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  1. Ching Siu Tung - Fantastic Action
    Written By James Mudge
    High-flying martial arts heroes, magical wuxia duels and supernaturally tinged romances have long been trademarks of Hong Kong Cinema, especially during the heady days of the 1980s when imagination and wacky creativity seemed to be the main forces driving the industry. One of the key figures in this movement is Tony Ching Siu Tung, a director, producer, action choreographer and actor whose career of more than forty years has seen him involved in some of the most important and influential films to have emerged from the genre. Working his way steadily up the ladder and picking up an impressive number of awards along the way, Ching has gone from strength to strength, and remains one of the top... [read more]
  2. Many new terms pop up in common lingo every year in Japan, and those interested in Japanese pop culture are no doubt familiar with the term "Ikemen". The term came into popular usage around 2000 as an expression to describe attractive young men who are of course plentiful in the Japanese entertainment industry. The Origin of Ikemen Starting around 2000, television stations started reaching out to a wider audience range by casting new-generation male artists in the leading or supporting roles of the traditionally male-oriented Kamen Rider, tokusatsu, and ranger superhero shows. With their handsome appearances and sharp images, these young actors won over many female viewers and created an... [read more]
  3. Banned in China
    Written By James Mudge
    As China gradually opens itself to the world, particularly during and after the 2008 Beijing Olympics, certain aspects of the country's culture and governance have inevitably come under far greater international scrutiny. One such area that has caused no end of bemusement and consternation is the activities of the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television (SARFT), the Chinese censors who have rapidly become notorious around the world for their strictness, and for their predilection for banning productions, which, to the casual observer at least, may seem wholly innocuous. This has manifested itself in a number of high-profile examples of Hollywood blockbusters falling foul of the... [read more]
  4. The Ever-living Anita Mui
    Written By Mike Crandol
    There's a certain bittersweet irony that in Rouge, Anita Mui's most acclaimed film role, the star plays a ghost from Hong Kong's bygone past lingering into the present day. It's been almost five years since the world lost the 40-year-old Anita Mui Yim Fong to complications from cervical cancer, yet in Hong Kong - and indeed the entire Chinese-speaking world - the woman once dubbed "The Madonna of Asia" continues to be an almost palpable presence. Countless memorial shrines, compilation CDs, even a Mainland TV biopic have kept her spirit alive and center-stage in the East Asian pop cultur442e landscape. In life her flashy, constantly evolving onstage personas earned her another nickname -... [read more]
  5. Lee Byung Hun - Man of the World
    Written By James Mudge
    With the seemingly never ending popularity of the Korean Wave continuing to flourish, a number of stars have become household names both at home and all around Asia. Korean television dramas in particular have proved to be a huge success, elevating certain male actors to heartthrob status, especially in Japan. However, Lee Byung Hun is one of the select few who can truly claim to have achieved global stardom, having won over audiences not only in Korea and Asia, but also in the West, with several promising Hollywood roles lined up, and being the only one of his countrymen to currently have US agent representation - no small feat in an industry notoriously resistant to all but the biggest of... [read more]
  6. Not Just The Other Tony Leung
    Written By James Mudge
    When hearing the name Tony Leung, viewers would be forgiven for automatically thinking of Tony Leung Chiu Wai, the internationally acclaimed, sad-eyed Hong Kong star of In the Mood for Love, Hero, Infernal Affairs, and more recently Lust, Caution. However, particularly in recent years, the name is equally likely to be used in reference to another Tony Leung, namely Tony Leung Ka Fai, whose twenty-five year career has seen him grace the screen in nearly a hundred productions. Those confused by the similarity in English names may find it helpful to know that the two are often differentiated by nicknames, with Tony Leung Chiu Wai having been dubbed "Little Tony" and Tony Leung Ka Fai "Big... [read more]
  7. Beauty and wisdom have long been the tagline for beauty pageants, but for the past 25 years, Miss Hong Kong Pageant winners have added their own requirement to the list: heart. In 1982, a group of Miss Hong Kong titleholders and finalists united to form the Wai Yin Association, a charitable organization dedicated to community service, philanthropy, cultural activities, supporting the arts, and promoting Hong Kong's international image. With all the members being former beauty pageant contestants, Wai Yin Association is the only certified charitable organization of its kind in the world. In 2007, Wai Yin carried out a series of special charity events and commemorative activities to celebrate... [read more]
