the scene-long specifics don't seem as appealing as the kind of amalgamated sense memory of what you have already watched & processed & know & want. i liked this & thought it was interesting, & was pretty moved by it, having been kinda worried at first, the economy of its storytelling coming at the expense of the space that's common to his other films - the understanding of how suggestive a canvas tony leung can be seemed sidelined to exposition & montage, of ip man's happy family, shown kinda quickly & generically, or of what we heard of political shifts. i disagree w/tipsy, though, cause i think his genre films are genre films - this reminded me most of as tears go by, which i haven't seen for forever (& which i didn't like) but which i think managed to be clearly informed by the tropes & styles he was working with & not like ... a commentary on that, not an exploded version of them (the way that say jarmusch's dead man isn't & is a western). like i felt an absence of knowledge of the genre that might have improved my understanding of this but i also think it was pretty tightly in the genre - there was a voice in my head halfway through that was saying wait so nobody even landed a punch on h-, quieted by remembering it's a kung-fu film, in that tradition, that storytelling mode, that distance from realism. but it progressed really interestingly, i think, maybe in moving toward zhang ziyi, all her lines so good & that coming closer to the less purposeful territory of in the mood for love, or whatever, where conversations are genuinely conversational & are allowed to circle or be funny or build character not narrative. it was interesting how diffuse it was. i would like a longer cut. i felt like it didn't earn the button motif. i didn't realise how i'd missed tony leung's voice, the calm, clipped narration of leveled emotional terrain. i didn't think that the kinda generic visual motifs of wkw really worked in this - reflective water, cigarette smoke, & think he has lost something (not even necessarily christopher doyle, which would be the obvious explanation) - the close ups of zhang & leung felt less thoughtful, less open, the specificity & clutter of wong's previous renderings of hong kong kind of a damning comparison, what he would make of actual texture & physical spaces rather than kinda classical, well adorned settings. train stations, train windows. i remember hearing nick james talk about how he thought yi yi & in the mood for love were kinda the last of the classical cinematic epics, which had that vantage point and operated in that register, this assumed & delivered graceful tone & frame, & that that film wasn't made anymore, or wouldn't be what it was anymore. & seeing this projected digitally felt genuinely jarring, to me, the softness of the celluloid gold gradients of his films still visible to me absent, the plasticity of the new image unbelievable, inappropriate. i liked this, anyway, i wonder what he has an appetite for next. i wonder how hou's martial arts movie will be (kinda felt puppetmaster vibes from this, too).

szarkasm (schlump), Wednesday, 4 September 2013 02:50 (ten years ago) link

He does work genres from the inside and not the outside, he's not deconstructing or critiquing or whatever. But the genre motifs are always just his way into a Wong Kar-Wai movie -- which is the real genre he's always working in.

something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 4 September 2013 03:03 (ten years ago) link

yeah sure - was maybe speaking past you, there, sorry! I did find it simultaneously engrossing & strange to be back in the territory of lovesick tony leung (in a suit! in 50s HK! like when will someone re-edit the diffuse sections of various wkw films into a new miniseries?) having circuitously climbed through the action to get there.

szarkasm (schlump), Wednesday, 4 September 2013 03:15 (ten years ago) link

ha yeah like 2/3 of the way through when i thought "oh yes this is definitely a wong kar wai movie" now.

ryan, Wednesday, 4 September 2013 05:13 (ten years ago) link

I'm super excited about this movie! I still have many WKW films to watch, mostly his early ones but I like not seeing them yet.

