2007: The Digital Scrounge

Discussions on Asian cinemas: Japanese, Korean, Thai, ....

Postby Brian Thibodeau » Tue Jun 19, 2007 2:33 am

Goodness, I haven't checked out Electric Shadows in ages. Thanks for the long overdue reminder. I do visit Kung Fu Cinema on occasion, but I'm not familiar with HK and Cult Film DVD. Got a link?

Colin Geddes, a programmer with the Toronto Film Fest with a serious Hong Kong jones and probably Canada's largest collection of Hong Kong film posters and memorabilia, has a cool blog here:
http://kungfufridays.blogspot.com/
He was posting here briefly, but I've long wondered if my comments about his friend Bey Logan might have put him off! :lol: (I'm dying to see some of the Taiwanese "Black movies" he talks about in a recent entry...)

Plus he also dug up this great little 1989 "Movie World" doc on HK movie dubbing hosted by Paul Fonoroff via Youtube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R4LkLmK1pjU
(be prepared to finally put faces to the English voices of Danny Lee and Chow Yun-fat in THE KILLER :lol: )

Which, of course, leads to all sorts of other goodies:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3AOR0PrLCEs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a54St67K5x8
http://www.youtube.com/profile_videos?user=snpro
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Postby Masterofoneinchpunch » Tue Jun 19, 2007 4:08 pm

Brian Thibodeau wrote:Goodness, I haven't checked out Electric Shadows in ages. Thanks for the long overdue reminder. I do visit Kung Fu Cinema on occasion, but I'm not familiar with HK and Cult Film DVD. Got a link?


Of course: http://hkfilmnews.blogspot.com/ (rss link is on the site). Here is an OOP (R1) site I like (though I only use the RSS feed): http://www.rareoopdvds.com/.

I got tired of going to pages over and over again which is why I enjoy using RSS so much :-) (I use Snarfer for my reader)

Thanks for the link (still want to hear other peoples RSS favorites :-D):

Regardings previous post Brian: what are your feelings on Edison Chen? I detected a bit of sarcasm :-D. He was decent in Infernal Affairs 2 (though Francis Ng was sublime). I haven't seen his earlier films before Infernal Affairs (like Gen-Y cops though haven't heard anything good :-)).
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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Tue Jun 19, 2007 7:24 pm

Of course: http://hkfilmnews.blogspot.com/ (rss link is on the site).


Oops. Guess I was familiar with that HK Film News site after all, just wasn't thinking of the real name when you posted about it! Haven't used the RSS feed yet for any websites, really, so I should look into that!


Regardings previous post Brian: what are your feelings on Edison Chen? I detected a bit of sarcasm :-D. He was decent in Infernal Affairs 2 (though Francis Ng was sublime). I haven't seen his earlier films before Infernal Affairs (like Gen-Y cops though haven't heard anything good :-)).


Chen has his supporters here who will no doubt offer good counterpoint, so I guess I can only say that my middle-of-the-road opinion of him is purely subjective. I just don't think he's an actor that can be ideally cast in a role, as in a producer saying "Let's get him for this. Absolutely NO ONE else can play it any better." That's not to say he doesn't have some talent (music career and spelling ability excepted, of course) and the obvious looks, but I've yet to see him in a role that I thought only he could have played, but I remain optimistic. Parts like the ones that Chen played in IA and DOG (probably his best to date) and even INITIAL D (heck, even inconsequential stuff like MOVING TARGETS could've allowed a more gifted actor to mark his territory and deliver something unforgettable. He's just bland and interchangeable, but blessed with savvier image handlers than many in his range who've come and gone since he arrived on the scene. Incidentally, his real-life "antics" have no impact on my opinions of his screen work. Many real-life dim-bulbs, even some with Chen's grasp of marketing (if it's even his) are fantastic actors. To me alone, though, Chen is not one of them. He's just okay. ;)
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Postby Mike Thomason » Wed Jun 20, 2007 12:37 am

Just swinging by to add...

Dracula Has Risen From The Grave (UK) (DVD)
Lethal Angels (Hong Kong) (DVD)*
The Revenge Of Frankenstein (UK) (DVD)

* apparently this time it's actually getting released!
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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Wed Jun 20, 2007 4:40 am

Young Master wrote:
JAMES WONG IN JAPAN & KOREA (1992; Universe; James Wong, Elsie Chan, Kathy Chow) Interesting role name for Mei Yim-Hung in the DB listing for this one!


