Ashes Of Time

The early nineties was the period of the return of Kung Fu genre to HK theatres. Producers proposed Wong Kar Wai to direct a Wu Xia Pian (Chivalry movie genre). He agreed since he has always been a great fan of such traditional genre. He decided to adapt Louis Cha's (aka Jin Yong) modern martial art novel: The Eagle Shooting Hero.

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CREDIT
HONGKONG/ October 1994
Literally
: Evil East Poison West. Written by: Jin Yong "The Eagle Shooting Hero". Freely adapted and directed by: Wong Kar-wai. Producer: Tsai Mu-ho. Excecutive Producer: Shu Kei. Director of Photography: Christopher Doyle. Action Director: Samo Hung. Art Director: William Chang Suk-ping. Editor: William Chang Suk-ping, Kai Kit-wai, Patrick Tam Kar-ming, Kwong Chi-leung. Music: Frankie Chan, Roel A. Garcia.
Starring: Leslie Cheung Kwok-wing (Ouyang Feng), Tony Leung Kar-fai (Huang Yaoshi), Jacky Cheung Hok-yau (Hong Qi), Brigitte Lin Chin-hsia (Murong Yin, Murong Yang), Tony Leung Chiu-wai ( Blind Sworsman), Carina Lau Kar-ling, Maggie Cheung Man-yuk, Charlie Young et Li Bai.
Running Time: 92 min. BO in HK: from 17/09/94 to 12/10/94. 34th out of 164 (1st: God of Gamblers Return).
Gross: HK$ 9,023,583  (Best gross HK$ 52,529,768). Awards: Best Cinematography to Chris Doyle (Venise, 94), Best Costum design to William Chang at the Hongkong Film Festival Awards 1994.

Inspirations
Ashes Of Time is considered as an unofficial sequel to Wong Kar Wai second feature Days Of Being Wild.

Wong Kar Wai original idea was to deal with the daily life of a man in the desert. For the story he was inspired mostly by literature and traditional Chinese novels. Ashes Of Time (AOT) is not only a free adaptation of the novel The Eagle Shooting Hero but it is also an adaptation of the fantasy world created by writer Louis Cha. Little by little, Wong Kar Wai freed himself from the novel and eventually he only kept the main characters such as Ouyang Fen and Huang Yaoshi, he got rid of some characters, he invented new ones and he mixed them with some from other novels. Wong Kar Wai's second inspiration was Taiwanese writer Gu Long. Gu Long is as famous as Louis Cha but he is more modern. Gu Long has inspired and still inspires a lot of HK directors.
As for the formal aspect of AOT, South American writers were the main source of inspiration for Wong Kar Wai, i.e. Gabir Garcia Marquez or Manuel Puig. Wong Kar Wai understood that it was possible to create an original story with a fragmented narrative structure with no apparent chronological order.
As for the fight design, Wong Kar Wai was influenced by Japanese cinema, Chang Cheh movies and Kung Fu and Fantasy Cantonese movies from the sixties. Wong Kar Wai wanted to find a new style of action and a kind of editing far from all the Wu Xia Pian made at this time, most of them copying Tsui Hark wonderful flying fights. Sammo Hung was hired as action director made fight scenes with outrageous action. Some moves were surprisingly shot off frame, with a hectic camera work and an incredible editing job. All this has contributed to the worldwide fame of AOT, which was then perceived as a re-definition a la Sergio Leone of the traditional Wu Xia Pian genre.

Conception
A perfect location had to be found regarding the type of the film and its budget. Wong Kar Wai's solution was the Chinese desert, which could offer sumptuous wild locations. Wong Kar Wai's team was looking for the landscapes depicted in the Chinese novels that inspired him for a while. It wasn't really successful until one day. Wong Kar Wai was shown pictures off the place where Leslie Cheung had recently moved in. He sent art director William Chang for scouting location. The main location was eventually found this way.
To re-create the world of AOT, which is not a genuine historical movie, Wong Kar Wai didn't do any research. He is indeed pretty familiar with this world. He is a great fan of Cantonese cinema since childhood, and he knows by heart Chang Cheh and King Hu's movie worlds. Plus, he spent a great deal of time reading martial art novels, and he was used as well to listen to Kung Fu series broadcast on local radio. This is may be why Wong Kar Wai is so keen on voice over monologues, which are present in most of his movies. Moreover, old Kung Fu flicks are still broadcast late at night on TV in HK and are a constant source of references. In the process of creation of the AOT atmosphere Wong Kar Wai had only one restriction: authenticity. He didn't want to include any element appearing after the period of the Soong Dynasty (12th century). As for dialogues, he didn't use any slang, modern vocabulary or old Chinese either.

Actors
Wong Kar Wai likes to know the actors and actresses he works with. They help him to direct and to create the story. He cast Brigitte Lin as the schizophrenic Murong Yin /Yan. Early nineties she rose to fame playing androgynous warriors in numerous movies (e.g. Swordsman) and she has mastered her sexual ambiguity image. Wong Kar Wai found interesting to use her image to the extremes. The blind swordsman couldn't be anyone other than Tony Leung Chiu Wai since as for Wong Kar Wai he is short and he has the right look to play an ancient and very masculine warrior. Very famous actors were cast as well, i.e. Tony Leung Kar Fai, Jacky Cheung, Carina Lau, Maggie Cheung and Charlie Young.

Over-lengthy shooting
Although Wong Kar Wai had a comfortable budget of HK$ 40 millions to make AOT and plenty of time, things didn't go that smoothly. He had to manage on his own the crew plus a cast full of stars in a hostile environment far from the air-conditioned studios of HK. He had to work as well following the hectic schedules of all the stars (they were busy with other commercials, concerts, TV series, movies, radio series…). Wong Kar Wai had to conceal two opposite sides of the movie business. To attract a large audience in order to recoup the cost of production was of first importance while delivering a personal movie was of equal importance since he refused to make a mere commercial feature. Wong Kar Wai added as well his personal themes and obsessions (loneliness, existentialism questions…). The ideas of rejection and treason developed in AOT are indeed the main lines of his work.

As usual, Wong Kar Wai shot following his instinct. He reckons now that he included in this feature all that he knew and thought of the cinema. He once stated that he tried to tell too much in a very short lapse of time and he therefore involuntarily made a complex film. So the production got late and eventually went over budget despite all his precautions. AOT took eventually two years to be completed.

Waiting for the post-sync-sound team, Wong Kar Wai took a two-month break. From this moment of relief Wong Kar Wai created one of his greatest masterpieces: Chungking Express.


Written by Thomas in 1999, translated and updated Mai 2002.


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