King Hu's biography

It's only after the success of Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon that people realised King Hu left us. There were and there still are some traces and influences of his cinema in the works of the most acclaimed Hong-Kong directors. King Hu has probably lift the HK cinema to another level. His features were very much influenced by various art forms (dance, opera and painting), which he transcended by integrating them into his own work.

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King Hu (Wu Kam-Chen, 1931-1997)

BIOGRAPHY
King Hu (Wu Kam-Chen, 1931-1997)Born in 1931 in Beijing, King Hu (Wu Kam-Chen) seemed to have had experienced everything such as hosting radio programmes or editing Buddhist books. He was a left-winger militant when he studied at the Beijing Art School. He decided then to carry on studying in HK. He didn't know such decision would change his life. Indeed, China became communist and borders got shut. He then had to rethink about his political commitment and he spent time learning Cantonese. He took the opportunity to approach the local cinema world by various indirect means.

He became set designer and he and his friend Li Hangxiang painted posters and leaflets for cinemas. A few second roles later, King Hu followed Li at the Shaw Brothers. He worked there as an actor and a scriptwriter for almost ten years, and he then tried film direction thanks to Li, who had already made a name for himself as a movie director. On the set of The Love Eterne (1963), Li Hangxiang let Hu direct several scenes. Although King Hu wasn't credited as a second unit director (but he was as an actor), he directed all the action sequences. Li could therefore get concentrated on the romance between the characters. Tsui Hark, who enjoys exploring the Chinese cinema patrimony, remade the movie in 1994. He called it The Lovers (with Nicky Wu and Charlie Young).

The Love EterneThe Love Eterne

King Hu's first official movie was the period film The Sons Of The Good Earth. Not only he directed it but he also wrote the script. The pertinence of his style was, however, truly revealed in 1966 with Come Drink With Me. King Hu's first Wu Xia Pian (Chinese chivalry genre) was a huge success all over Asia and Chang Cheh even made a sequel in 1968: Golden Swallow. The same year, Chang Cheh made The Magnificent Trio. In a couple of years, both directors managed to bring up to date the HK cinema. Come Drink With Me was influenced by Japanese cinema like a fair portion of the Cantonese cinema at that time. The Shaw Brothers being very impressed by their moviemaking, sent some of their protégés to study on Japanese sets. The plot of Come Drink With Me focused on female characters. At the time, the true cinema stars were women (Hsu Feng, Chan Peipei among others), but they progressively disappeared in the seventies under the influence of Chang Cheh movies for instance. But King Hu ended up being the only director to still give women an important place in his films.

Sons Of The Good EarthCome Drink With MeDragon Gate Inn

Come Drink With Me was also the sign of Hu's break up with the Shaw Bros. His perfectionism and his desire to be independent were too strong to fit the Shaw Bros diktat. The following year, King Hu joined a small Taiwanese production company called Union. While Chang Cheh was directing The One Armed Swordsman, King Hu made The Dragon Gate Inn. Two years were enough to get rid of 30 years of Wu Xia Pian tradition. King Hu used the Cinemascope process and very complex camera movements, he appropriately mixed editing with choreography and music and he developed a pictorial sense of framing. The story was stunning as well: historical context, complex characters and plot. Despite a slow-paced introduction, the movie was a huge success at the box office. King Hu was finally acclaimed as a great director.

Such triumph allowed King Hu to finance his most ambitious project: A Touch Of Zen. He took him three years and lot of money to complete this masterpiece. Indeed, he cared for every single detail and worked at his own pace. A Touch Of Zen was originally supposed to be a ghost story, but it gradually became a political intrigue with such a philosophical and spiritual content rarely achieved in the rest of Hu's work. The movie was however badly cut by producers and released in two parts. A Touch Of Zen was released in 1971. It wasn't a great success but it gave King Hu the status of auteur. Shocked by the studio behaviour that mistreated the movie, King Hu left and came back to Hong-Kong where he established his own film production company King Hu Film Cie. Four years later, A Touch Of Zen was presented at the 1975 Cannes Film Festival and won the Technical Award. It took eleven years for producers and distributors to release A Touch Of Zen in France.

Hsu Feng in A Touch Of Zen

After A Touch Of Zen , Hu raised funds during 3 years in order to make The Fate Of Lee Khan (1973). It's his last Wu Xia Pian where the main intrigue takes place in an inn (favoured place for fights in traditional Wu Xia Pian, like in Dragon Gate Inn), and a film of which the story deals with spies. Indeed, Hu never really hid the fact that the James Bond success in HK bothered him. "I don't like James Bond. They made him a super hero, but he is just an agent, a human being. In my movies, secret agents are more realistic, I didn't want to portray them in the most glowing colours" : stated King Hu. Again, The Fate Of Lee Khan was distributed in France only in 1986, 13 years after it was made.
Two year later, Hu made The Valiant Ones (1975), and had much difficulties to finance it. His capricious-mood genius reputation was already well established.

