Without going out of your door,
You can know the ways of the world.
Without peeping through your window,
You can see the Way of Heaven.
The farther you go,
The less you know.
Thus, the Sage knows without travelling,
Sees without looking,
And achieves without Ado.
(tr. John C. Wu)
Well that's wisdom, but for real consolation, last night, in some sort of prescient synchronicity, I had a pleasant surprise. A movie released just this summer that I thought I might see or buy in China during my trip was made available on YouTube. I have been eager to see Vincent Zhao in The Great Wudang for over a year, when I first heard about it.
The Great Wudang |
Turning away from Episode 66 (of 77) of Yi San, my current Korean escape, I watched my favorite MA star in a kind of typical wuxia story, set in post-Qing/early Republican times. In the first few minutes, there is a kick-ass fight in an airplane flying over Hubei on the way to a martial arts competition at Wudangshan. Everything about it--the time, the plot, the romance, the quest--has led me to call it "Indiana Zhao and the Temple of Tao." (Vincent seems to be channeling Harrison Ford a little bit: motorcycles, leather coats, scholarly spectacles, and a daughter. No fedora. Or maybe there was. Need to watch again. And where was Sean Connery?)
Indiana Zhao |
It was nice to find it on You-tube just at this moment, and I'll probably watch it one more time before it disappears. Still, I'll buy it when my DVD vendor calls me and tells me she just got it in. Just for the locations, you know...and Vincent.
Vincent, where are you? |
2 comments:
Wow, that Wudang movie's already out on DVD? Saw it not so long ago in a cinema here in Hong Kong.
I wish I liked it more but there were bits that just were too laughable for me -- done more for style than any substance or logic. (The prime example being the fight in the library when suddenly paper like confetti came to fill the air.)
However, yes, Zhao Wenzhao (or Chiu Man Cheuk, as I had known him as first -- back in the early 1990s) was very watchable in it. ;b
No, I watched on Youtube!!! It may still be there. I loved it only for Vincent and the setting. It was silly in some ways, but Zhao has style, although he is clearly aging a little and from what I hear getting a little petulant. (Who tells Donnie Yen what to do?)
Post a Comment