I've been curious if this movie just have two movies edited together or something like that? Since it's official in the DB that it's got Stooges in Tokyo-footage it might just as well have The Wild Goose Chase-footage? (they are fooling around in Korea in that movie). Feels kinda logical :wink: Someone can confirm if that's the case please? :)



Finally watched this tonight. Pretty sad, and it's largely comprised of footage from the two films Young Master referenced above, linked by a cheap new James Wong "hosting" segment that looks like it was shot in someone's living room. Anyone know if it also contains footage from STOOGES IN HONG KONG, the slightly more upscale member of the family? I wouldn't be surprised. I'm kinda curious to know the original intent behind a movie like this. The two films it's constructed from were both released within the previous two years, so I can't imagine there was a public outcry for an upgrade. I suspect Young Master's alternate title, WHORING GUIDES TO KOREA & JAPAN (probably a more reasonable translation, as Wong's name doesn't actually appear in the Chinese title, only his character) might tell us exactly why this was thrown together. Although even "whoring" aficionados would have been ill-prepared had they used something like this as a guide.

Oh yeah, and the character description that so "shocked" Mr. Thomason and myself several posts back—"fingers-in-p**** stripper"—actually turns out to be correct :shock: Although the digits in question don't belong to the stripper, the role name might be worth cautiously re-describing, as Mei Yim-hung is not the only stripper in the film. Not that many people are actually following her career...:lol:



Can't remember if I posted these, but I received a package of VCDs on the weekend to complete (I think!) the Gordon Chan/Michael Wong NEW OPTION series, including

RUN AND SHOOT (AKA Kill In Central Restaurant)
PUPPET HON (AKA Undercover)
GOLD RUSH
THE FINAL SHOWDOWN


The DB counts 12 titles in the series, including the original Clarence Fok entry (but excluding Chan's original OPTION trilogy), but I've only ever been able to track down 10, even accounting for the rather pointless retitlings of some of these in various markets. The spine numbers on the nine Panorama VCDs that I now have (saw Fok's pilot ages ago, so it's tucked away somewhere) are all sequential, ending with, of course, THE FINAL SHOWDOWN (which is also the final film), and I'm almost certain that RUN AND SHOOT was the first direct sequel after Fok's film, so I suspect at least a couple of the DB entries may need to be merged at some point once I've had the—*shudder*—Michael Wong film festival and can sort out what's what. There's also a box-set of the series that amounts to only 10 films:
http://www.buyoyo.com/cgi-bin/ncommerce ... 1&curr=USD
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Postby Bearserk » Wed Jun 20, 2007 8:01 am

Brian Thibodeau wrote:Oh yeah, and the character description that so shocked Mr. Thomason and myself several posts back—"fingers-in-p**** stripper"—actually turns out to be correct :shock: Although the digits in question don't belong to the stripper, the role name might be worth cautiously re-describing, as Mei Yim-hung is not the only stripper in the film. Not that many people are actually following her career...:lol:


In my opinion the role name should stand as it is, it is after all the name of the character, and rewriting roles to suit someone else's taste or opinion is a wee bit much in my opinion to put it mildly. If everyone should run around changing role names because they feel offended or don't like the particular way something is written, we would have a problem on our hand.
I shudder at the thought of someone starting to change names because they might offend religious or political views should role names touch those.
Leave it as it is, she is after all a Cat.3 actor so no-one besides those who are after those movies will come across the role name.
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Postby Mike Thomason » Wed Jun 20, 2007 10:52 am

Brian Thibodeau wrote:Oh yeah, and the character description that so shocked Mr. Thomason and myself...


Shocked? Nah, not at all. It was just another opportunity for me to reel off another cheeky joke, that was all. Those kind of things don't faze me anymore, as I'm no longer an editor and they're not my concern... :P

Anyhoo, my next entertainment order will be:

Frankenstein Created Woman (Great Britain) (DVD)
Plague Of The Zombies (Great Britain) (DVD)
The Reptile (Great Britain) (DVD)
Scars Of Dracula (Great Britain) (DVD)
Wet Dreams 2 (South Korea) (DVD)

Yes, I'm having a big, fat binge on Hammer Films at the moment -- I missed the majority that I wanted to collect when they were released on DVD in Oz, but a healthy contingent of them have recently been re-released in brand, spanking new remastered (and for the most part, uncut) editions in the UK. As a lifelong fan of Hammer, I couldn't be happier!

