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Thread: Bodyguards and Assassins starring Donnie Yen

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  1. #1
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    Bodyguards and Assassins starring Donnie Yen

    from sina dailen news. via wu-jing.org

    Peter Chan Enshrouds March in Dark October

    -- Dark October --
    Dark October, produced by Peter Chan, is slated for production in March. Director Teddy Chan was planning the film back in 2004 when the investor committed suicide resulting in the production being stalled. With Peter Chan stepping in, financing for the 1.5m yuan film has been secured. The cast is likely to include Chow Yun Fatt and Donnie Yen, and perhaps Lau Ching Wan, Jacky Cheung, Leon Lai, Aaron Kwok, Ji Jin Hee, Kwon Sang Woo.

    In Dark October, Sun Yat Sen (Chow Yun Fatt) heads to Hong Kong to raise funds for uprising activities. Learning of assassination attempt by the Manchu government, the businessman (Leon Lai) in Hong Kong who is responsible for receiving Sun Yat Sen hires elite bodyguards (Donnie Yen et al.) to protect him, eventually escorting him back to Guangzhou safely. Sina, Dalian News
    chow yun fat and donnie in a film together could be epic.

  2. #2
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    Sounds good. I hope to see those 2 together. It will be funny to see Donnie protecting Dr. Sun Yat Sen rather than trying to kill him like he did in OUATIC 2.
    "For someone who's a Shaolin monk, your kung fu's really lousy!"
    "What, you're dead? You die easy!"
    "Hold on now. I said I would forget your doings, but I didn't promise to spare your life. Take his head."
    “I don’t usually smoke this brand, but I’ll do it for you.”
    "When all this is over, Tan Hai Chi, I will kick your head off and put it on my brother's grave!
    "I regard hardships as part of my training. I don't need to relax."

  3. #3
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    ok finally an update

    so there has been no news of this film but looks like sina is reporting that chow yun fat is out, due to his confucius film. the cast and further info about the film is listed below.

    Dark October Mugged by Bodyguards and Assassins

    -- Bodyguards and Assassins --
    At today's press conference for Bodyguards and Assassins (formerly Dark October), a movie on a group of people protecting Sun Yat Sen against assassination when he was in Hong Kong to raise funds on October 15, 1905, the cast was formally announced.

    At this stage, it's not known who'd be playing Dr Sun Yat Sen, after Chow Yun Fatt, who's doing the film on Confucius that begins filming around the same time, declined the offer. Director Teddy Chan explains that Sun Yat Sen is not the key figure in Bodyguards and Assassins, rather the film shows the history of Hong Kong through a group of people protecting Sun Yat Sen.

    The partial cast announced includes "Gambler" Donnie Yen, "Beggar" Leon Lai, "Rickshaw Puller" Nicholas Tse, "Revolutionary" Tony Leung Kar Fai, "Assassin" Hu Jun, "General in Exile" Simon Yam, "Police Commissioner" Eric Tsang, "Mistress" Fan Bing Bing, "Scion" Wang Bai Jue, Wang Xue Qi and Zhou Yun.

    Among the various characters, Donnie Yen's role is particularly of great import, full of suspense and development. Unlike the others, he isn't a patriotic or righteous person initially, even in the final instance, he's still uncertain of his own stand. Fan Bing Bing plays Donne Yen's wife, but remarries tycoon Wang Xue Qi to be his mistress due to a twist of events.



    While Nicholas Tse had actually auditioned for this film several years ago before the production was held up, it's until only recently that his role as the rickshaw puller, one that would lay down his life for Dr Sun, was confirmed.

    Hu Jun, as the main villain, one sent by the Manchu government to assassinate Dr Sun, would be shaving his head bald. Hu Jun would also be joining Jingle Ma's ongoing production Hua Mulan starring Vicki Zhao, playing a Hun general.



    The 150m yuan film produced by Peter Chan, action directed by Stephen Tung Wai, begins production in early April 2009 and would be released in December 2009. Sina

    also the film is called bodyguards and assassins now.

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    I think I prefer Black October as the title.

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    black october is a bit more ominous, then bodyguards and assasins which make it sound like a generic kung fu flick.

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    Exactly, it sounds like a bad English title for an old Shaw Brothers flick.

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    I wonder what kind of release this might get in America

    I was hoping Red Cliff would get a better release and since that hasn't happened, I can't imagine this will.
    Action! A new type of kung fu movie is set to hit the screens
    www.chinaview.cn 2009-08-06 09:35:07

    Film director Teddy Chan makes a gift to actress Michelle Reis at the closing ceremony of the shooting of the film "Bodyguards and Assassins." The film marks actress Reis' return to the screen after her marriage to business tycoon Julian Hui last year.

