Kuei Chih-Hung
Kuei Chih-Hung | ||
---|---|---|
Hanyu Pinyin | Guì Zhìhóng |
Kuei Chih-Hung (桂治洪, aka Kwei Chi Hung, Gui Zhi-Hong, Gwai Chi-hung)
Early life
Kuei was born in Guangzhou (in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong) on 20 December 1937. Kuei's passion for cinema began as a high school student in Hong Kong, where he would cobble together makeshift shorts from a shoebox projector and discarded film stock. After graduating from high school, he studied stage production and filmmaking at Taiwan's National School of the Arts, experimenting on several 8 mm films. After writing a few film scripts for the Taiwan film industry, Kuei joined the Shaw Brothers Studio in the early 1960s. Initially hired as an assistant director on two Taiwan-shot Shaw films, Lovers' Rock (1964) and Song of Orchid Island (1965), he then lead projects in Hong Kong and an apprenticeship in Japan, where Kuei continued to work.[4]
Shaw Brothers career
At the large Shaw Brothers Studio, Kuei gained a reputation as one of the most promising assistant film directors on numerous Hong Kong productions. In 1970, at the age of 34, he finally got the opportunity to direct a feature, Love Song Over the Sea. Shot in Singapore and Malaysia, the troubled production was initially suspended after the film's star
In 1973, he joined forces with the popular Shaw Brothers filmmaker, Chang Cheh, co-directing The Delinquent, an edgy action drama about a young dishwasher who falls into a life of crime. Though a collaboration between the two men, it is Kuei who is credited with the film's distinctive visual style, including the then pioneering use of on-location shoots in Hong Kong's gritty streets and public housing complexes. The film's success led to a string of early '70s hits with Kuei as the sole director, including the women-in prison exploitation flick, The Bamboo House of Dolls and the acclaimed vigilante drama, The Teahouse. He proved a versatile, imaginative filmmaker with a distinctive style that carried through to a number of diverse genres including comedy (The Bod Squad, Rat Catcher) and horror (Ghost Eyes).[2]
The Teahouse, about an immigrant restaurant owner trying to protect his family from juvenile gangs, takes a scathing look at the
Though Kuei's contributions to
Kuei continued to challenge himself by directing segments for The Criminals film series, an acclaimed anthology based on actual Hong Kong cases. His episodes (across four films from 1975 to 1977) included "The Deaf Mute Killer," "The Informer" and "Arson".[8] During the late '70s, Kuei also expanded his filmography to include Cantonese-language comedies (Mr. Funnybone, Crazy Imposters, The Reckless Cricket) and kung fu (The Iron Dragon Strikes Back).[2]
The 1980s saw the versatile Kuei reinventing himself once again, this time with the popular supernatural fantasy, Hex and its two sequels, Hex vs. Witchcraft and Hex After Hex. The latter contained Kuei's signature social satire, taking on such hot-button topics as real estate development and
Kuei also delved into the wuxia genre for the first time with Killer Constable (1980). Though a box-office disappointment at the time of its release, today Killer Constable is considered one of Kuei's finest, most accomplished movies.
Reuniting with his Teahouse/Big Brother Cheng star, Kuan Tai Chen, Kuei's kung fu drama is set in ancient Beijing (a rare
Kuei's directorial credits during the 1980s also included Corpse Mania, Bewitched and The Boxer's Omen. With the rise of Hong Kong's New Wave filmmakers, a fresh cinematic style was emerging, though Kuei did not get to participate in this movement. He made one last film, the comedy Misfire, in 1984, before immigrating to the United States, where he opened a pizza restaurant. Kuei died of liver cancer in 1999 at the age of 61.[11]
Legacy
Though often overlooked due to his penchant for exploitation genres and his early retirement from the film industry, Kuei Chih-Hung's films have received a renewed appreciation and attention in recent years. Today, he is often fondly referred to as the "Hong Kong Cult Meister." In 2011, the Hong Kong Film Archive published a bilingual edition of Kuei Chih-Hung, the Rebel in the System, a look at his life and films.[12]
That same year, the 35th Hong Kong International Film Festival paid tribute to Kuei with a seven-film retrospective, including screenings of The Teahouse, Killer Constable and the Hex series.
