Showing posts with label The Water Margin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Water Margin. Show all posts

Friday, April 5, 2024

The Water Margin - David Chiang (1972) - Shaws Movietown

It wouldn't be a Shaw movie without at least a small mention of the Movietown sets. Anyway, there now follows a hiatus in posts as I look for new films to feature and perhaps resurrect some of the old film related history posts from the old blog. If anyone has a film they would like me to cover and can point me in the direction of a copy, then feel free to comment.

Thursday, April 4, 2024

The Water Margin - David Chiang (1972) - Ho Sheung Heung, North District

Back to Ho Sheung Heung and the location where Bruce Lee fought Sammo Hung in the opening scenes of Enter the Dragon. Despite taking me several months to locate, it turns out this place was a popular filming spot through the 70s. These days it's still fairly over grown and impenetrable but I still wait patiently for the day when some idiot accidentally starts a hillfire and reveals some lost film artifacts.

In this scene, Yan Ching (David Chiang) has just saved Jade Unicorn from being assassinated by his corrupt guards, and hangs around waiting to rob someone so he can get enough money to go to Liangshan and team up with the bandits. It turns out that the two people he decides to rob are Liangshan bandits.

Tai Shek Mo (Crest Hill) in the background

Wednesday, April 3, 2024

The Water Margin - David Chiang (1972) - Pak Shek Au, North District

Here we are back at Pak Shek Au near Kwu Tung. It's a favoured filming location for many a 60s- and 70s-made period film thanks to its - then - relatively unspoilt environment. Since those days it has undergone significant change as small industrial sites (and their requisite corrugated iron and steel structures) occupied much of the central area. Although even now, those rather unsitely structures have themselves now been cleared to make way for the start of the much-heralded "Northern Metropolis".

In the scene below, Chao Gai, the bandit leader (played by Tung Lam), has just been ambushed and atttacked by Shi Wengong and is impaled with an arrow before being rescued by Lin Chong (Yueh Hwa).

The area below can be indentified by the presence of a small ridge in the background that has the English name on Open Street Map of "Mt Kirkpatrick" and "Mt Kilpatrick" on older ones. I suspect the older one is the correct name. In front was a flat area with a couple of large ponds that was later utilised for the aforementioned cluster of small industrial buildings as well as the community centre, sports pitch and camp site. Someone took a photo from the Tung Wah campsite which shows Mt Kirk/Kilpatrick in the background. It gives you an idea of how much the place has changed. Also, fans of the genre may be interested to compare the images below with the last image on my old post on The Fate of Lee Khan. It's more or less the same camera angle.


As Chao Gai tries to escape, he rides his horse to the east with a view towards Tai Shek Mo (Crest Hill). You can see a similar view in this shot from The Blood Brothers.


And...finally a view over to the distinctive peak of Ki Lun Shan which can be seen in this image from The Legend of the Seven Golden Vampires. In fact, you will see those two shots were taken from more or less the exact same place.

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

The Water Margin - David Chiang (1972) - Port Shelter, Sai Kung

The Water Margin is a 1972 Shaw Brothers film directed by Chang Cheh. Readers who followed the Alan Whicker posts last year may be interested to know that it is this film that was in production when Whicker went along and interviewed David Chiang and his brother, Paul Chin-pei. There was also some behind the scenes footage seen in that documentary. For those interested, you can watch the documentary (and others) here: What Makes Shaw Run Run?.

The film is supposedly just a small snippet of the full "Water Margin" tale and details how the bandits seek to approach Jade Unicorn (played by Tetsuro Tamba), the fellow student of one of their enemies, in the hope of getting his help defeating him. In doing so they inadvertantly drop him in trouble with the local Imperial court who arrest him for harbouring bandits following a tip off from his adulturous wife and her scheming lover.

I watch this film and scratch my head as to why David Chiang became such a big action star because I don't think I've seen a single film where he has looked good during a fight. He just goes through the motions most of the time, with hardly any power. In this film he plays "The Prodigy", Yen Ching, whose signature fight move is as uninspiring as all his other movies but largely involves rolling around on the ground.

Anyway, the film begins with some ships coming in to shore at the stronghold of Shi Wengong (Toshio Kurosawa), the main protagonist of the film and arch enemy of the Liangshan bandits. The location is, of course, the section of Port Shelter just off the coast from where Shaws Movietown was located. The coastal area you see on film is now the location of the HKUST Fok Ying Tung Sports Centre.


If you look in the near background of the bottom image, you can see a low rocky outcrop behind the soldiers.This is about the only thing that still looks the same, as long as you go at low tide.