    BEIJING, Aug. 6 -- Director Teddy Chan has a vision of a different kind of martial arts movie. One that doesn't neglect emotions and storyline in favor of the action. "Bodyguards and Assassins" is to be released in December. Hong Kong filmmaker Teddy Chan's 10-year dream has finally come true as his highly anticipated period epic "Bodyguards and Assassins" finished its three-month shooting recently at a huge replica of 1905 downtown Hong Kong built in Shanghai's suburban Songjiang District.

    The action-packed film, with a budget of 150 million yuan ($22 million), is due for release on December 18.

    "I have revised the script several times over the past 10 years," Chan says. "The story really moved me a lot. I believe it can move the audience as well."

    This time, Chan, known for his popular action films "Downtown Torpedoes" and "Purple Storm," wants to give kung fu film more historical relevance and magnitude, even if the storyline is fictional.

    The film centers on a group of martial artists who try to protect revered Chinese revolutionary Dr Sun Yat-sen from an assassination attempt when he was in Hong Kong raising funds on October 15, 1905.

    Its all-star cast includes veteran actors Donnie Yen, Tony Leung, Nicholas Tse, Leon Lai, Michelle Reis and Fan Bingbing.

    But a big surprise to director Chan were the stunning performances from the 2005 "Super Girl" champion Li Yuchun and Chinese basketball star Mengke Bateer. Both had no previous acting experience.

    "Li plays a martial arts talent while Bateer plays a bodyguard of Dr Sun Yat-sen," Chan says. "Their impressive performance submerged my former worries about first-time actors."

    Veteran actors also take on new challenges in the movie.

    In contrast to his former handsome and squeaky-clean image on the screen, Hong Kong actor Tse had his head shaved bald, for the first time, to play a "rickshaw puller" with suntanned skin and scarred face.

    To get close to the heart of the character, Tse even wore special makeup while he was sleeping.

    The film also marks actress Reis' return to the screen after her marriage to business tycoon Julian Hui last year.

    Reis plays a woman who helps a beggar summon up courage and find new meaning in his life. The beggar, played by Lai, later becomes one of the martial artists to protect Dr Sun Yat-sen.

    Director Chan notes that all the cast hopes to break out of the kung fu film stereotype with beautiful, sincere emotions, an in-depth storyline and more cultural connotations.

    "The film portrays the gracious and bright side of human nature such as one's love for family, patriotism and dignity in the face of death," he says. "There are so many unsung heroes behind the Chinese revolution which overthrew the Qing Dynasty in 1911. We should show our respect for their devotion and sacrifice."

    In addition to its star-studded cast, another highlight of the film is its magnificent set which reproduces the Hong Kong of a century ago.

    It depicts Hong Kong's prosperity and vibrancy with a cluster of exotic colonial-style buildings, Gothic architecture and South Asian flavored arcades. About 500 homes, 200 shops and 4,000 signboards were created.

    It took about a year and 43 million yuan to build the set, almost as big as 10 football fields.

    "This film setting is the biggest of its kind in the history of Chinese cinema," director Chan adds. "It will be reserved for other film projects such as Andrew Lau's new action film."

    It is a challenge for anyone to take charge in such a big film production. Lau actually helped direct several scenes when director Chan was busy, for which he received a special gift from the crew ?? a 1905 Hong Kong banknote.

    The movie is also the debut production of Cinema Popular, a film company founded by Peter Chan and Chinese mainland director Huang Jianxin.

    Peter Chan is one of the few Hong Kong directors adept at different genres, both art-house films and commercial war epics.

    The period actioner "Bodyguards and Assassins," in his eyes, is an attempt to make a "new mainstream commercial film," which aims to attract audience from all over the world with more universal storylines, sensational acting and inspirational scenes that touch the soul.

    Cinema Popular plans to produce 15 films in three years including the fantasy film "Jung Ku The Man from 18th Hell," suspense thriller "Queen's Road Ripper" and comedy film "The God of Wealth."

