Showing posts with label Fei Ngo Shan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fei Ngo Shan. Show all posts
Monday, August 25, 2025
Police Force - Wang Chung (1973) - Fei Ngo Shan
Following his victory in the karate competition, Ling Kuan (Fu Sheng) and Shen Yan (Lily Li), go up to Kowloon Peak to take some photos when they are accosted by the two thugs. The main thug, Kao Tu (Wang Kuang-yu), has just watched Liang win the karate tournament and so he ties his hands to stop him fighting back properly.
Following the attack, the sequence moves to the north side of the hill, close to where Gillwell Camp is located. In fact. the green painted sign seen in the images below *might* be an old sign to the camp. Although I'm not sure. The sign has long gone but that small area looks fairly similar today. The images below are all taken from the same spot but looking in two directions See here. It's now all part of the Wilson Trail Stage 4.
Saturday, March 1, 2025
Karate from Shaolin Temple - Kazuma Kenji (1976) - Fei Ngo Shan Road, Kowloon
After leaving the Yuen Yuen Institute, Musashi is undergoing a personal crisis as he grapples with whether or not he should be helping Wu. The following sequence was shot at the junction between Fei Ha Road and Fei Ngo Shan Road. Musashi is stopped by one of Wu's friends, Chang (Gwan Jing-leung) who asks him to try and find out some information for them about the bosses movements. However, the pair are spotted by a couple of the boss's henchmen.
The first image below shows the view down Fei Ha Road as Chang races to catch up with Musashi. The following images shows the junction as the car turns around on the curve. The final image shows what was the art-deco style property at #6 Fei Ngo Shan Road in the background. Remember that property because it will pop up in another film I have lined up after this one.
The first image below shows the view down Fei Ha Road as Chang races to catch up with Musashi. The following images shows the junction as the car turns around on the curve. The final image shows what was the art-deco style property at #6 Fei Ngo Shan Road in the background. Remember that property because it will pop up in another film I have lined up after this one.
Looking down Fei Ha Road from the junction
Saturday, March 23, 2024
Come Drink With Me - Cheng Pei-pei (1966) - Fei Ngo Shan Road, Kowloon Peak
This image shows the cutting I have referred to previously, where the road crosses the ridge from one side to the other. The district boundary runs along the road here so the group are moving from Sai Kung District into Wong Tai Sin District. It wouldn't surprise me if King Hu just turned his camera around at this spot to film this earlier view. Once again, Google maps is messing with my marker locations so the one below is not where I placed the pin (click on the location at the bottom of the post). It's close enough but this is a recurring issue I have with Googlemap pins, especially so in more remote locales.
Friday, March 22, 2024
Come Drink With Me - Cheng Pei-pei (1966) - Fei Ngo Shan Road, Kowloon Peak
Continuing on Kowloon Peak, the next shot clearly shows the view along the Kowloon ridgeline towards Beacon Hill in the distance. The two-pronged peak just before Beacon Hill is, of course, Lion Rock. You can see a very similar view here, in Heisser Hafen Hongkong. The group of actors would have been standing near the cutting where the road crosses from one side of the ridge to the other.
Saturday, September 2, 2023
Bloodfight - Yasuaki Kurata (1989) - View from Kowloon Peak
Another part of Masa's training involves him running up the slope of the Kowloon Peak. The camera was located in the popular spot where Fei Ngo Shan Road switches from the south (Kowloon) side of the ridgeline to the north side, near the Kowloon Peak viewing point.
Saturday, July 8, 2023
The Seventh Sin - Eleanor Parker (1957) - Fei Ngo Shan Road, Kowloon
The Seventh Sin is a 1957 remake of The Painted Veil written by W. Somerset Maugham. It was directed by Ronald Neame, who incidentally also directed two other films I have covered in the blog: Gambit and Meteor.
It stars Eleanor Parker as Carol, the unhappy wife of a doctor in post-war Hong Kong who is caught in her infidelity by her husband and given an ultimatum to accompany him into Mainland China to help him in his medical work in a remote village.
Initially I thought this would be another library-footage-film with some typical stock footage of Hong Kong, but it looks as though there was an actual second unit here in HK filming location shots, albeit without the real actors. I could be wrong and haven't delved enough yet but the Hong Kong footage here almost certainly was specially shot for this film. For scenes involving the characters, it's very much in the same method that Neame used for his Kowloon shots in Gambit, i.e. a stand-in who is always too far away, or facing away from the camera, to be properly identified.
