LMD: Mr. Leung, this was your first kung fu film, but you broke your arm twice during production, how likely are you to
do another kung fu movie?
Not exact matches
Honestly, if you think this is the best
kung fu movie ever made, your brain will explode if you watch Drunken Master the original and there are a lot better
kung fu movies than that, that don't constantly resort to slapstick without a moment of seriousness.
Say what you will about Tarantino's loving appropriation of B -
movie tropes, grindhouse thematics, and
kung -
fu culture, but don't be so quick to overlook the second installment's characterization, a cagey evolutionary leap from the frenetic, hack - and - slash avatar development of Vol.
John Woo, for example — who Chan last worked with more than 30 years ago, when both were
doing cheap
kung -
fu movies — is an old hand at this kind of neo noir.
Powell is refreshingly forthright in his assessment of
kung fu movies and Chinese cinema at large, and he
does little to hide his frustration with certain aspects of production.
He loves her for who she is (a lady who loves
kung -
fu movies) not what she
does (hooker).