Tallyho old chaps! :D
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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Wed Jun 20, 2007 5:04 pm

I shudder at the thought of someone starting to change names because they might offend religious or political views should role names touch those.


I see your point, and I'm all for leaving the vast majority of DB character descriptions alone, but in this case, I think the title was unnecessarily matter-of-fact, when something more literate would get the point across just as well. As it stands now, the description is not really enough to separate the actress from similar roles in the movie, and I'm certainly not all about bending over for a family-friendly demographic, but there are better alternatives to "fingers in p****" :) (p.s. I also edited my previous post to put "shocked" in quotations, as I now realize how literal it sounded the first time around! :lol:)


in brand, spanking new remastered (and for the most part, uncut) editions in the UK


Good to see those Hammers getting some love on home soil! Are some of them subject to cuts and the like? Hopefully at this late stage, there isn't much in them that could still offend! I've got a bunch of the old Anchor Bay Hammers and also the Warner Frankenstein/Dracula/Mummy releases (CURSE OF..., ...HAS RISEN, ...MUST BE DESTROYED, etc.), but I'd imagine these new U.K. editions are even better???

Last fall, I picked up a nice 8-film Hammer Box set from Universal, with some lesser known, but very, very cool films (Curse of the Werewolf, Paranoiac, Nightmare, Brides of Dracula, etc.). I was mainly after the early Oliver Reed stuff, but all the films were excellent, really. It's pretty cheap everywhere, and while some folks complained of "sticking" problems at a couple of forums, I can't say that my set gave me any troubles, but I think my trusted old cheap-o Malata player isn't very discriminating about what I put into it! :lol:
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Postby Masterofoneinchpunch » Wed Jun 20, 2007 8:10 pm

Brian Thibodeau wrote:Last fall, I picked up a nice 8-film Hammer Box set from Universal, with some lesser known, but very, very cool films (Curse of the Werewolf, Paranoiac, Nightmare, Brides of Dracula, etc.). I was mainly after the early Oliver Reed stuff, but all the films were excellent, really. It's pretty cheap everywhere, and while some folks complained of "sticking" problems at a couple of forums, I can't say that my set gave me any troubles, but I think my trusted old cheap-o Malata player isn't very discriminating about what I put into it! :lol:


Great set, I think my favorite of that was Night Creatures (I liked all of those films; I love the set designs that Hammer used). I'm a fan of Peter Cushing though. I had slight sticking problems with Evil of Frankenstein (lost about 10 seconds or so). What did you think of Paranoic?

better put something semi-relevant to this thread: (nice little old school link with Roy Horan: http://youtube.com/watch?v=grBIj9zY_mg
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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Wed Jun 20, 2007 9:57 pm

What did you think of Paranoic?


I thought PARANOIAC was excellent, but I'm a sucker for contemporary-set psycho-thrillers like that. Plus, Oliver Reed + Booze = Dynamite! There's a couple of scenes where he goes ballistic and/or a little batty and you just sit there in awe. It's the kind of role that I mentioned earlier, where a good actor can come in and literally own it right from the start, regardless of what's written in the script, whereas putting any number of Hammer's lower-tier leading men from the day into a role like that would likely mean we wouldn't even be talking about the film now. Reed definitely had that power, at least for another decade or so. Kind of reminded me of stuff like THE HAUNTING and VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED in it's creepy little black 'n white way.
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Postby Mike Thomason » Thu Jun 21, 2007 12:06 pm

Brian Thibodeau wrote:Good to see those Hammers getting some love on home soil! Are some of them subject to cuts and the like? Hopefully at this late stage, there isn't much in them that could still offend! I've got a bunch of the old Anchor Bay Hammers and also the Warner Frankenstein/Dracula/Mummy releases (CURSE OF..., ...HAS RISEN, ...MUST BE DESTROYED, etc.), but I'd imagine these new U.K. editions are even better???