    (Source: Shanghai Daily)
    Gene Ching
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    Donnie makes NYT

    And to think, we knew him back when...
    An Action Star Moves to the Lead
    By SONIA KOLESNIKOV-JESSOP
    Published: August 19, 2009

    SHANGHAI — Over the past 26 years, the actor Donnie Yen has developed a dedicated following in Asia for his impressive martial arts skills, and a cult status internationally for his roles in popular action movies, including “Once Upon a Time in China II,” “Hero,” “Shanghai Knights” and “Seven Swords.” But until recently, he had, he said, “never tasted what it meant to be a superstar.” Instead, in big-budget movies, he often played in the shadow of established Asian stars like Jet Li and Jackie Chan.

    But with “Painted Skin” and “Ip Man,” two Asian-box-office successes in 2008, Mr. Yen’s star is finally rising. “He’s been around as along as the two Js,” said Daniel Yun, managing director of MediaCorp Raintree Pictures, referring to Mr. Li and Mr. Chan. “For a long time he was the third choice; but with his films making big money at the box office, he’s become the leading man to watch.”

    “Painted Skin,” which was co-produced by Raintree Pictures, grossed 230 million yuan, or about $33 million, at the Chinese box office last year, making it the second most successful film of the year there, behind John Woo’s “Red Cliff.”

    “Donnie is the ‘it’ action person right now,” said the producer and director Peter Ho-Sun Chan, who cast Mr. Yen, 46, in “Bodyguards & Assassins,” a big-budget period action film directed by Teddy Chen that is set for release in Asia in December, and about six months later in Europe and North America. “He has built himself into a bona fide leading man, who happens to be an action star.”

    Mr. Yen seems to approach his newfound success with healthy skepticism. In a recent interview in Shanghai, where he was filming his final scene for “Bodyguards & Assassins,” the actor commented that he had “a lot of new friends” now — whereas in the late ’90s he couldn’t find anybody to help finance “Ballistic Kiss,” his second film as a director and producer.

    “Now all the producers are calling me and I’m having films lining up all the way to 2012,” he said. “It’s beginning to sink in that after 26 years in the industry I’m finally having my break.”

    In addition to completing “Bodyguards & Assassins,” in which he plays a gambler who agrees to protect the Chinese revolutionary Sun Yat-Sen during his brief 1905 visit to Hong Kong, Mr. Yen also recently finished work on Daniel Lee’s “14 Blades.” In the $20 million Ming-era martial arts movie, to be released in February in Asia, he plays Green Dragon, a sword-fighting special agent.

    Mr. Yen acknowledges that he has tended to avoid expanding his acting abilities. “I came in to the industry by total accident,” he said. At 19, he was spotted in Hong Kong by the director Yuen Woo-ping while traveling from Beijing — where he had been studying martial arts — back to the United States, where his family had been living since he was 11. Mr. Yuen was looking for a new kung fu movie hero and, impressed by Mr. Yen’s skills, offered him the part.

    “Even though I was learning all the dramatic techniques, it never sunk in that at the end of the day I should be an actor,” Mr. Yen said.

    He also believes that directors had never really encouraged him to act. “It was more ‘come in, fight, look cool, show your muscles,”’ he said, laughing.

    That is changing, however, and Mr. Yen said his confidence has grown. “It’s only in the last three years I started to concentrate on acting,” he said. He added that it wasn’t until the 2008 martial arts epic “An Empress and the Warriors” that he felt he “was the character.”

    “When I made people cry on the set I thought ‘I must have done something right,”’ he said.

    This month, he started shooting the sequel to “Ip Man,” in which he plays the title role — a part which Mr. Yun of Raintree Pictures said he felt would ultimately define Mr. Yen as an actor. The “Ip Man” films are based on the life of the eponymous martial arts master, who taught, among others, the kung fu superstar Bruce Lee. While the first installment focused on Ip Man’s life in China in the 1930s, the sequel will look at his early years in Hong Kong and his first meeting with a young Bruce Lee. “Ip Man 2” is set for release in Asia in May, and Mr. Yen has already committed to shooting “Ip Man 3” if the sequel is successful.

    The actor said that he had prepared very seriously for the film. “I’m a very energetic man, but Ip Man was the opposite, he was very slow,” he said. “So for months, I was talking slow, walking slow, even drinking tea slowly.”

    Despite his growing success, Mr. Yen is realistic about the type of films he will potentially be offered. “I don’t think there will be heavy, complicated characters written for me, even if they now know I can do emotional,” he said. “I don’t think you’re going to see me in a film without action because I don’t think investors are going to put their money in such a film. That’s not what the audience wants to see me in.”