  8. Although since they first opened their doors, Chinese cinemas have been ringing with the clash of swords, the righteous battle cries of noble, exquisitely garbed heroes and the evil laughter of beard stroking, cape swirling villains, of late the clamor has been particularly loud. Indeed, audiences at home and abroad would be forgiven for thinking that China's cinematic output consists for the most part of martial arts historical costume epics. Certainly, almost all of the country's big name and internationally lauded directors have tried their hand at the genre, even those perhaps better known for arthouse and humanistic cinema. The budgets for these films have grown ever bigger, packing in... [read more]
  9. Say "Takashi Miike," and most people immediately think of severed limbs, bullet-ridden corpses, ruthless yakuza hitmen, coke-addled whores, and maybe a dancing zombie or two. Modern Japanese Cinema's most infamous auteur, Miike is renowned at home and abroad for elevating the dark and violent themes that had been lurking in the flickering shadows of Japan's moviehouses since the 1960s into a kind of gloriously gory pop art. Not so obtuse as Seijun Suzuki, and defter than Terou Ishii, Miike and his movies descend into the darkest corners of the human psyche with an almost childlike sense of wonder. What ends up on the screen frequently disturbs, but also unabashedly entertains. The sheer... [read more]
  10. Japanese rock band L'Arc-en-Ciel recently wrapped up their TOUR 2008 L'7 ~Trans ASIA via PARIS~. Held from April 19 to June 8, the world tour brought L'Arc-en-Ciel to Shanghai, Seoul, Hong Kong, Taipei, Paris, Tokyo, and finally full circle back to Osaka, where the band first began their musical journey 17 years ago. In close to two decades of ups and downs, this Japanese aesthetic rock band has grown from a Kansai indie to a world-class act. There is, of course, a reason I'm describing L'Arc-en-Ciel as "aesthetic rock" instead of "visual rock". In 1999, the host of Japanese music program Pop Jam repeatedly called L'Arc-en-Ciel a "visual kei band", a label that the band strongly resists.... [read more]
  11. Among the Chinese pop artists that emerged during the early 2000s R&B renaissance, no one has found success in as many forms of mass media as Jay Chou. In his ten years in the entertainment industry, he has become one of the biggest pop acts in Asian music and one of the most successful young actors in Asian Cinema as well. He's even become one of the most successful young directors in contemporary Chinese Cinema with a hit debut film. And to think - he started his entertainment career as a failing contestant on a talent show. Musical Pioneer - Jay Chou the Musician Jay Chou began to play the piano from the age of 4 and even majored in piano in high school, where he began writing songs.... [read more]
  12. Kon Ichikawa: The Great Adaptor
    Written By Mike Crandol
    For international audiences, Kon Ichikawa - who passed away February 13, 2008 - might be called the Ringo Starr of the great Golden Age Japanese film directors. In the West, at least, Ichikawa is a name that does seem destined to remain eclipsed by the likes of Akira Kurosawa, Masaki Kobayashi, and Yasujiro Ozu. But the Japanese have long recognized and celebrated Ichikawa's invaluable contribution in forging the identity of their national cinema. If Kurosawa, Kobayashi, and Ozu were auteuristic luminaries working within clearly defined boundaries, Ichikawa was the master-of-all-trades. His work spans six decades and virtually every genre of filmmaking imaginable. Comedies, mysteries, sci-fi... [read more]
  13. Although Zhang Yimou, Chen Kaige, and even the determinedly arthouse Jia Zhangke are better known around the world, Feng Xiaogang is arguably the most popular director and the biggest box office draw in China. After ten years of directing domestic blockbusters that have never quite managed to find an international audience, this woeful situation is finally starting to change, with his lavish 2006 costume drama The Banquet winning a belated Western release under the bizarrely misleading martial arts title Legend of the Black Scorpion, and his latest film Assembly breathing life back into the Asian war genre and introducing viewers in the West to his considerable talents. Feng has progressed... [read more]
  14. X Japan's Music Revolution
    Written By Kitazawa
