Chor Yuen was Gu Long before he started filming Gu Long. The director's first wuxia film, made at Shaws' rival Cathay, finds him relishing in a mode of expression that would later become the signature style of the 'martial-arts suspense thriller' mini-genre. Chor grafts the quasi-psychological stylishness of his Cantonese melodrama onto this actioner, laying on thick the atmosphere by dialling up the fog machine and unleashing the colours from his camera's palette. He also stages his fights in modern dance-like choreography, with moves that are more graceful than ferocious and paused poses that are longer on expressive narcissism than continuity of action. Cold Blade is the quiet beginning of an aesthetic.
Title | Cold Blade |
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Year | 1970 |
Genre | Action, Adventure, History |
Country | |
Studio | Cathay Studios |
Cast | Melinda Chen, Kao Yuan, Pin Chang, Chu Kong, Kong San, Li Ying |
Crew | Chen Kuan-Tai (Martial Arts Choreographer), Choo Kok Leong (Producer), Yan Sit-Ping (Sound Recordist), Wang Zhao-Xi (Editor), Lee Man Kit (Cinematography), Chor Yuen (Screenplay) |
Keyword | first mandarin martial arts film by chor yuen, gu long aesthetics, mandarin cinema, cathay martial arts film, ming–qing transition, the manchu conquest of china |
Release | Dec 31, 1970 |
Runtime | 86 minutes |
Quality | HD |
IMDb | 0.00 / 10 by 0 users |
Popularity | 1 |
Budget | 0 |
Revenue | 0 |
Language | 普通话 |