Logan never really went away, unfortunately, and because of that we must now contend with an endless parade of gushy and largely UNinformative commentary tracks on a new label. And now he's teamed up with Brett Ratner, the man who openly admitted in the commentary to RUSH HOUR that Jackie Chan needed a crummy script like that to break big in America. Sadly, he was right, and look at Chan's American projects since then - pale imitations of his Hong Kong work, and way too many co-starring and/or sidekick roles.
But I digress. Bey Logan is a master of deception in his tracks, making the listener THINK they're getting more information than they really are simply because of his authoritative tone and his proximity to the industry, where he's probably the only caucasian to go from fan-boy to publisher to Professional Friend of Donnie Yen® to unsuccessful screenwriter to Weinstein shill. As I've stated repeatedly, there are FAR MORE APPROPRIATE PEOPLE that should be doing commentaries for Hong Kong cinema classics. These films don't need one more "look who I'm pals with" track that offers about 35% enlightenment and 65% cheerleading, ESPECIALLY in unison with someone who's only there because he's the director of Jackie Chan's latest film and another fan boy.
Jackie Chan did once record a commentary for the American DVD release of one of his films. Forgive me if I can't remember it now, but I think it's the only one he did. Perhaps he knows his English skills are not strong enough to maintain a listener's interest for 90-plus minutes, but clearly SOMEONE was able to convince him to give it a try. The man if probably a fountain of memories and knowledge and would be fascinating to listen to in subtitled cantonese.
Barring that, I just don't understand why they don't treat these films with a little more respect and bring in more studied scholar/authors (Stephen Teo? Shu Kei?) to bolster the endless enthusiasm —and general LACK of accuracy, technical enlightenment and cultural revelations— foaming forth from the likes of Logan, Ratner (RATNER????) and the current crop of go-to guys for these sorts of things.
It's sad. Japanese films on DVD from smaller labels like Criterion and even Tokyo Shock get commentaries by original participants in the films themselves and/or respected scholars and authors like Donald Richie and so many others, and the information to be gleaned from these tracks enriches the experience of the film immensely. But when it comes to re-issuing classic pieces of Hong Kong cinema to the western masses, who do they inevitably turn to?
Bey Logan.
Bey Logan.
and Bey Logan.
And sometimes Ric Meyers. Who's arguably worse.
It's just not fair. To the films or the fans. There desperately needs to be a better variety of commentators on Hong Kong films.
Do Hong Kong filmmakers—and the long list of well-researched scribes who've written about them in the wake of Logan's Hong Kong Action Cinema book (which even I can admit was a key factor in repopularizing Hong Kong cinema in the west)—really consider their contributions to world cinema so disposable as to not want to record their thoughts on older films for posterity, so that films like POLICE STORY can be properly assigned a place in the pantheon of world classics instead of the realm of "cool" exploitation?
Or is it the view of American and British distributors that Hong Kong cinema, unlike Asia's other two dominant cinemas (Japanese and Korean), is of such reduced status that a track by Logan—which invariably repeats some of the more generic information from his previous tracks—is somehow considered enough to satisfy all and sundry who might pick it up? (and yes, I'm aware that a least A FEW of Logan's HK Legends DVD tracks involved actual HK talent involved with the films on display, but they were exceptions to the rule, which was usually solo Bey).
Logan's commentary on the Dragon Dynasty DVD of KILL ZONE (the laughable retitling of SPL) offered almost NO insight into the production of that film (and really suffered from the absence of Donnie Yen, who was scheduled to participate, and Wilson Yip, the director, whom the Weinstein fart-catchers apparently didn't try very hard to involve).
And now with the release of POLICE STORY, the addition of Ratner not only gives Logan yet another name to drop on future commentaries, but also adds some much needed "industry cred" to POLICE STORY.
Sigh.
Glenn Erickson's review at DVDtalk also hints at the pointlessness of the commentary track, as well as suggests —in the footnote—that the DVD may or may not be the original Hong Kong edition, although Erickson is admittedly no expert on Hong Kong cinema, so we may have to wait for further verification before deciding if the Weinsteins and their shineboys have done further disservice to another Hong Kong classic.
www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/read.php?ID=25649