★ Great filmmaker King Hu is a giant in martial arts cinema. Although he was not a
productive filmmaker, he created a new style for and consolidated...
★ Great filmmaker King Hu is a giant in martial arts cinema. Although he was not a
productive filmmaker, he created a new style for and consolidated the genre of
martial arts movies through his works.
★ Director Lin Jing-Jie (director of The
Man Behind the Book) records Hu’s cinematic formation and explores his
cinematic aesthetics as well as passion for and pursuit of cinematic art.
★ The King of Wuxia Part 1 presents
interviews with and memories of cinema professionals in collaboration with King
Hu, including actors Shih Chun and Sammo Hung, directors John Woo, Tsui Hark,
Toon Wang, and Ann Hui, actress Cheng Pei-Pei, and critics Peggy Chiao, Wen
Tien-Hsiang, and Chien-Yeh Huang.
★ The King of Wuxia Part 2 traces
the trajectory of Hu’s life from Beijing, Hong Kong, Taiwan to the U.S., exploring
the impacts of life experiences on the formation of Hu as a unique artist.
★ The King of Wuxia details Hu’s
life and cinematic creation through a rare collection of reminiscences from his
relatives and close friends about the life of this epoch-making master.
The King of Wuxia comprises two parts.
The King of Wuxia Part I: The Prophet Was Once
Here shows King Hu’s cinematic charm through a chronology of his classic films,
along with aesthetic analyses by major scholars and critics as well as
interviews with important cinema professionals, such as Feng Hsu, Cheng
Pei-Pei, Toon Wang, Tsui Hark, John Woo, and Sammo Hung, who share their
memories about the details of working with Hu. The film gradually reveals the
filmmaker’s cinematic approach, aesthetic style, and artistic devotion, along with
his specific manners and mad pursuit of perfection.
The King of Wuxia Part 2: The Heartbroken Man on
the Horizon thoroughly details King Hu’s fate as a homeless wanderer all his
life, who lived in Beijing, Taiwan, Hong Kong and the U.S. The film explores
how such fate is reflected in his oeuvre and affected his artistic career.
Particularly, his continued effort for filmmaking in his later years was not as
glorious as imagined. In failing to fulfill his last ambition, this
epoch-making figure became a solitary hero lost amid the tumults of an era.
The film also features actor Shih Chun (leading
actor in Dragon Inn and A Touch of Zen) who developed his career under the
guidance of Hu, who was a fatherly mentor for him. Following Shih’s footsteps back
in the locations of shooting by Hu along with flashbacks of filmmaking, the
audience are led on a trip through time and space. Despite his age, this
chivalrous man persists in retrieving the memory about his mentor for fifty
years, a mentor that is fatherly with a sincere friendship.
【Background】
Martial arts films are a prominent genre in
cinema today and a representative type in Chinese films. Director King Hu is generally
acknowledged as a giant in this genre, but his reputation as an epoch-making
master of mandarin martial arts films has gradually faded into oblivion with
the passage of time. The timeless cinematic aesthetics he created has remained
a profound inspiration and influence for subsequent generations of filmmakers,
including internationally renowned directors such as Tsui Hark and Ang Lee.
Through an in-depth exploration by director
Lin Jing-Jie, The King of Wuxia portraits the unique charm of Hu’s works and
his solitary filmmaking career. The film outlines the cinematic formation of Hu
as a filmmaker and discusses the aesthetics of his martial arts film and his
love and pursuit of film art, like a knight with peerless Kungfu constantly waiting
for the moment to draw his sword.
The King of Wuxia contains interviews with
cinema professionals in collaboration with King Hu and under his impact,
tracing Hu’s creative trajectory, exploring the greatness of his films through
their views, and achieve a collage of this unique artist. The touching and
impressive film is the first to reveal the mad pursuit of perfection of this
master in cinematic art and his intricate life story as a wanderer.
Color :
Color
Running time:
126 min
Language:
Chinese , English , Cantonese
Film Type :
Documentary
Genre :
History , Biography
Festivals & Awards :
Nomination 2022 Best Documentary Feature at the 59th Golden Horse Awards