    To the average Japanese family, NHK's Kohaku Uta Gassen ("Red and White Song Battle") aired on the night of December 31, 1997 was just the 47th installment of the popular annual New Year's countdown music event. But for fans of Japanese pop and rock music, the night marked the final performance of a band representing the white team. The band bowed out with one last song titled Forever Love. That band was X Japan. One of Japan's most representative and legendary bands, X Japan is a name of great interest for both music fans and academic scholars alike. The band's effect on Japanese music can be rightfully described as a series of revolutions. From their official major debut on April 21, 1989... [read more]
  15. When asked to name an iconic image of Hong Kong Cinema, what springs to mind? Bruce Lee, trampling that "No Dogs or Chinese Allowed" sign in Fists of Fury? Chow Yun Fat jumping through the air in slow-motion, two guns blazing in Hard Boiled? Jackie Chan almost breaking his neck in any number of movies, perhaps? All good choices, but can any of them compare with the visual poetry of Joey Wong suspended from a wire, gracefully gliding across the night sky in her long, flowing robes in A Chinese Ghost Story? It's an unforgettable image that sent massive shockwaves through the Hong Kong film industry, as anyone who's seen any of the innumerable knockoffs of A Chinese Ghost Story can attest to.... [read more]
  16. M for Noir
    Written By X
    In chiaroscuro, between shadows and light, an ambiguous figure comes out to greet us. Is that a smile, or the mask of a double-faced man who'd rather die than reveal what he's thinking? From the moment Orson Welles made his world-famous entrance in Carol Reed's masterpiece The Third Man, noir has been mysteriously shrouded in shades of black and white. The more famous quote about Switzerland and the cuckoo clock are still quintessential noir, of course, but they hardly stand up to the shadowplay's challenge. Visual and emotional ambiguity has always been noir's biggest charm, and this is what sets the stage for Korean filmmaker Lee Myung Se's latest film M. When did noir start in the West?... [read more]
  17. Although in an election year it might seem a little frivolous, there were few instances in 2007 that surpassed the controversy and fervor created by Shim Hyung Rae's blockbuster monster flick D-War (a.k.a. Dragon Wars). Director Shim, oh-so-much smarter than he makes people believe on TV or print interviews, ended up running away with the cheese while supporters and critics of his film were fighting under his nose. Although even non-Koreans might already be familiar with the director of Yonggary and D-War, an introduction is necessary to understand a little better what happened. Shim Hyung Rae is perhaps one of the two or three representative Korean comedians of the 1980s, becoming a star... [read more]
  18. Spring of 1980. Gwangju, South Korea. The breeze of late spring blew through the southern city, over the river of billboards and the perky sounds of green cabs. Color broadcasting had only started a few months earlier, and televisions could be seen airing baseball. Or maybe a little horror, with the virgin ghosts of KBS program Hometown of Legends predating Sadako's screams and chronic back pains by a good few moons. The residents of Gwangju were just living out their small, everyday routines, but what happened from May 18, 1980 changed their lives in ways they could have never imagined. These everyday people, those few fateful days, are the focus of Kim Ji Woon's 2007 blockbuster May 18.... [read more]
  19. Ayumi Hamasaki Against the Music
    Written By Kitazawa
    On April 8, 1998, B'z, one of Japan's most representative bands, released their 24th single and successfully took the number one spot on the Oricon charts again. On that same day, a 19-year-old female singer named Ayumi Hamasaki who had struggled in the entertainment industry for a few years released her debut single. The single peaked modestly at number 20 on the Oricon charts. At the time, neither she nor her mentor and producer Max Matsuura could have possibly known that this was only the beginning of a fairy-tale journey for both them and Japanese pop music. It is not possible to talk about the past decade of Japanese pop music without mentioning Ayumi Hamasaki. In the past ten years,... [read more]
  20. The Lure of Old Shanghai
    Written By James Mudge
    The Chinese film industry has always been best known internationally for wuxia and martial arts productions, from the films of the famous Shaw Brothers studio during the 1960s and 1970s through to recent hits such as Ang Lee's Oscar-winning Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon or Zhang Yimou's luscious epics Hero and Curse of the Golden Flower. Over the last couple of decades, however, another genre has been rising in prominence to rival its popularity, namely that of the Shanghai nostalgia piece. This form sees filmmakers attempting to evoke memories of the glory years of the 1930s through to the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, a time during which Shanghai flourished as the... [read more]
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