I got the first three of my collection through today and, having had a quick scan of them on the PC, have to say that I'm pretty impressed with what Optimum have done with everything -- from the nifty "themed" packaging right down to the fresh transfers prepared by France's Studio Canal. Dracula, Prince Of Darkness now has an anamorphic AND uncut transfer available (plus the disc includes the "Many Faces of Christopher Lee" documentary). Fear In The Night and Demons of the Mind look like virtually brand new features! The BBFC cuts to Demons have been reinstated, so Optimum's version is identical to Anchor Bay's OOP edition now (the AB version was still the cut UK theatrical version).

I am, in fact, so impressed by these first few discs that I've decided that I'm going to put my Asian DVD purchasing plans aside for a few weeks and stock up on most, if not all, of Optimum's Hammer releases. :D
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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Sat Jun 23, 2007 6:21 am

I'm gonna digress a little here, but I guess this all still falls under the "scrounge" umbrellla. Just not digitally speaking, but tough... :lol:



Went to see something on the big screen tonight and they showed this trailer for an upcoming Clive Owen-does-Jason Statham action piece called SHOOT 'EM UP, which looks to yet another HK-influenced wannabe of the kind that I mentioned in another thread on Hong Kong cinema books, where Western directors seem bent on appropriating the style of HK action scenes, but none of their unique construction (as discussed to perfection in David Bordwell's book). I suspect Owen and Paul Giammatti might very well save this from being yet another cartoon HK-style poser....but we gotta wait and see...
http://youtube.com/watch?v=YVoBrHRMWXA


1408 was the actual film we saw tonight, and it's yet more proof that the Weinstein's glory days, if they ever had any, are essentiallly over, especially in the wake of the GRINDHOUSE mess and their unneccessary desicion to shamefully dump Corey Yuen's guilty pleasure DOA into a literal handful of theatres so they could slap "2007 Theatrical Release" on the DVD in a few weeks (no doubt featuring another "expert" commentary). When they push pretientious twaddle like this over something that made no bones about what it was and could have easily recouped its production costs with even a modest amount of marketing, you gotta wonder.

Certainly 1408 has the better pedigree: it's based on a short story by Stephen King, and John Cusack is a bigger draw than Eric Roberts for sure, but it's just so obvious they stuck this in theatres now to grab a slice of the summer movie pie with a movie that word of mouth would have hobbled before the first weekend was over during any other time of the year.

It starts of quite well, with enough cheap scares and weirdness to keep you interested despite an early sequence that casts instant suspicion over everything that comes after it, ala FEMME FATALE, but around the half-way mark, it becomes one loud crashing "madness" scene after another, with at least two trick endings and a third one that's definitely too feel-good phony. I guess in light of the more sick 'n twisted trends in horror films that have been in vogue these past couple of years, 1408 was at least something different...but man, did they ever sucker people (yes, myself included) by releasing it now! For some reason, I kept thinking back to the Keanu Reeves film JOHNNY MNEMONIC as I was watching this. Both films were released (and I believe partially financed) by Alliance Atlantis here in Canada. In fact, JOHNNY was very heavily funded by Alliance and when they realized what a box-office turd they had on their hands (many execs admitted as much in interviews after the fact), they did something odd: they released it into the busy summer boxoffice season nonetheless. Of course, it got critically clobbered and disappeared within a week or so, but not before taking in something like $15 or $20 million. Infinitely more than it would have made at any other time of the year. That's what it feels like the Weinsteins are doing with 1408. Clever boys.

1408 does hold one item of interest for fans of Hong Kong cinema (yes, there IS a sneakier reason why I even bothered to mention it here). It's an extremely creepy looking apparition thingy that lunges at Cusack with a big hammer or something in a couple of scenes. The make-up seriously reminded me of Benny Urquidez, so much so I had to wonder if it was some kind of in-joke on the part of the make-up people. What a cool surprise to see that it really WAS Urquidez playing the part! Freaky!


Clearly, I need to start scrounging for more bargain bin goodies to properly contribute to this thread. I'm starting to wander.... :lol:
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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Sun Jun 24, 2007 4:40 am

Gotta love Canada Post. Normally when a package arrives that won't fit through the mail slot in my door, they leave a door-hanger telling me it can be picked up across the road. Been waiting a while for this latest package and asked about it out of the blue today while I was at the post office for something else, and wouldn't you know, it's been there for a few days now. Silly postal people (Harlock excepted, of course)...