    And as a veteran action star, he’s also aware the career clock is already ticking. He said that he had noticed that, with age, the time he needed to recuperate from an action sequence was increasing. “I’ve actually given myself a retiring deadline for acting of 50,” he said. “I want to push myself to the limit, but I don’t want to be hanging around.” But, he said, he still planned to be involved in movies.

    “I know I can still have some influence in the action directing department and raise the bar,” he said. “I still have a lot of ideas.”
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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    This article is a little dated...

    But I just spoke to Cung Le and he reminded me that B&A opens next week, same week as his next fight. It's going head-to-head with Storm Warriors, which opens this week.

    New 十月圍城 (Bodyguards and Assassins) Trailer = Action Orgasm [Updated with Longer Version]
    by X, November 26, 2009 9:20 AM
    Action, Asia, Drama, Martial Arts

    Oh mommy.

    First one to set the mood, second one to tell a story, third one... I haven't seen it. But the fourth trailer is certainly for the action fan who's been asking himself if Hong Kong still has it, and it should answer the question pretty explicitly. Of course the action takes center stage, but the HK replica set is truly stunning both in detail and artistry.

    Releasing on December 18, the film is set in 1905 Hong Kong, as a group of bodyguards attempt to protect Sun Yat-Sen from an onslaught of, well, assassins. Directed by Teddy Chen, this bad boy stars a who's who of Chinese cinema, from Leon Lai to Donnie Yen, Eric Tsang, Fan Bingbing, Hu Jun, Nicholas Tse, Simon Yam, Tony Leung Ka-Fai and even Jacky Cheung (cameo, I suppose?). The $23 million action blockbuster did well at the recent AFM, selling to the UK, Canada, Middle East and Korea.

    But enough with the chatter. Action!
    Follow this link for the new trailer.

    Jackie Cheung will not play Sun Yat Sen in "Bodyguards and Assassins"
    Posted: 26 November 2009 1651 hrs

    HONG KONG : Hong Kong singer Jacky Cheung will not play revolutionary leader Sun Yat Sen in upcoming movie "Bodyguards and Assassins", the film's production team announced on Wednesday.

    Cheung, 48, will instead play revolutionary Yang Quyun who accompanied Sun when he returned to Hong Kong in 1894. His character will have little screen time and will sacrifice himself early in the film.

    Produced by award-winning Hong Kong director Peter Chan, "Bodyguards and Assassins" is a story based on a group of bodyguards protecting Sun Yat Sen from assassins in 1905 Hong Kong.

    Cheung's involvement in this film has been wrapped in so much secrecy that most of the main cast were not even aware of it. The production team also sealed off the set to shoot his scenes.

    The film's director, Teddy Chen, said Cheung has decided to donate all his earnings from this film to charity.

    Costing more than US$23 million (S$32 million) to produce, it features more than 10 well-known stars across China and Hong Kong, making it one of the most eagerly anticipated Asian movies at the end of the year.

    The stellar cast includes Donnie Yen, Wang Xueqi, Tony Leung Ka-Fai, Nicholas Tse, Hu Jun, Leon Lai, Eric Tseng, Li Yuchun, Simon Yam, Fan Bingbing, Zhou Yun, Wang Po Cher, as well as a guest appearance from Michelle Reis.

    "Bodyguards and Assassins" is set to hit the big screen in mid December.
    Gene Ching
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    Opens this weekend

    And here's the upshot of my interview with Cung: Cung Le on STRIKEFORCE: EVOLUTIONS & BODYGUARDS AND ASSASSINS
    Gene Ching
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    one thing ill say about cung and the reason why i like him...he is very accessible, ive sent him messages once or twice on myspace...just asking questions about true legend and this film. and he answered promptly and fully. without no airs whats ever. so im really pulling for him to be the next big asian action star.

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    Quote Originally Posted by doug maverick View Post
    one thing ill say about cung and the reason why i like him...he is very accessible, ive sent him messages once or twice on myspace...just asking questions about true legend and this film. and he answered promptly and fully. without no airs whats ever. so im really pulling for him to be the next big asian action star.
    I've had him respond to me as well. Ever since I first saw him fight, I was hooked. If anyone has ever seen "The Making of a Champion" you will notice that he is one of the most down-to-earth individuals there is.

  13. #13
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    Incoming reviews

    Who will be the first here to post their review?
    'Bodyguards and Assassins' helps Chinese cinema enter the big leagues
    Relax News
    Tuesday, 15 December 2009

    It has been a big year for Chinese cinema -- and it's about to get even bigger. The Teddy Chan-directed Bodyguards and Assassins opens this Friday, December 18 -- a star-studded action adventure produced by a brand new studio that hopes to establish Chinese film as a major international force.
    (Relaxnews) -

    It has been a big year for Chinese cinema - and it's about to get even bigger. The Teddy Chan-directed Bodyguards and Assassins opens this Friday, December 18 - a star-studded action adventure produced by a brand new studio that hopes to establish Chinese film as a major international force.