Kuei's son,
“This is a film that’s totally psychotic, perverse and grossed out. It’s beyond rated R,” was how he described it to The Hollywood Reporter in 2011.
Kwei acknowledged that his dad would be pleased the films were still finding an audience, decades later.
“He’d bitch about his work every day, never quite satisfied how his work had turned out, or how it was being distributed. He was only ever happy when he knew for a day that a film had worked at the box office, then he’d start worrying again. He’d be so happy to know that his films were getting a second look today.”
With more of his films now available on home video and streaming platforms, Kuei's bold, iconoclastic approach and distinctive auteur style continue to reach new film audiences.[14]
Kuei's maverick career was the subject of one of Film Comment writer Grady Hendrix's “Kaiju Shakedown” columns in 2015:
“But while he was regarded as minor league during his time at Shaw Brothers, today he’s a giant, standing alongside Chang Cheh and Lau Kar-leung as one of the best directors the studio produced. A pissed off perfectionist with proletarian sensibilities, he directed groundbreaking, realistic crime flicks and some of the filthiest horror movies ever to leave a slime trail across the silver screen. Kuei applied the technical chops of Lau Kar-leung to exploitation material. He had Chang Cheh’s obsession with violence, but he was willing to offend his audience in a way that Cheh wasn’t.”[15]
Kuei's ‘80s-era horror films have gained a following in the United States in recent years.
Abrams describes The Boxer’s Omen as “a spectacularly sensory-overloading gross-out, the kind of Stendhal syndrome-inducing gem that spoils you for any further exploration of its creators’ prior work.”
“You will see things in The Boxer’s Omen that you’ve never seen before,” Abrams wrote. “And you’ll probably be left wondering ‘how the hell was this film made?’.”[17][18]
The New York Asian Film Festival has called Kuei “ one of the Shaw Brothers’ best and most underrated directors” and screened three of his films — Killer Constable, The Delinquent and Killers on Wheels — in 2014.[19]
Filmography
Year | Film | Notes |
---|---|---|
1963 | The Weird Gentlemen | Director/screenwriter |
1964 | Lover's Rock | Second assistant director |
1965 | Song of Orchid Island | Assistant director |
1966 | Princess Iron Fan | Assistant director |
1967 | Inter-Pol | Assistant director |
Hong Kong Nocturne | Assistant director | |
King Drummer | Assistant director | |
1968 | Don't Fall for Women | |
Hong Kong Rhapsody | Assistant director | |
Summer Heat | Assistant director | |
1969 | Tropicana Interlude | Assistant director |
1970 | Love Without End | Assistant director |
Whose Baby Is in the Classroom? | Assistant director | |
The Five Million-Dollar Legacy | Assistant director | |
Love Song Over the Sea | Co-director/screenwriter | |
A Time for Love | Also co-writer | |
1971 | The Lady Professional | Co-director |
1972 | The Gourd Fairy | Also co-writer |
Stranger in Hong Kong | Co-director | |
Intrigue in Nylons | ||
1973 | The Delinquent | Co-director |
Payment in Blood | ||
The Bamboo House of Dolls | ||
1974 | The Killer Snakes | |
Virgins of the Seven Seas | ||
Supermen Against the Orient | Co-director | |
The Teahouse | ||
Ghost Eyes | ||
The Rat Catcher | ||
1975 | Big Brother Cheng | |
Fearful Interlude | ||
1976 | Sayang Anakku Sayang | |
Spirit of the Raped | ||
The Criminals 2-Homicides ("The Deaf Mute Killer" & "The Informer") | ||
Killers on Wheels | ||
Mr. Funnybone | ||
1977 | The Criminals 3-Arson ("Arson") | |
The Criminals 4-Assault ("Maniac") | ||
The Criminals 5-The Teenager's Nightmare ("The Teenager's Nightmare") | ||
1978 | Crazy Imposters | |
1979 | The Reckless Cricket | |
The Gold Connection (a.k.a. Iron Dragon Strikes Back) | ||
1980 | Killer Constable | |
Coward Bastard | ||
