How I wish I had your opportunities to pick up VCD/DVDs for a song on my way home. I live in a big city in the midwest US; but my local Chinese grocery only stocks a few pirate DVDs, which I refuse to touch. So it's the internet for me.
I used your link to purchase a sizeable shipment from Poker, so I may post once I have had a chance to watch a few.
The only movie I've seen on your list is Brothers from the Walled City.
I loved My Name is Suzie on your Celestial list. Anthony Wong looks like Lou Diamond Phillips.
And I too, have been catching up on my mainland films:
Also been watching my usual diet of Cantonese b/w oldies.
Can't remember but weren't the Long Arm of the Law films shot in the Walled City?
And I've always wondered what a Faterdngers was too.
I recently stumbled into 1970s Japanese sexplotation "Pinky Violence" movies
Zero Woman: Red Handcuffs with Miki.
Touch and Go is the only one I've seen. Not bad, but not terribly memorable. Mine suffered from a pretty lousy Mandarin dub.
Jigoku (1960) Criterion ***½/****: Classic J-Horror film that has influenced much of later Japanese genre films. The last act is a classic visual metaphorical tour-de-force. Though I think some of the logic was missing (esp with the Tamura character who was symbolic of a Luciferian character yet was tortured at the end; I know a possible duel existence but I found it a bit confusing). Looking forward to other Nakagawa and Shintoho films.
7 Grand Masters (1978): ***½/****: Awesome martial art film by Taiwanese Director Joseph Kuo. I was completely surprised by the martial art ability of the actors (Corey Yuen does do the MA choreography). Well I guess there was a plot too. Of course being a Taiwanese film from the 70’s Lung Fei is in it. Pretty good copy by Tokyo Shock. Why is it on the Tokyo Shock label; I have no idea but it's a good film.
Brian Thibodeau wrote: I picked this up at the last Deep Discount sale, but ever since I read about the disc flaw, I've been leery of watching it. I probably should send it back for an exchange, as it sounds like the footage that goes "missing" because of the time code error (or whatever it's called) is fairly important. Is there any way to distinguish second printings from first printings, in case I've actually got a good one?
This sounds promising! I found this as part of a budget Tokyo Shock/Media Blasters 3-pack from Best Buy in the U.S. several months ago. The other films are RED WOLF (which is hardly deserving of the 2-disc treatment it gets) and the fullscreen retitling of Donnie Yen's LEGEND OF THE WOLF (which does deserve a 2-disc special edition, but doesn't get one! )
Link to the box set:
http://www.amazon.com/Martial-Art-Package-Triple-Feature/dp/B000FKPE4C
Speaking of Inconceivable Truth (and to a Canadian at that), I saw Michael Brook in San Francisco last week - terribly talented fellow
I've seen some of your posts at Mobius in relation to these films, but it seems like many of them come out sans English subs. Which I suppose is no biggie if you speak the language
Since you all last read me, I have upgraded my home theatre system
NB: I luuuuurve DTS!
And yes, from the above list you all will have probably guessed by now...I have pretty much defected to South Korean cinema.
Brian Thibodeau wrote:Good to see you haven't totally abandoned HK cinema though, Mike!
I don't think I ever could. But for me, personally, I just think the last quarter of last year shone new light on the various online communities dedicated to the medium and that, in retrospect, has been enough for me to make the decision to largely turn my back on the majority of it. There is a very vast division between constructive criticism and out and out belligerent whining. And that's something I can do without in my life
My only major criticism of a large percentage of modern HK cinema these days is, like its American contemporary, that it's being manufactured and targetted at select demographics (in this instance teenagers and the Mainland market). There are very few films being engineered towards "adult" audiences anymore -- action films seem geared towards teenage boys, and everything else seems to be being made with teenage girls and young couples in mind. Once in a blue moon you'll get an Election 2 or Re-Cycle made with a broader audience in mind, but predominantly you'll get a half dozen Dragon Tiger Gate's or Love Undercover 3's as a trade-off.
This is where South Korean cinema has picked up the slack for me; though it still also panders towards a certain demographic it does create films with adults in mind (as an example, last year there were 26 films released in the ROK that received the 18+ classification). It's one of the few Asian territories that understands there's an adult audience out there that wants to see films about adult subjects handled in an adult manner...and for that I will continue to favour it as well as lend my support. Being almost 39, consistently watching films made by commitee for a target (teenage) demographic does get tiresome
PS: I've always been able to playback DTS (it was an integral element of my original HT set-up when I was putting it together some years ago); updating my surround speakers just improved the fidelity of it all.
Plus, it's nice to comment about your own HT when so many across so many forums complain about DVD audio...while watching their discs in the basement of their parents' house, listening through a pair of $2 Kmart headphones.
Brian Thibodeau wrote:I can certainly sympathize with your ongoing distaste for many of the online forums devoted to this stuff (though perhaps not at your levels! ), which is probably why I only contribute here and save the stress of debating the umpteenth remastered and spit-shined DVD release of some already-famous, 20-year old Hong Kong movie plus all the attendant hair-splitting and splice-spotting that inevitably accompanies it. The whining, as you call it. Fascinating to read, but I can imagine it would drive one nuts to participate with regularity.
Masterofoneinchpunch wrote:I agree media should be a small equation when discussing the merits of a film...
Even on these forums, people succumb to it here and there...
The parallel thread of this equation is that, by and large, the very same trainspotters who invest more time in analysing the home video format that they saw a film on will often squawk loudly that they "don't understand" a film or "couldn't follow" it; in other words, their geekery extends predominantly to the technical side of the viewing experience and not the actual viewing experience itself. Some type out endless professions of admiration for X actor or director or whatever, but invariably confuse Asian actors/directors/filmmakers with one another or alternately can't identify them at all...but they can tell you how many Gig of the DVD was used, its average bitrate and so on.
Check the back of it; far right in the middle for printing; Criterion I believe should replace it for you: http://www.criteriondvd.com/popup_image ... tem_id=417
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