The film opens with an expansive view across Kowloon towards the western harbour and although the opening credits obscure the view somewhat, it does crop up again later in a scene as the husband (played by Bill Travers) returns home in his car with the camera at the exact same location.
The switchback in the road, coupled with the general view and presence of Lion Rock on the right hand side of the screen, means that this was shot where Jat's Incline joins with Fei Ngo Shan Road on Kowloon Peak.
It stars Eleanor Parker as Carol, the unhappy wife of a doctor in post-war Hong Kong who is caught in her infidelity by her husband and given an ultimatum to accompany him into Mainland China to help him in his medical work in a remote village.
Initially I thought this would be another library-footage-film with some typical stock footage of Hong Kong, but it looks as though there was an actual second unit here in HK filming location shots, albeit without the real actors. I could be wrong and haven't delved enough yet but the Hong Kong footage here almost certainly was specially shot for this film. For scenes involving the characters, it's very much in the same method that Neame used for his Kowloon shots in Gambit, i.e. a stand-in who is always too far away, or facing away from the camera, to be properly identified.
The film opens with an expansive view across Kowloon towards the western harbour and although the opening credits obscure the view somewhat, it does crop up again later in a scene as the husband (played by Bill Travers) returns home in his car with the camera at the exact same location.
The switchback in the road, coupled with the general view and presence of Lion Rock on the right hand side of the screen, means that this was shot where Jat's Incline joins with Fei Ngo Shan Road on Kowloon Peak.
Sunday, February 19, 2023
Police Story 2 - Jackie Chan (1988) - Tate's Pass, Fei Ngo Shan
The bad guys take the explosives supplier up Kowloon Peak to interrogate him about the police. This one was a right pain to find but I was helped along the way by the remains of Pillbox 126 - one of the pre-war remnants of the British defences. You can see it, or at least its remains, in the foreground below. This is actually part of the Wilson Trail (stage 4) in case you ever get the urge to go hiking.
Wednesday, January 6, 2021
Election - Simon Yam (2005) - Fei Ngo Shan, Kowloon
Fei Ngo Shan (Flying Goose Hill) is the Chinese name for Kowloon Peak and this is the place where Big D (Tony Leung) takes the two people he feels are responsible for his election loss, seals them into wooden packing crates, and then repeatedly pushes them down the hill. Okay, not strictly at the peak, but along the ridgeline a little to the west from the actual peak, not far from the pavilion where Fei Ngo Shan Road switches through a cutting from the north, New Territories-side of the ridge to the south Kowloon-side.
The exact location is a little way back west from the viewing point and only a short walk from Fei Ngo Shan Road. I've tried my best to mark it in the location link at the bottom of the post, but I've just noticed it keeps snapping to the road a bit further north. So you'll just have to take it as an approximate location for now.
The exact location is a little way back west from the viewing point and only a short walk from Fei Ngo Shan Road. I've tried my best to mark it in the location link at the bottom of the post, but I've just noticed it keeps snapping to the road a bit further north. So you'll just have to take it as an approximate location for now.
Friday, February 9, 2018
Sunday, June 18, 2017
Red Dragon - Stewart Granger (1965) - Fei Ngo Shan Road, Kowloon Peak
Another car chase that ends up at the top of Kowloon Peak. I won't go sdo far as to say this film is a bit of a copycat of other German productions, but we have already had a car crashing into Lung Ha Wan courtesy of Weiße Fracht für Hongkong and that film also features a car chase up along Fei Ngo Shan Road. Then there was Heisser Hafen Hongkong which didn't feature any crashing into Lung Ha Wan but did also have a car chase up Fei Ngo Shan Road culminating in one of the cars crashing down the side of the mountain. So here is a similar scene in Red Dragon: a car chase up Fei Ngo Shan that culminates in a very similar car crash.
Edit: I found out that all of the German productions I've been looking at recently (Heißer Hafen Hongkong, Weiße Fracht für Hongkong, Ein Sarg aus Hongkong and Das Geheimnis der drei Dschunken (i.e. Red Dragon) all had the same producer -Wolf C Hartwig - so this probably explains why some of the locations and scenes appear to have some similarity.