JacobSanders, Wednesday, 4 September 2013 05:33 (ten years ago) link

i watched this again. it's mesmerizing on a purely textural level (like most WKW) but the shift to rueful melodrama for the last reel left no impact on me at all. and what is up with the montage sequence after the end title credit that shows you fragments of scenes that were presumably cut from this version?

i'll have to see chinese cut to judge really but I'm not sure if WKW really knew what kind of movie he wanted to make? but yeah I liked some of the fight scenes better the 2nd time around.

esp. liked the one with the elder grandmaster (zhang ziyi's dad) where after basically circling around each other the elder just realizes without even fighting per se that he has met his match. it's like two chess opponents who don't even need to play the full game; after a few moves they can foresee every subsequent move up to and including the checkmate.

still this wasn't a patch on chungking express or days of being wild or even ashes of time. miss the vibrant colors and manic mood swings.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Wednesday, 4 September 2013 05:51 (ten years ago) link

all the same it was a good experience to go to a multiplex and see something that was really :cinema:, you know. for all its many faults, the images at least gave my brain a lot to chew on.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Wednesday, 4 September 2013 05:52 (ten years ago) link

this movie strikes me as the kind of biopic you see after you've seen the other 85 biopics on the same guy ( even though it's really about two people not one as the american title would suggest). the weinstein cut takes pains to "place" each sequence historically/geographically and i understand why they did that, but chinese audiences have seen (just in the last 2-3 years!!) like three or four more conventional biopics of ip man (not to mention a huge back catalog of books, movies, comics, etc.) and so you could argue wong doesn't really need to "tell the story" in a conventional sense.

that said, i would love to read a book by a good historian on the chinese martial arts and how they functioned in society over the last millenium or whatever. all the movie versions are, like westerns in american cinema, kind of just embellishments on, comments on, revisions of, etc. other imaginings which are all more or less overtly mythologizing. and i love them. but although martial artists have an enormous place in the chinese cultural imaginary, just practically speaking they can't have been all that essential in an age of mass-manufactured munitions. that's assuming that the fighting aspect is most salient, which a lot of films, etc. would have you believe is wrong. (the grandmasters fitfully tries to suggest the more abstract intellectual content but as with most such depictions it's really just a few quotables rather than a sense of a real philosophy).

supposedly hou hsiao-hsien is working on a wu xia and i can't imagine that one--if it ever finishes, last i heard he had run out of money--will be in the standard mythological mode.

blah blah blah.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Wednesday, 4 September 2013 06:00 (ten years ago) link

Watched the Chinese original cut and was surprised at how straightforward and action-filled it was, but I really liked what WKW did with it. In a way it's a simple film, and the passing of traditions theme is conveyed well and concisely enough even at 2hrs+ with beautiful fight scenes inbetween. Leung and Zhang under WKW's lens and especially the latter with a character to chew on makes this an instant success, but otherwise as well I felt it was a complete work, not a half-finished something or an over-ambitious mess. Very solid stuff.

abcfsk, Wednesday, 4 September 2013 14:32 (ten years ago) link

you might say the narrative is too simple as i wasn't drawn into it a la chungking express, days of being wild...

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Thursday, 5 September 2013 02:56 (ten years ago) link

no, sure, & I think that's true of the film more broadly, too; I think that the linearity, the lack of clutter or specificity or unnecessary detail, is some of what made this minor, for me. I feel like perhaps for Wong this was an attempt at a bolder, almost austere, more refined & elemental style; compare the close-ups of Zhang, say, dedicated entirely to the balance of focus across the contours of her face, with the drawing of Maggie Cheung in ITMFL, accessorised with costume, colour, contrast, locale, &c. I think there is cinematic math, & precedent, for this working, for bolder image-making, & I feel like perhaps the idea of portraying a train station through just steam, light & an everlasting passing train felt like a distillation of its essence. but I think - & I can't separate this from seeing it protected digitally, the memory & associations & romantic history of film - that it didn't work, here, or maybe just disappointed an audience accustomed to such textural richness. I am pretty sure I could walk into a fabric store & match the materials from which Tony Leung's suits in previous WKW films were made, could gauge their likeness from their absorption or reflection of light, so evocative was their rendering. & this, in narrative, too, felt like it denied some of that connection, or familiarity.

szarkasm (schlump), Thursday, 5 September 2013 04:28 (ten years ago) link

my understanding is that the american cut was simplified narratively xp

but the chinese cut wasn't that hard to follow either, which i was fine with.

