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Thread: Rise of the Legend 黃飛鴻

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  1. #1
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    Rise of the Legend 黃飛鴻

    Edko to reboot Wong Fei-hung franchise
    By Kevin Ma
    Wed, 07 August 2013, 20:45 PM (HKT)

    Bill KONG 江志強's Edko Films Ltd 安樂影片有限公司 is rebooting the long-running Wong Fei-hung franchise with Rise of the Legend 黃飛鴻. News of the project first appeared today on the China government's latest list of approved film projects.

    Christine TO 杜緻朗, who co-wrote martial arts films Fearless 霍元甲 (2006) and True Legend 蘇乞兒 (2009), is listed as the scriptwriter. The short official synopsis implies that the story will be about a younger incarnation of the character.

    Wong Fei-hung (or Huang Feihong) was a real-life martial artist and physician who lived in Guangdong Province in the late Qing Dynasty. He is better known in Chinese culture as a folk hero who has been immortalised in over one hundred films.

    The character has been portrayed on screen by KWAN Tak-hing 關德興, Jackie CHAN 成龍 and both Jet LI 李連杰 (pictured) and Vincent ZHAO 趙文卓 in TSUI Hark 徐克's Once Upon a Time in China 黃飛鴻 (1991) series.

    The film is listed as a China-Hong Kong co-production between BDI Films Inc 北京數字印象文化傳播有限公司, Edko Films and Irresistible Delta Ltd 萬誘引力丁有限公司.
    Just one small missing detail...who is playing Wong?
    Gene Ching
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  2. #2
    Quote Originally Posted by GeneChing View Post
    Just one small missing detail...who is playing Wong?
    Keanu Reeves

    RZA if Keanu's unavailable.

  3. #3
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    Good one MB.

    But some additional info on this link as possible candidates....

    http://www.cityonfire.com/rise-of-th...to-the-screen/
    Quote Originally Posted by lkfmdc View Post
    point sparring is a great way to train

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    While I'm glad there's new KF projects in the works, I'm finding it a bit difficult to get very excited about the possible casting choices in China/HK films. These days, there isn't much of a pool of new talent to draw from at all. Mostly wushu athletes or pop idols (or non-MA actors).

    However, if they do choose a wushu athlete, the best for the role, IMO, would be Fan Siu-Wong. Even though he must be at least 40 now, he still looks very young. He also has very good charisma and could pull off southern style onscreen.

  5. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by Jimbo View Post
    While I'm glad there's new KF projects in the works, I'm finding it a bit difficult to get very excited about the possible casting choices in China/HK films. These days, there isn't much of a pool of new talent to draw from at all. Mostly wushu athletes or pop idols (or non-MA actors).

    However, if they do choose a wushu athlete, the best for the role, IMO, would be Fan Siu-Wong. Even though he must be at least 40 now, he still looks very young. He also has very good charisma and could pull off southern style onscreen.
    40's NOT OLD!!!

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    I know. I'm 50, but most people think I'm around 32-35. But the film is supposedly about Wong Fei-Hong's younger years, and believe it or not, 40 is usually considered "old" for actors in Asia.

  7. #7

    KungFu Movie Theater: Shaolin Legend


  8. #8

    Rise of legends

    Quote Originally Posted by Zombie King View Post
    This is rise of the legend, wong fei hung movie reboot

  9. #9
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    U.S. Theatrical release in March

    Very limited - from WellGoUSA



    US THEATER LOCATIONS

    March 11, 2016
    LOS ANGELES

    Arena Cinema
    1625 N Las Palmas Ave
    Hollywood, CA 90028
    (323) 306-0676

    AMC Atlantic Time Square
    450 N Atlantic Blvd
    Monterey Park, CA 91754
    (626) 407-0240

    CHICAGO

    AMC River East 21
    322 East Illinois Street
    Chicago, IL 60611
    (312) 596-0333

    HOUSTON

    AMC Studio 30
    2949 Dunvale
    Houston, TX 77063
    (713) 977-4431

    SAN FRANCISCO / BAY AREA

    Four Star
    2200 Clement St
    San Francisco, CA 94121
    (415) 666-3488

    CANADA THEATER LOCATIONS

    March 11, 2016
    OTTAWA

    Mayfair Theatre
    1074 Bank St
    Ottawa, ON K1S 3X3, Canada
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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  10. #10
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    Opens today!