The Fate Of Lee KhanThe Valiant Ones

In 1979, King Hu had finished his ambitious diptych Raining In The Mountain & Legend In The Mountain. The scenario was written by his wife and not by himself. Shot in location in Korea with the same cast and crew, both films tend to describe temptations and difficulties to accept one's condition, first from the human point of view and then from the ghost point of view. This diptych was most probably the peak of his career. The following films would be failures or actes manqués.

Legend Of The MountainRaining In The Mountain

King Hu's following films became less and less successful and he had increasing troubles to finance some more. The eighties were years of hassle for him. After seven years of aborted and delayed projects, Tsui Hark proposed King Hu to direct Swordsman for him, and allowed the old master to work behind the camera again. After all, Tsui Hark made a lot of tributes to King Hu in his own movies. Early nineties, the HK cinema industry has, however, changed a lot. What seemed a good idea at the beginning turned quickly into a nightmare. Tsui Hark got exasperated with King Hu's slow pace and Hu couldn't bear Tsui Hark interventionism and Ching Siu Tung's visual ideas. Finally King Hu was sacked. He was however still credited as director even if in the final cut, none of his scenes were kept. The eighties were therefore fatal for King Hu: the new wave changed the face of the local film industry and Hu wasn't able to fit in or to meet new challenges.

Painted Skin (1992) confirmed that the HK cinema had evolved without King Hu. A recurrent reproach to this movie was that it was considered as a copy of Tsui Hark's A Chinese Ghost Story because it dealt with ghosts and it starred Joey Wong. Actually, it's only a pale King Hu's movie but it's still far from being as bad as its reputation. It's just that it was already old-fashioned when it came out. At this time, the Wu Xia Pian pace was faster and faster and hysterical. Swordsman 2 was released the same year. King Hu slow pace didn't work any more.

SwordsmanPainted Skin

Exiled in the USA, King Hu tried until his death to sort out another film dealing with Chinese immigrants who built the American railways network. Ironically, King Hu died after gathering half of the money needed for the film production. This project isn't dead yet though, since John Woo and Terence Chang saved it and plan to make it with Chow Yun Fat and Nicolas Cage.

The death of King Hu in 1997 in Los Angeles, USA, almost went completely unnoticed. He has however written some of the most beautiful pages of the Asian cinema history in general and the Wu Xia Pian in particular. His one of the rare directors to have seen his own Wu Xia Pian winning an Award at Cannes, and he was also a director whose films, apart from his most prestigious ones, are still hardly accessible. Now it's time for local or worldwide distributors to mend this matter.

Written by David Aneas, May 2002.
Freely translated by Thomas December 2002.

See also King Hu's Swan Song: Raining In The Montain/ Legend of The Mountain

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Filmography

1962: The Mix Up (sc)
1963: The Love Eterne (2nd unit dir)
1964: The Story of Sue San (sc)
1965: Sons of the Good Earth (dir, sc)
1966: Come Drink With Me (dir, sc)
1966: Downhill They Ride (sc)
1967: Dragon Gate Inn (dir, sc, art dir.)
1970: Anger (2nd episode of The Four Moods, based on Sancha Kou opera, dir, sc)
1971: A Touch Of Zen (dir, sc, ed, art dir.)
1973: The Fate of Lee Khan (dir, sc, art dir.)
1975: The Valiant Ones (dir, prd, sc, art dir.)
1976 : Heroes Of The Underground (sc)
1979: Legend of the Mountain (dir, art dir., ed, costume designer)
1979: Raining in the Mountain (dir, sc, art dir., ed, costume designer)
1981: The Juvenizer (dir, prd, sc, ed)
1982: All The King's Men (dir, art dir., costume designer)
1983: The Wheel of Life (first episode) (dir)
1990: Swordsman (dir)
1992: The Painted Skin (dir, sc, ed)

dir : director, sc : scriptwriter, ed : editing, prd : producer

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Film Availability
The Love Eterne : VCD no subtitle, DVD (Chinese with English subtitles, out of stock)
Sons of the Good Earth :VHS (
Chinese with English subtitles) ed. Tai-Seng
Come Drink With Me : VHS (
Chinese with English subtitles) ed. Tai-Seng, DVD VOSTA ed. Celestial released 05/12/2002
Dragon Gate Inn : Japanese DVD (
Chinese with Japanese subtitles)
A Touch Of Zen : DVD released 10/12/2002 (
Chinese with English subtitles) ed. Tai-Seng; Korean DVD (Chinese with Korean subtitles) & Japanese DVD (Chinese with Japanese subtitles)
The Fate of Lee Khan : VHS (
Chinese with English subtitles) ed. Tai Seng & ed. Made In Hong Kong
The Valiant Ones : VHS (
Chinese with English subtitles) ed. Tai Seng
Legend of the Mountain :VCD no subtitle, HK DVD (
Chinese with English subtitles) ed. Winson
Raining in the Mountain : French VHS (
Chinese with French subtitles) ed. Films Sans Frontiéres, Japanese DVD (Chinese with Japanese subtitles)
Swordsman : HK DVD (
Chinese with English subtitles) ed. MegaStar
The Painted Skin : VCD, DVD & VHS (
Chinese with English subtitles) ed. Tai-Seng

 

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