乒乓, Thursday, 5 September 2013 11:17 (ten years ago) link

yeah weirdly a bunch of reviews of both versions complained about it being incomprehensible but I found that to be far from the case and I'm the sort of guy who gets confused by narratives

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Thursday, 5 September 2013 13:23 (ten years ago) link

i mean i can see how WKW probably left a lot of connective tissue out, but it's not very hard to fill it in yourself

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Thursday, 5 September 2013 13:23 (ten years ago) link

the contours of the narrative are roughly visible by virtue of simply being a historical story

乒乓, Thursday, 5 September 2013 13:57 (ten years ago) link

i mean i can see how WKW probably left a lot of connective tissue out, but it's not very hard to fill it in yourself

this is true, but it's only really possible after the fact. so (for me anyway) i didn't often understand what i was seeing as i was seeing it. but i think that sorta thing is almost common in WKW, at least the post-ITMFL movies.

ryan, Thursday, 5 September 2013 14:11 (ten years ago) link

yeah the rhythm of a WKW movie is sensuous, non-narrative vignettes capped by wistful Tony Leung reminiscences, its like its own tense form

szarkasm (schlump), Thursday, 5 September 2013 14:25 (ten years ago) link

the flip from utter incomprehensibility to complete comprehensibility between the first and second viewing of a wkw movie is almost like black magic

乒乓, Thursday, 5 September 2013 14:27 (ten years ago) link

yeah, that's kind of true.

although the 2nd half of the grandmasters seems immediately legible to me, it's the earlier stuff that might be a bit challenging at first viewing.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Thursday, 5 September 2013 23:10 (ten years ago) link

talking about the american release btw. maybe i'll watch the chinese one this weekend.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Thursday, 5 September 2013 23:10 (ten years ago) link

i've seen the 130 minute cut and the weinstein cut. the weinstein version makes two major changes - some horrible concessions to american ignorance (in the form of overly literal title cards & narration and the like), and it messes with the structure of the movie to make it more melodramatic. the depiction of Yip Man's relationship with his wife suffers a lot for this - in the 130 minute cut it's treated in that achingly delicate WKW way, but in the american theatrical version a lot of nuance is missing. weinstein's version attempts to build suspense about the fight between Gong Yutian and Yip Man, but in the 130 min cut there are multiple scenes making it clear that Gong Yutian not only expects to lose, he wants to so that he can pass the torch. in the 130 min version the Gong Er scenes set during the war are presented chronologically, whereas in the weinstein cut they take the form of a melodramatic revelation in the final act. in the chinese version Yip Man's scenes with her in Hong Kong are mostly about kung fu and his interest in learning and passing on her family's martial legacy; the weinstein version makes it seem more like he's pursuing a long lost love. and there's a bunch of other, smaller things missing, like a very ITMFL shot of Gong Er whispering into a hole in a wall just before she vows never to marry. (there's a few things added, too, to be fair.)

you know what though? it's an impressive film in either form. i love how seriously it takes kung fu, that it's as willing to end a fight with a broken cookie or a disarming tony leung smile as it is a brutal asskicking. i love that it's really Gong Er's movie, and that the central tragedy of the film is of her potential being strangled and killed by Confucian strictures. (zhang ziyi has the movie's two most powerful moments imo) i even loved the fights and how they were shot, and i'm normally pretty rigid about how i like my fight scenes. i thought the emphasis on foot movement, objects shaken by impact, and kung fu moves that use someones momentum against them was really great and beautiful at times. this film really stuck with me... it's got a lot going for it.

i wanna be a gabbneb baby (Hungry4Ass), Monday, 16 September 2013 12:00 (ten years ago) link

i love that it's really Gong Er's movie

That's a good point. I'm not sure it's completely true -- tho I haven't seen the long version -- but it could or should be true. She's definitely the most interesting character, and she also has the best fight scenes.

something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Monday, 16 September 2013 12:39 (ten years ago) link

three months pass...

Finally saw this (American cut) and pretty much loved it. It's not up there with 2046, but what is, really? Still, it's gorgeous and melancholy, and I loved the fight scenes.

i love that it's really Gong Er's movie, and that the central tragedy of the film is of her potential being strangled and killed by Confucian strictures.

