Being a HK film fan with more interest than money, and having bought little this year myself, I am wondering about this issue as well and would appreciate some suggestions.
Taijikid wrote: I was very surprised that nothing from the last year made the cut, given the effect of recency on film fan memories.
Bearserk wrote:...Checked out the list at LoveHKfilms and seems I have seen most of what they have listed there. A few surprises, mostly from movies which I didn't think was that great.
Finding CTHD so far up on the list is a bit disappointing, considering that I didn't like the movie at all. Not that big on wire fu and the soundtrack made it feel like a movie made in the west.
The opening with the orchestra just didn't sit that well with me.
I can be a bit difficult at times I much more prefer the good old Skinny Tiger and Fatty Dragon
...
Bearserk wrote:but sometimes I just need to get down and dirty with some well made trash
I checked out the list at LoveHKfilms and seems I have seen most of what they have listed there. A few surprises, mostly from movies which I didn't think was that great. Finding CTHD so far up on the list is a bit disappointing . . .
I was actually contemplating putting The Unbelievable on my to buy list here the other day, but I might have to reconsider that given that you didn't like it Brian. We do tend to have similar tastes when it comes to trash
I still wont go to the step of getting any more ME movies just as a precaution for my fragile mind
Masterofoneinchpunch wrote:Hee hee, Throw Down was one of my favorite films from the decade (all countries) .
Brian Thibodeau wrote:. . . and then sell it to me! That way, you'll have room for more trash.
Seriously, though, I often look forward to watching poorly-made Hong Kong trash more than I do sitting down with the latest blockbuster from Hollywood. With the latter, I know what to expect in terms of quality, performance, production value, etc., but with the former, it's always an adventure.
Brian Thibodeau wrote:THE UNBELIEVABLE is actually compulsively watchable in a Mondo, "is-this-s**t-for-real?" kind of way, but the slaughter of live animals, especially in the name of hillbilly religious traditions, is an automatic black eye (though I did finish the film). I have serious issues with that in any film and Hong Kong cinema certainly has had its share of such wanton cruelty in the name of entertainment over the years. It's more insidious here because the context is so obviously embellished by the filmmakers (in keeping with the spirit of the TV series), which makes one suspect that many of the real-life subjects were actually in on the game from the start. There are also scenes of people doing bizarre things to themselves in the film, but these scenes aren't as disturbing because they're only hurting themselves or making themselves look thoroughly deluded and pathetic. To each his own on that count, but harm or kill other living beings (humans or animals alike) for the sake of a "documentary" film crew that is obviously encouraging the behaviour—even editing around it to make it more suspenseful and "creepy"—and that's where a line must be drawn.
Brian Thibodeau wrote:Just be vigilant. They strike when you least expect it. Rather like Robert DeNiro's character in BRAZIL, you may one day find yourself trapped in a swirling tornado of looseleaf bible pages, and when the paper finally settles . . . you'll be gone!
Brian Thibodeau wrote:I was extremely disappointed that CRAZY SCUM: DICKY'S JOURNAL didn't make the list. Recount!
(If mankind someday begs for a true "Worst of the Decade" list of Hong Kong movies, I nominate Bearserk and myself to compile it. LoveHKfilm, like so many other web sites, pays almost no attention to the bottom of the barrel. They just don't know what they're missing! )
Bearserk wrote:Animal cruelty has never been a big hit with me either, cruelty to other people however consensual that is, can be a lot of fun.
ewaffle wrote:Regarding "The Unbelievable", this sentence from Paul Fox's review on lovehkfilm.com tells me all I need to know:
While film has typically approached this genre with a heavy dose of fiction (see Troublesome Night and similar variants), TV programs about real ghosts, hauntings, and supernatural phenomena have proven quite popular in Hong Kong.
(emphasis added)
There may be "real" ghosts but catching them on camera is a leap of faith I am unwilling to take.
Frankly, I have almost zero interest in shows that try to validate these ridiculous claims of the supernatural, there or here. They never prove anything! Except that the hosts can be "convinced" by the weakest evidence, and that home audiences like to be creeped out while presumably telling others around the water cooler the next day that they don't really believe in "that stuff"
ewaffle wrote:I said something like "Well, the main difference between real zombies and ones in Hong Kong movies..." but was interrupted by a co-worker who had been listening and who was concerned that when I said "real" zombies I meant that I believed that corporeal, re-animated coprses might exist.
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