Nothing spectacular, but a few pieces:

FATAL TERMINATION (1990; Wing Artist; at long last my regrets over ditching the LD without making a backup can be put to rest)
HAUNTED COP SHOP (1987; Joy Sales/Fortune Star; I presume this is a reissue, but as I've only ever seen this on a VHS I taped of TV, it's basically a new DVD for me...)
HERO OF BEGGARS (1992; Universe; Micheal Hui, Simon Loui :lol:)
SUPER FANS (2007; K&R; Charlene Choi, Leo Ku)

and finally, a pick-up from the music/media shop down the road from the Taste of Asia street festival I visited tonight, since it's nice sometimes to peruse this stuff in person after a nice big container of street-vendor bulgogi 8) :D

LOVE IS NOT ALL AROUND (2007; Garry's Trading ?); Stephy Tang, Alex Fong)
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Postby Young Master » Sun Jun 24, 2007 9:55 pm

Thanks for the report on Whoring Guides to Japan & Korea / James Wong in Japan & Korea Brian!

Anyone know if it also contains footage from STOOGES IN HONG KONG, the slightly more upscale member of the family?


You can take a look at this clip on Youtube if you want, maybe the material will be familiar to you:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LNsRWcc8Fmk
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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Sun Jun 24, 2007 10:07 pm

You can take a look at this clip on Youtube if you want, maybe the material will be familiar to you:


Nope, that particular scene isn't repeated in JAMES WONG IN... and there's a visual unity amongst the footage that is there to suggest they only recycled from the two earlier films. Perhaps it was just tossed together to cash in on the popularity of STOOGES IN HONG KONG, which came out the same year and looks to have been a modest success, but doesn't actually contain any stolen footage from it. :?
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Postby Mike Thomason » Tue Jun 26, 2007 11:20 am

Whoops! Almost forgot...

Born To Fight (Thailand) (DVD)*
Captain Kronos, Vampire Hunter (Great Britain) (DVD)
Kwaidan (Japan) (DVD)

* the recent remake, not the older version.
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Postby Masterofoneinchpunch » Wed Jun 27, 2007 4:02 pm

Mike Thomason wrote:... Born To Fight (Thailand) (DVD)*
Kwaidan (Japan) (DVD)

* the recent remake, not the older version.


I definitely want to hear your opinion on the new Born to Fight. I'm a fan of Kobayashi so I think Kwaiden is a good film. So far Harakiri is my favorite film directed by him.

All that Hammer talk has gotten me in the mood for their films again (though tapped out a bit for English films especially after watching The Third Man last night :), although I did get an Ealing release this week -- The Ladykillers).

Just bought Once Upon a Time in China 1,2,3 (I already have them on a different set, but there is commentary on the first two I believe, yes I know Ric Meyers, plus it only cost me about 2.50 dollars each.)

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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Sun Jul 01, 2007 7:10 pm

Picked up some real junk this week. I assume. The stuff was being cleared out at Wal-Mart for $2CDN a pop, down from the exorbitant $3.88 it usually goes for. :lol: They all seem to be old lesser-knowns from Video Asia, so my expectations aren't particularly high.

BRUCE LEE TRUE STORY (1976, Bruce Li, aka Bruce Lee The Man The Myth) Missed a chance to get the old Universe DVD at one of the usual Chinese bargain bins, so I guess this will do for now, though I may still hold off...

FIST OF UNICORN (1972). This at least has two versions of the film, the widescreen mandarin and the fullscreen international, both of which sound like crap from the reviews I've read. Better than nothing, I suppose. Surprisingly plentiful extras on this and TRUE STORY, though many of them seem only tangentially related to the films themselves. But come one, two bucks!! :lol:

DRAGON MASTER / CHINESE KUNG-FU AGAINST GODFATHER double feature. Gave the latter a quick spin and though it's full screen and the colours have dulled, it's actually a pretty sharp print, in Chinese with english subs. DRAGON MASTER also looks decent. It's a DRAGON LEE starrer that sounds like a retitle of DRAGON THE YOUNG MASTER. Definitely Korean.

DRAGON BLOOD / THE FIGHTING FIST OF SHANGHAI JOE double feature. Frank Lakatos' review in the DB makes DRAGON BLOOD sound like amusing junk, and a quick skim of Videoasia's disc reveals a print tolerable enough to at least get through it. The latter is an old Italian film with Chen Lee and Klaus Kinski in which a Chinese immigrant in the old west squares off with racist cowboys. The IMDB has some positive reviews for this one, so I'm kinda looking forward to it, DVD quality be damned.