Yes! It's really about kung fu as an art form and the importance of preserving the knowledge of the past, and Gong Er embodies that through failure: missed opportunities, lost knowledge, regret, regret, regret...

Cherish, Friday, 20 December 2013 18:43 (ten years ago) link

two months pass...

http://blogs.wsj.com/chinarealtime/2014/02/27/william-chang-on-the-art-of-movie-design-2/?mod=WSJBlog

Unghngnhngng I wnat this guy's job

, Thursday, 27 February 2014 14:21 (ten years ago) link

nine months pass...

saw the grandmaster last night, seeing it with a saturday night movie crowd was probably a bad idea. but not sure anything would have helped make it any better. you can tell its had harvey weinstein make cuts to it, as its insultingly littered with intertitle screens, which should make it easier to follow, but instead just make the film feel dumber. but then i dont know if the longer cut of this would have been much better either. wong kar wai is becoming a parody of himself really. his style is so mannered on this, its almost like someone doing an imprersonation of his style after watching in the mood for love. far too many slo-mo shots, for no real reason, odd camera placing, which makes no real sense, and looks like a real mess. it has one truly affecting scene at the end, between zhang yiyi and tony leung in terms of something that is very WKW, and a few decent fight scenes, but mostly, its just a mess of a movie. poetic in places, but a fallure as a biopic, a failure as a romance, and worst of all for a film called the grandmaster, just not that memorable as a martial arts movie. in WKWs defence, it made me really hate harvey weinstein. if WKW is to make any more films, he should probably do away with his now very affected style, and just go back to basics (ie no more closeups of raindrops when you actually want to see fighting). he should go anti-style. because this is just silly. and why does tony leung have that hat on so often?

StillAdvance, Sunday, 7 December 2014 09:27 (nine years ago) link

also, for an ipman film, its just stupid that the first intertitle screen in the epilogue is about gong er. and some of the dialogue is just silly (and im someone who genuinely likes the philosophy that you get in martial arts movies).

harvey weinstein should never be allowed to buy any asian films again.

StillAdvance, Sunday, 7 December 2014 09:31 (nine years ago) link

I could never see this film with its so-called 'cuts'.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 7 December 2014 09:39 (nine years ago) link

I've remembered many of the fights throughout the year since I saw it, so I'd say the fights are memorable. Also, this is a wkw-film first and foremost, that it fails at being something else is not that important. Now I really want to rewatch it :)

Frederik B, Sunday, 7 December 2014 13:54 (nine years ago) link

theyre memorable, sure, but not for anything other than their wkw-ness but why is that always seen as a good thing? i see it as not so much a directorial stamp, but a sign of limitations. this is kind of a problem i have with praising directors for their auteur-ness - critics like spotting the same things in their movies, and directors seemingly like to, or cant help but, give them the same things to spot again and again, leading to a rather ridiculous circle jerk.

StillAdvance, Sunday, 7 December 2014 14:11 (nine years ago) link

No, they're memorable because they are insanely beautiful. Which has a lot to do with their wkw-ness, but nothing to do with a circle-jerk. The train, the snow, the rain, the moment where Leung jumps over Yiyi. They're memorable. I couldn't care less that it isn't the kicks and punches that are particularly memorable.

Frederik B, Sunday, 7 December 2014 14:14 (nine years ago) link

youre not wrong in that they do have an aesthetic power, but i felt like i was watching a music video or some sort of tv commercial at times, there was something a little too slick about them. the editing was too quick, and the camera positioning meant you were constantly disoriented and not being sure where to look in a way that made me think more of a bourne-style hollywood actioner than something like crouching tiger or hero.

StillAdvance, Sunday, 7 December 2014 15:49 (nine years ago) link

eight years pass...

Which links to something he wrote about ASHES OF TIME REDUX: http://www.davidbordwell.net/blog/2008/12/18/ashes-to-ashes-redux/

Dose of Thunderwords (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 1 October 2023 12:59 (seven months ago) link


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