    The US$23 million (€16 million) production is the first to come under the umbrella of Cinema Popular (http://www.cinemapopular.com), a collaboration between Hong Kong producer-director Peter Chan, mainland Chinese producer Huang Jin-xin's We Pictures and China's Polybona International production house.

    And when Chan announced the film back in March, he made it crystal clear that it would be the first of many. "The Chinese market is growing at an astonishing rate,'' he said. "And the whole world is watching. We want to harness all the talent there is and start to produce films on a truly international scale.''

    Hence Bodyguards and Assassins has gathered the talents of Chen - a Hong Kong-based director who guided Jackie Chan in the Hollywood-funded Accidental Spy (2001) - and some of the biggest names in Chinese cinema, among them action star Donnie Yen, the veteran Wang Xueqi, Hong Kong heartthrob Nicolas Tse, acclaimed actor-singer Leon Lai and one of the most popular female actress in mainland China, Fan Bingbing.

    The film is set in the Hong Kong of 1905 and focuses on a group of bodyguards sent to protect the revolutionary hero Dr Sun Yat-sen from assassination.

    On Friday, Bodyguards and Assassins goes into wide-release throughout China - and its producers have been busy visiting film festivals in recent months trying to drum up support for an international release.

    Chinese cinema has been enjoying a record-breaking year in 2009 with - on average - a new theatre opening every day in mainland China. The locally produced epic The Founding of a Republic - made to the mark the 60th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic - in November became the highest-grossing film in the country's history, when it passed the 406 million yuan (€40 million) mark.

    More and more international filmmakers are looking to find a way to tap in to the mainland Chinese box office which is growing by 25 percent per year. In 2008, the country's cinema ticket sales were worth 4.3 billion yuan (€430 million).
    Bodyguards stars dish dirt
    Thu, Dec 17, 2009
    By Joy Fang

    VETERAN Hong Kong producer- director Peter Chan and Chinese actress Fan Bing Bing take no prisoners when it comes to talking about the people they have worked with.

    The two dished on subjects covering everything from Bodyguards And Assassins stars, to, well, plastic surgery.

    Both were in town yesterday, along with Hong Kong actor Tony Leung Ka Fai, 51, and Hong Kong director Teddy Chen, to promote the film.

    Chan, 47, revealed that it was not easy getting the stars together to make the movie. In fact, like James Cameron's Avatar, which took 15 years to reach fruition, it took a whopping 10 years before he could get started on Bodyguards.

    Sure, building the set - the largest life-size set of the early 1900s that Hong Kong studios have built - and securing funding were among many obstacles he had to face.

    But the major challenge came from getting the cast together.

    The film boasts an impressive line-up of major Asian stars, including Donnie Yen, Leon Lai, Wang Xueqi and Eric Tsang.

    "Movie stars are very reluctant to work in ensemble movies because they get compared (to one another)," said Chan, who spoke to reporters at Raffles City Convention Centre. "It has always been a difficult task to cast more than one male lead."

    Perhaps the most difficult to pin down for his role was Yen, the Hong Kong martial artist actor.

    Yen, 46, who has been in martial- arts movies for years, finally had his big break with Ip Man last year. He was cautious, said Chan, of his next move.

    "He's also a very sensitive person and a perfectionist in a way. And he's not very secure about himself as an actor. He would always come back and say, 'Can I look at the playback and can I do it again?' He keeps wanting to excel."

    Luckily for Chan, some stars were easier to persuade than others, one of them being Hong Kong-based actor and Cantopop singer Leon Lai, who was the first to commit to the film.

    "His role is very independent, so it's very self-contained in the way that he could actually take that role and not worry that he'll be overshadowed by anybody else," explained the film-maker.

    Lai plays Liu Yu-bai, or The Beggar, a washed-up opium addict living in destitution pining for a lost lover.

    Chan was not the only one open to dishing out information. Fan, 28, who plays a concubine in the film, was equally forthcoming when my paper asked about her relationship with Zhang Ziyi.

    Nasty rumours of petty catfights with Zhang, who produced Sophie's Revenge, which Fan starred in, had been flying around.

    But they are totally not true, said the starlet.