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I watched the Christy Chung blind-girl thriller SET UP the other night, as well. The film was released in 2005, but bears a copyright of 2003 in the closing credits. Anybody know why it was held up? It's not a bad little movie, implausibilities notwithstanding, and certainly worse films with bigger stars saw release in those years, so I'm a bit puzzled considering this is a Wong Jing production and all... I'll try and post a screenshot in the Additions forum later so the DB entry can be modified however necessary.
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Postby Mike Thomason » Wed Jul 04, 2007 3:08 pm

Nothing very Hong Kong-ish going on in these parts...

Blue Crush (United States) (DVD)
The Fearless Vampire Killers (United States/Great Britain) (DVD)
Hotel Rwanda (United States/Great Britain) (DVD)
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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Mon Jul 09, 2007 3:05 pm

I watched SUPER FANS about a week or so ago—among far too many others to remember! :lol: —and posted a short review, but recalling that the movie actually managed to put Mike T to sleep (assuming it was the film, of course ;) ), and then recently noting the two like-minded reviews now in the DB, I'm wondering if anyone else has seen this one yet, or has found it noteworthy. I'm sure I'd agree with certain positives people might find with it (production value, certain performances, couple of good songs, etc.), but overall I found it to be one of the laziest movies I've seen in the sense of taking a ripe concept and following the path of least resistance (or comedy, or drama, or thrillls, or much of anything, really). I suppose having a Karaoke company footing some or all of the bill might muzzle even the most conservative of filmmakers, but did they really think such a neutered product would have much of a shelf life? I'd have been more impressed if they dropped the pretentions and just went the Gold Label route a la LOVE @ FIRST NOTE, which is an example of marketing savvy that really—honestly!—deserves to be studied in classes on the subject! :shock: :lol:
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Postby Mike Thomason » Mon Jul 09, 2007 3:50 pm

Brian Thibodeau wrote:...overall I found it to be one of the laziest movies I've seen in the sense of taking a ripe concept and following the path of least resistance (or comedy, or drama, or thrillls, or much of anything, really).


Hence why it put me to sleep, and doubly hence why I've had zero interest in an immediate repeat viewing to try and finish it... :P
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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Mon Jul 09, 2007 4:41 pm

Mike Thomason wrote:Hence why it put me to sleep, and doubly hence why I've had zero interest in an immediate repeat viewing to try and finish it... :P


Seriously though, it gets soooo much better after the part where you fell asleep, really, honestly, swear-to-god, everything just clicks and it all makes perfect sense and Charlene gives the performance of a lifetime and...oh who am I kidding...it's dreadful and I just want others to suffer with me. Actually, I should probably be worried by the fact that it didn't put me to sleep, and I'm not even much of a Charlene-as-actress fan! Scary... :lol:
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Postby cal42 » Mon Jul 09, 2007 6:30 pm

I'm trying to modernise, I really am. Hence my latest purchases that have just dropped through the door:

The Heavenly Kings (2006)
The Haunted School (2006) and...erm...
The Magnificent Swordsman (19*cough*)

Well, two out of three ain't bad. For some inexplicable reason, I've also acquired For Bad Boys Only (2000). I didn't order it, I don't want it but I've got it and I ain't paying for it. But Hsu Qi's in it so I might give it a spin. Actually, I think it was a free gift for one of the other films I ordered. My money's on The Magnificent Swordsman...

My thoughts on these will no doubt show up in the course of time.
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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Mon Jul 09, 2007 8:27 pm

I'm trying to modernise, I really am.


:lol:


- - - - - - - - -

I won a few 99¢ DVDs on ebay last night from a seller who always has a good selection of genre stuff from the smaller labels, all for the actual price of 99¢ (no other bidders—nice!). Not much of note outside of an utter piece of garbage called CANNIBAL CAMPOUT I haven't seen since my old newspaper review of it nearly got my column spiked at the time (ahh, the memories) and, on a more reasonable note, Blue Underground's decent 1975 giallo AUTOPSY (aka Macchie Solari) and

CURSE OF THE SUN (Thailand, 2004, Tai Seng version, I think).

This was the only Asian film in the batch, but it wasn't even one I wanted. I thought for 99¢ I could at least give it a spin. Thai cinema disappoints on such a consistent basis that I might have to keep my expectations kinda low.
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Postby Mike Thomason » Tue Jul 10, 2007 12:12 pm

Still nothing on the Hong Kong front...

