General
Bruce Lee self-guided Tours (work in progress)
Friday, May 31, 2024
Royal Warriors - Michelle Yeoh (1986) - Lycée Français International French International School, Jardines Lookout
Thursday, May 30, 2024
Royal Warriors - Michelle Yeoh (1986) - Hill Road, Shek Tong Tsui
Credit where credit is due and I am still finding Dandan's Hong Kong on Film blog very useful even ten years after its indefinite hiatus began. This is the location of the baddy's ("Raging Bull" played by Lam Wai) hideout as he finds out about the failure of the plane hijack. It was located at 63 Hill Road but was demolished probably not long after filming and the current building in its place, Fortune Villa, was constructed in 1990. For those who don't read Chinese, the wooden sign hanging on the front simply says "For Rent".
Wednesday, May 29, 2024
Royal Warriors - Michelle Yeoh (1986) - Kai Tak Airport
So here we are, 35 years later (give or take) and I have just rewatched it - the first time since then - and I have to say that, fashions aside, it holds up really well, probably helped by the fact that Hiroyuki Sanada has been kick-ass for a very long time (and still is!!).
Anyway, for those who haven't seen it, the film follows the tribulations of three police officers (Yeoh, Sanada and Michael Wong) who get snarled up in a plane hijack on the way from Japan to Hong Kong. A gang of criminals have conspired to help free their incarcerated buddy (Chan Wai-man) who is being extradited back to Hong Kong and all hell breaks loose. The rest of the film details how the remaining gang member tries to kill them in revenge for the ruined plan. As you would expect, the Hong Kong part of the story begins as the heroic trio's plane lands back in Hong Kong. Cue Kai Tak footage...
Tuesday, May 28, 2024
We're Going to Eat You - Norman Chui (1980) - Tang Chung Ling Ancestral Hall, Lung Yeuk Tau
The area used for the slaughterhouse is actually a walled courtyard on the east side of the hall. You can see the outside of it on GoogleEarth here. Being a Tsui Hark film, we get a plethora of weird angles from low to high, so I've just included the more conventional views in the screen caps below.
The alleyway connecting the entrance to the courtyard is indeed an alleyway connecting this courtyard to the front of the hall. It's formed by the main hall structure and a couple of lower side blocks (one of which can be see in the courtyard grabs above). Remember, in the film the front entrance was actually shot over at Lo Wai (literally a minute's walk away).
And lastly we can see the main courtyard inside the hall where all the meetings take a place and is also the same location where the finale was shot as the remaining survivors set off fireworks as they rollerskate around avoiding the horde. This area is the one that is usually open to visit as part of the heritage trail.
Monday, May 27, 2024
We're Going to Eat You - Norman Chui (1980) - Tin Hau Temple and Courtyard, Lung Yeuk Tau
Sunday, May 26, 2024
We're Going to Eat You - Norman Chui (1980) - Lo Wai, Lung Yeuk Tau
Saturday, May 25, 2024
We're Going to Eat You - Norman Chui (1980) - Rocky Harbour, Sai Kung
Despite the opening shot being of Shing Mun Reservoir, when the next shots show the two unfortunate initial victims of the villagers after they have arrived by boat, they are looking at their departing boat as it makes its way across Rocky Harbour - the northern section of Port Shelter in Sai Kung, just off the north tip of Kau Sai Chau.
Friday, May 24, 2024
We're Going to Eat You - Norman Chui (1980) - Shing Mun Reservoir
The story concerns a village where the inhabitants are cannibals and trap unwary travellers, murdering them and then chopping them up for distribution amongst the villagers. It's a bit gruesome in parts but is most definitely a satricial comedy (a criticism of China's "Great leap Forward"). Melvin Wong stars as the reformed bandit, Rolex, who is sought after by Norman Chui's "Agent 999". Eddie Ko plays a rather evil village boss.
The film opens with a shot of the submerged trees at Shing Mun Reservoir and it's supposed to be the coastline of the plaace where the cannibalistic village is. However, I'm not sure how much subsequent filming was done here. Most of the forested scenes in this film make it impossible to know where they were.
Thursday, May 23, 2024
Cosa Nostra Asia - Chris Mitchum (1974) - Cross Harbour Tunnel
Wednesday, May 22, 2024
Cosa Nostra Asia - Chris Mitchum (1974) - Hung Hom Interchange, Hung Hom
Perhaps the producer, Bobby Suarez, had some obsession with this view of Hong Kong because it was repeated in They Call Her Cleopatra Wong a few years later. The images in that old post though are much better quality (taken from a DVD print).
Tuesday, May 21, 2024
Cosa Nostra Asia - Chris Mitchum (1974) - Kai Tak Airport
My local, more knowledgable friend has suggested the following, feel free to correct if necessary: "First sequence looks like a KLM DC-8-63 in 'white top' livery. The second one is either a DC-8 or 707...The third is an Alitalia DC-8, just based on the fact that Alitalia didn't fly 707s until later".
The second sequence looks very likely it was shot from the top of Checkerboard Hill because it looks like the swimming pools in Kowloon Tsai Park at the bottom of the frame.
The final sequence was filmed from the north side of the runway with Hong Kong Island in the background.