    Very limited release above (maybe it expanded - I have not checked)

    Review: ‘Rise of the Legend,’ a Kung Fu Period Film
    Rise of the Legend
    By ANDY WEBSTER MARCH 10, 2016


    Eddie Peng in “Rise of the Legend.” Credit WellGo USA

    The blending of vast sets and digital effects is not quite seamless in Chow Hin Yeung’s kung fu period extravaganza “Rise of the Legend,” but it’s close. Revisiting the story of Wong Fei Hung, a martial arts master whose life has passed into Chinese folklore, “Legend” takes place in 19th-century Guangzhou, where two crime factions vie for control of the docks. This movie’s Guangzhou is a marvel: sprawling, detailed, abounding in narrow alleys and vivid street scenes.

    Alas, the plot and subplots are variations on time-honored Hong Kong cinema devices: The young Fei (played as an adult by Eddie Peng) grows up training alongside a buddy, Fiery (Jing Boran); both pine for the same woman, Chun (Wang Luodan), a minder of street waifs. Fei, a formidable warrior, is adopted by the kingpin Lei Gong (the kung fu movie veteran Sammo Hung), only to subvert his empire. When Chun and Fiery lead an insurrection and torch Lei Gong’s opium dens, furious but graceful brawls (orchestrated by the renowned fight choreographer Corey Yuen) erupt.

    Mr. Peng has charisma, though his moves are less convincing than those of an earlier Fei: Jet Li, in Tsui Hark’s 1991 classic “Once Upon a Time in China” (and less humorous than those of Jackie Chan, who played Fei in “The Legend of Drunken Master,” a.k.a. “Drunken Master 2,” from 1994). But “Legend” does offer the hefty authority of Mr. Hung, who at 64 can still — almost — hit, kick and do wire work with the best of them.

    Rise of the Legend

    Not rated

    In Mandarin and Cantonese, with English subtitles

    Running time: 2 hours 11 minutes
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  11. #11
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    Our latest sweepstakes

    Enter to win KungFuMagazine.com's contest for Rise of the Legend on DVD! Contest ends 5:30 p.m. PST on 6/06/2016
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  12. #12
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    Rise of the Legend

    Gene, I know there was already a thread about this somewhere but I couldn't find it, and I'm sure you'll merge this post with that thread.

    I enjoyed this movie. The action is pretty good, and I liked that it's set in the Qing Dynasty, like so many of the old-school KF films were. IMO, this was one of the more unusual takes on the Wong Fei-Hong story. I hadn't realized that the star Eddie Peng is not an experienced MAist, but had only trained MA for 6 months in preparation for the film, until I looked up his info. He was pretty convincing, although like most newer MA films, this one lacks the long, complex, single-shot sequences that require a relatively high degree of performance skill, as was often seen in the old Shaw Brothers films. The quick-shot nature of the fight scenes makes lots of sense if the star's actual MA abilities are limited.

    The film is beautifully shot, even including some shots from the fighters' POV. Action choreography-wise, this is some of Corey Yuen's best work, IMO. Corey Yuen isn't exactly one of my favorite choreographers, as he often runs hot and cold; sometimes his work is spectacular, but often it seems uninspired. Also, his fight scenes usually focus on mostly fancy leg maneuvers/kicking, and his fights often start off well but end inconclusively or in unspectacular fashion. In Rise of the Legend, Corey Yuen does not limit the action to kicking, but also features handwork, swords, staffs (staves?), etc. IMO, one of the best scenes in the movie features Wong Fei-Hong's best friend armed with a broadsword in an alleyway.

    Sammo Hung looks good as the villain and, while he obviously can't perform like he did at his peak, he still moves well and is convincing. He is assisted by wirework, which IMO he would have been better without. It looks a bit funny to see such a heavyset man floating about.

    I never felt that the film dragged too long at any point. Its story moves along at a fairly brisk pace. The cinematography is beautiful. Although I can't say I liked it as much as, say, the old Shaw Brothers flicks, in spite of its much bigger budget; that is mostly my own personal bias.
    Last edited by Jimbo; 07-12-2016 at 09:24 AM.

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