The Aggressives (South Korea) (DVD)
Antarctic Journal (South Korea) (DVD)
Cheaters (South Korea) (DVD)
Heart Is... (South Korea) (DVD)
Heaven's Soldiers (South Korea) (DVD)
The Unseeable (Thailand) (DVD) (with English subtitles! Woot!)
The Victim (Thailand) (DVD) (with English subtitles! Woot!)
Last edited by Mike Thomason on Sat Jul 14, 2007 10:45 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Postby Mike Thomason » Wed Jul 11, 2007 5:18 pm

A digital diversion...

http://hkmdb.com/phpbb/viewtopic.php?p=63316#63316

...and now, back to your regularly scheduled programming. :D
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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Wed Jul 11, 2007 6:00 pm

Mike Thomason wrote:A digital diversion...

http://hkmdb.com/phpbb/viewtopic.php?p=63316#63316

...and now, back to your regularly scheduled programming. :D



Impressive list! Not sure I understand your closing comments there, but... interesting. Can't wait to read your (long form?) reviews some day, especially of the Korean stuff, as few people seem to be bothered reviewing K-movies anymore (even at Koreanfilm.org, where they've got about four reviews up for all of 2007 :( ). Assuming, of course, that the K-stuff will still have a berth at your site?
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Postby Mike Thomason » Thu Jul 12, 2007 3:06 am

Brian Thibodeau wrote:Impressive list! Not sure I understand your closing comments there, but... interesting -- Assuming, of course, that the K-stuff will still have a berth at your site?


The closing statement...hmmm, well, in the past about the place (even on these very boards on a couple of occasions, way back) I've been victim of the whole "so many DVDs, you must have no life" mentality. Simply just being a hobby (collecting, that is), nothing could be further from the truth -- the dependent comment refers to the fact that we are afforded tax offsets in this country if we are fully supporting a spouse. The "no credit cards" comment refers to the fact that this can all be done quite effectively if one is disciplined enough to budget AND be patient (ie: wait for sales, don't buy on day of release and so on). Etc etc...

The K-Movie stuff will surely hit the site...when and if my designer EVER gets off his arse and does the work! I have been paying hosting for over a year now, and have not long renewed the domain -- and I've been pestering him to actually do something, anything towards getting the damn thing online -- after a year of "tomorrows", I'm pretty much convinced that he doesn't give a s**t, to be honest... :cry:
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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Thu Jul 12, 2007 4:05 am

The closing statement...hmmm, well, in the past about the place (even on these very boards on a couple of occasions, way back) I've been victim of the whole "so many DVDs, you must have no life" mentality. Simply just being a hobby (collecting, that is), nothing could be further from the truth -- the dependent comment refers to the fact that we are afforded tax offsets in this country if we are fully supporting a spouse. The "no credit cards" comment refers to the fact that this can all be done quite effectively if one is disciplined enough to budget AND be patient (ie: wait for sales, don't buy on day of release and so on). Etc etc...


Ah, cool. Now I see. It all sounded pretty par-for-the-course to me, even familiar (the only difference being the lack of a live-in), but I get the ol' fish-eye when I'm not quite sure of the context, so to speak. ;) I can think of a few people in the real world—extended family no less—who've made similar assumptions when they've seen my collection, which for the most part resides in discreetly tucked away tote bins. Of course, I also remember the times they figured they could borrow some of those same movies and were rather shocked when I said no! :lol: I suppose anyone with a consuming passion or hobby like this has to put up with skeptics sooner or later.




The K-Movie stuff will surely hit the site...when and if my designer EVER gets off his arse and does the work! I have been paying hosting for over a year now, and have not long renewed the domain -- and I've been pestering him to actually do something, anything towards getting the damn thing online -- after a year of "tomorrows", I'm pretty much convinced that he doesn't give a s**t, to be honest... :cry:


I does seem like that may be the case based on this and previous comments! Perhaps web designers are as dime-a-dozen down there as they are up here, and you could shop around for someone more productive?
Last edited by Brian Thibodeau on Thu Jul 12, 2007 7:28 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Postby Brian Thibodeau » Thu Jul 12, 2007 4:27 am

double...oops! Site went a bit weird on me tonight... :?
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