Friday, April 21, 2017
Heisser Hafen Hongkong - Horst Frank (1962) - Fei Ngo Shan, Kowloon
Immediately following the car around Peak Road it suddenly appears on Clearwater Bay Road about to turn up Fei Ngo Shan Road up to Fei Ngo Shan (aka Kowloon Peak). I can't say for sure if the scenes between the turning into the road and arriving at the top are all filmed on Fei Ngo Shan Road, but it wouldn't surprise me. Once at the top there are some great views to be had.
Clearwater Bay Road into Fei Ngo Shan Road
At the top the car gets stuck in the passageway where Fei Ngo shan Road crests the ridge. We've seen this section of the road multiple times on this blog.
Next we have a rather spectacular car crash down the side of the hill. I doubt this sort of stunt would be allowed so easily now, but you never know.
Lion Rock can be seen on the left with Beacon Hill beyond.
There's that cutting again in the background
Those hillocks in the centre now have an electricity pylon on them
Finally, there's a really spectacular view over to the actual peak of Kowloon Peak/Fei Ngo Shan. That ridge is fairly overgrown now but still has a trail along it.
Friday, April 14, 2017
Weiße Fracht für Hongkong - Dietmar Schönherr (1963) - Fei Ngo Shan Road, Kowloon
Fei Ngo Shan is the Chinese name for Kowloon Peak. If you ever get the chance to get up here then it is well worth the effort because of the views from the ridge over Kowloon to the south and the New Territories to the north.
The top picture shows the view to the north, taking in a large area of Sai Kung including the Ho Chung valley (the flat bit right of middle), Hebe Haven (the bit of enclosed water just beyond Ho Chung) and Port Shelter and beyond that even further the High Island area before it became a reservoir..
The road forms a hairpin bend at this section as it moves from the north side of the ridge to the south, and from here we get the views over to Kowloon. In the top picture you can see pretty much all of the Kowloon peninsula including the Kai Tak runway sticking out into the bay and Stonecutter Island on the other side (top right). The double-pointed hill between the actors in the second picture is actually Lion Rock with Beacon Hill beyond and to its left. Actually, you can get fairly similar views even today because most of the change has occurred away from the slopes of the hills.
View towards Sai Kung area
The road forms a hairpin bend at this section as it moves from the north side of the ridge to the south, and from here we get the views over to Kowloon. In the top picture you can see pretty much all of the Kowloon peninsula including the Kai Tak runway sticking out into the bay and Stonecutter Island on the other side (top right). The double-pointed hill between the actors in the second picture is actually Lion Rock with Beacon Hill beyond and to its left. Actually, you can get fairly similar views even today because most of the change has occurred away from the slopes of the hills.
Labels:
1963,
Dietmar Schönherr,
Fei Ngo Shan,
Fei Ngo Shan Road,
Hebe Haven,
Ho Chung,
Kai Tak Airport,
Kowloon,
Port Shelter,
Sai Kung,
Weiße Fracht für Hongkong
Location:
Clear Water Bay, Hong Kong
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
Kickboxer - Jean Claude Van Damme (1989) - Jat Incline, Kowloon Peak
Despite featuring a large section shot in Thailand, Kickboxer was also filmed in Hong Kong which stood in for rural Thailand on a couple of occasions. The first brief glimpse is a shot of Taylor's (played by the Haskell V. Anderson III) battered old blue Toyota HIACE threading its way along a thin mountain road.
Rather than rural Thailand we are, in fact, looking at Jat Incline - a small road that runs on the south side of the Kowloon mountain range. Believe it or not if the camera were to pan right you would be presented with urban Hong Kong in its full high-rise concrete glory. The Streetview below gives a rough approximation of the camera's viewpoint. The hill at the far end with the pole on it is actually the summit of Fei Ngo Shan (i.e. Kowloon Peak).
For some reason most maps seem to list this road as the possessive 'Jat's Incline', but actually its proper name is just 'Jat Incline'.
Sunday, February 22, 2015
Bruce Lee & I - Betty Ting Pei (1976) - Fei Ngo Shan Road, Kowloon
Here's a quick one I should've got last year but was confused by the contemporary tree growth that obscures some of the view. But seeing as other scenes were filmed up here, it makes sense that this was shot around the same time (it may have been for the same scene, I can't remember). Anyway, it's a nice view from the cutting that takes the road from Kowloon side over to the New Territories side.
Here is a reasonably similar view from Streetview - sadly the Google car cam doesn't go that low. But you'll notice the extra tree growth and the fact that the cutting has been subsequently shot-creted.