cal42 wrote:If I remember correctly, there's a good shop on the corner of Canal St and Bowery. If you stand outside it, I'm pretty sure you can see the Manhattan Bridge, so a quick look on Google maps tells you where it is. I've got a carrier bag from the shop somewhere, but of course because I'm looking for it, it's nowhere to be found . It was pretty comprehensive and quite reasonable, price-wise. I was a bit lagged when I visited, and was suffering from a poor diet of too much fast food when I went to New York, so my memory of the place is severely compromised. Actually, the flight was sheer hell, too. But I'm getting off the subject.
The place that REALLY impressed me was a place under the Empire State Building that was called "Empire DVD" or "Empire Video" or something. ALL of their stuff was highly suspect (I don't think they had a legit DVD in the entire building) but they seemed to have just about every hard to find film in existence. I bought King Hu's Raining in the Mountain, but there was a lot of difficult to get films there.
KMGor wrote:
The first place you're talking about is withing sight of the arch thing right? If so, that's the place I couldn't remember the name of - which might be Lai Ying, not sure. And yeah, last time I went there I bought like 15 movies.
KMGor wrote:Thanks for the tip on the Empire DVD place. Was it actually IN the Empire State building or just like next to it?
I don't personally like the thought of these "grey market" DVDs but the lure for the fan is quite strong.
cal42 wrote:Sounds like quite a haul . Is Dragon Gate Inn the original (King Hu) version? I liked that a lot!
Its really a shame 43rd Chamber is no longer around. I spent hours in that place. I heard a rumor supposedly the owner, Singh, had ties to the terrorists involved in 9/11 never found out if thats true or not.
j.crawford wrote:Its really a shame 43rd Chamber is no longer around. I spent hours in that place. I heard a rumor supposedly the owner, Singh, had ties to the terrorists involved in 9/11 never found out if thats true or not.
This is rubbish. Singh was a true gentleman, and a huge fan.
Those guys were the best bootleggers around during the pre-dvd times.
They had an awesome stack of original Shaw Bros. lobby cards that used to make me nuts.
The reason the shop is no longer there is because of the price of New York real estate. They couldn't make the rent, and that's the truth.
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