    "Our relationship is very good, we are very happy working together. Our generation of female actresses are actually quite united, because everyone hopes to work together for the movie to do well," she said.

    What about her take on plastic surgery? Fan was rumoured to have gone under the knife.

    And, in 2006, she went as far as to get a team of plastic surgeons to examine her face to disprove the rumours.

    "I wouldn't get plastic surgery done myself," she said. "My pain threshold is too low."

    But she added: "Women want to beautify themselves, it's natural. As long as they don't harm their bodies or go to extremes, I don't think it's a problem. A lot of Korean stars have done plastic surgery and it's nothing shameful," she said.

    But, all rumours and problems aside, Chan and Fan have a good thing going in Bodyguards. It's a big-budget movie that is being well-received by audiences. The movie was made on US$23 million (S$32 million), and is attracting buzz with its action sequences and intriguing premise.

    It was picked up for distribution in Britain, Canada and Korea last month at the American Film Market.

    "I really hope the audience likes this movie," said Chan.

    "Besides its action scenes, it's an emotional film, too. You will feel anxious, scared, touched and will cry.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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    One more

    Went over the word count on the last post...
    Finally! A great Chinese flick
    Thu, Dec 17, 2009
    By Tay Yek Keak

    I FLUNKED my Chinese-history test in school but, even then, I am quite sure that this thing in Bodyguards And Assassins didn't happen.

    I don't think that back in 1905, Sun Yat Sen, the Father of Modern China, was protected in Hong Kong by a gambler, a beggar, a rickshaw man, the winner of the 2005 Super Girl singing contest in China, and a super- tall giant who once won an NBA championship with the San Antonio Spurs.

    (I digress with the latter two, but the bios of pop star Li Yuchun and former hoops star Mengke Bateer, who play a gongfu gal and a street hawker respectively, are just too wild to ignore completely.)

    In Bodyguards And Assassins, fiction is incorporated with an actual historical figure and, boy, am I glad that it was done.

    The film is about a motley group of patriots protecting revolutionary leader Sun from lethal assassins sent by the Qing Empress.

    As the VVIP travels by rickshaw to secret meetings, they defend him stage by stage, like a poor man's version of the Secret Service.

    Now, you know how the saying goes, that the best things are always kept for the last?

    Well, unless an Oscar winner about the Yangtze River comes up between now and the end of this month, to me, this year's best China-Hong Kong film has been kept for the last.

    Now, I love Chinese-language films like Infernal Affairs, Perhaps Love and Comrades, Almost A Love Story, but I've been grumbling about the lack of good stories in such flicks lately.

    Case in point: the recent The Storm Warriors.

    But Bodyguards has restored my faith in the Speak Mandarin Campaign.

    Let me clarify. I'm not talking about Chinese arthouse films.

    Those are naturally marked up on quality - in terms of story, script, acting, setting, and tortured souls.

    I'm talking about commercial movies made for the entertainment of the least common denominator - films that allow a shallow, star-struck movie fan like me to get excited when Donnie Yen, Leon Lai, Nicholas Tse, Tony Leung Ka Fai, perpetual bad guy Hu Jun, and Eric Tsang (in his, I think, 1,000th movie) show up.

    Bodyguards combines three things that I like: historical personalities, martial arts, and a throwback to old action flicks - Eastern wuxia pian and spaghetti Westerns - where match-ups of good vs evil take place along the way as mini-showdowns.

    Kind of like Bruce Lee fighting his way up the pagoda against various opponents in Game Of Death, or Manchester United playing five teams to reach the FA Cup final.

    Actually, structure-wise, Bodyguards reminds me of a Bruce Willis movie called 16 Blocks, where copper Bruce protected valuable witness Mos Def from other corrupt cops.

    Bodyguards is a bit like that, except the heroes zip past shophouses and wonton-mee stalls.

    Now, the most significant thing about Bodyguards is the way the first half was devoted to fine acting fronted mainly by a seasoned China actor, Wang Xueqi, who plays the rich tycoon that puts the Band Of Brothers (and one sister) together.

    His face is etched with the dilemma of preserving his self interest or serving the greater good of the nation.

    I think the same quandary of to-be or not-to-be was posed in writing the story of Bodyguards.

    Luckily, in its mix of historical drama, fiction and action, it turned out really well.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
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    Quote Originally Posted by GeneChing View Post
    Who will be the first here to post their review?
    when can i expect this in my neck of the woods, or will i have to wait till i can buy it on dvd? i dont even see it on fandango
    For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.

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