Masterofoneinchpunch wrote:I do not think that ENTER THE DRAGON is the most influential movie of all time (I think his argument is a bit ad absurdum; it certainly was not more influential than BREATHLESS; I'm not going to get into Griffith but I will state that INTOLERANCE is much better and was more popular in Europe and Russia than BIRTH OF A NATION), it certainly wasn't overly popular in Hong Kong (where FIST OF FURY and WAY OF THE DRAGON were more successful and FIST OF FURY is still mentioned by many critics -- number 16 in the HKFA top 103 list) and its biggest influence was here in the states.
I have to agree with you on the point about ENTER not being the most influential movie of all time. I cringe when critics/scholars undertake such a task because there are, frankly, too many definably influential movies out there to pick any
one as being the
most influential of them all. They all exerted an influence on what came after--either in cinema or in pop culture--and did so in their own way, and it can generally be agreed upon that they did so, but to find the one film that tops every other film ever made is a lofty goal, and the body of the article doesn't really reinforce the attribution so much as go into well-reasoned detail about the aspects of cinema and popular culture that this
particular film and its star
did change over the ensuing years.
I do not agree with: "This really demonstrates the ignorance of Western audiences or, rather, mainstream Western critics, regarding the development of Chinese cinema in the preceding decades."
Western critics were missing several pieces of the puzzle (the Wuxia film and other actioneers), they had been lauding Chen Kaige, Wong Kar-Wai, John Woo, Zhang Yimou and some even Hou Hsiao-hsien and Tsai Ming-liang. They have been dismissive of action content and comedy from HK (and certain auteurs like Ann Hui) ignoring Chang Cheh (even Woo was not content on praising him until later) while some were loving King Hu (but not all knew of him).
Not sure I'm reading you right on this one. It sounds like you
do agree with the writer's stance that western critics/audiences being ignorant of the bigger picture, though mostly critics, since they were and are
paid to be savvy about world cinema and in all likelihood were only missing pieces of the puzzle they selectively
chose to miss, either for lack of interest or lack of time. Hong Kong cinema was very accessible at the time of CROUCHING TIGER (the key film behind the writer's point above), and I remember being a bit frustrated at the time by at least a couple of critics who clearly had almost no knowledge of the cinema and culture that gave CROUCHING TIGER its raison d'etre. Then again, I was probably somewhere nearer the opposite end of the spectrum in that I was a rabid consumer of Hong Kong films and culture, which could have been equally annoying to readers of the paper I worked for at the time, and in which I reviewed the film.

On a side note: readers of Black Belt (I was during the early 90s) saw a huge change in the way they did articles etc... because of the UFC. They helped push the "death touch" type of mentality and slowly changed because of this (Bill Wallace anti-UFC articles are great though I have to transcribe some of those sometime).
It would be interesting to read that early resistance to the new form. Ain't that always the way? I'm not a big follower of UFC/MMA, though one of the talk radio stations here in Toronto has a late night MMA recap show that I (very) occasionally listen to on my way back home from visiting family out of town. I'm still pretty clueless, but I figure it doesn't hurt to pick up the terminology and/or learn about rules, styles and what not, especially when a filmmaker like Yen is so actively visiting the well. Watching the actual combat, however, kinda repulses me (show me a chainsaw massacre in a movie and I'm fine; show me a dude bleeding all over his head for real, and I get a bit queasy), but I can certainly understand how it has evolved away from the more artistic leanings of traditional martial arts. Especially when the combatants drop all pretense of "styles" and just start pummeling the s**t out of each other. Nasty.