Hex | Also co-writer | |
Hex vs. Witchcraft | ||
Corpse Mania | Also co-writer | |
Bewitched | ||
1982 | Hex After Hex | |
Curse of Evil | ||
Godfather From Canton | ||
1983 | The Boxer's Omen | Also story credit |
1984 | Misfire |
Notable quotes
"I fell in love with movies in high school and had been itching to make one of my own. But I did not have the money so I made a projector out of a shoe box. I placed a light bulb in it and saved up for film. At the time, movie studios would throw away bits and pieces of used film that did not make the cut. I bought them for my shoe box projector. The film stock back then was nitrate and highly flammable. One time the bulb got overheated and the film started burning. It almost caused a fire and my father gave me a good scolding."[20]
"I am not interested in making fanciful romantic movies at all. I have always wanted to take the realism approach. But in Hong Kong, that is so hard to do. If you make a movie about the mob, you may offend the real mob. If you object to the lenient sentences for juvenile delinquents, you may be condemned as 'agitator'. And if you include provocative dialogues, you may be mistaken as being political."[21]
"A lot of people in Hong Kong tend to indulge themselves in mahjong playing and turn a blind eye to social problems. They think that as long as they do not get mugged themselves, everything is fine. I hope Big Brother Cheng can make them think again."[9]
"In a time when movie-making is considered only an industry, I feel as if I were a factory worker. My job is the director, expected to produce whatever the market demands and I have no right to question that."[22]
"The audience is hard to please. Their tastes tend to be low. The more vulgar the movie, the more likely you will make money. If you try to do something different or try to say something true to your beliefs, you might end up with a disastrous flop. To please the audience, you must resort to gimmicks. I make fantasy movies because audiences like them. But I'm not cavalier making them. I devoted a lot of thought on photography, lighting and so on."[23]
"Compared to smaller studios, there are advantages and disadvantages to working for Shaw Brothers. Perhaps things have improved now, but in the past, independent productions were always running out of funds and that affected both the quality of the movie and your own livelihood. Shaw Brothers is at least well-equipped. If you need a set for a period movie, for example, just take a look in the sculpture room of the studio and you will find Shanghainese masters who specialize in making antique furniture. It is also true that New Wave directors have raised the standard. Now I can ask my crew, 'How do we compete with them when we are complacent?'"[24]
References
- ^ "Kuei Chih Hung". Hong Kong Cinemagic. Retrieved 2 August 2011.
- ^ a b c "Chih-Hung Kuei (1937–1999)".
- ISBN 978-962-8050-59-8.
- ISBN 978-962-8050-59-8.
- ISBN 978-962-8050-59-8.
- ISBN 978-962-8050-59-8.
- ISBN 978-962-8050-59-8.
- ISBN 978-962-8050-59-8.
- ^ ISBN 978-962-8050-59-8.
- ISBN 978-962-8050-59-8.
- ISBN 978-962-8050-59-8.
- ^ "HKIFF Celebrates Shaw Director Kuei Chih-Hung". Shaw Brothers Reloaded. Archived from the original on 2011-10-06. Retrieved 2011-07-28.
- ^ "Ming Beaver Kwei". Internet Movie Database. IMDB. Retrieved 2 August 2011.
- ^ Landreth, Jonathan. "Kuei Chih Hung's Work Offered Up To New Generation". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
- ^ Hendrix, Grady. "Kaiju Shakedown: Kuei Chih-hung". Film Comment. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
- ^ "11th New York Asian Film Festival". NHYAFF. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
- ^ Abrams, Simon. "FANGO BONUS PAGES: The Nightmare World Of Chih-Hung Kuei". Fangoria. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
- ^ Abrams, Simon. "FANGO BONUS PAGES: The Nightmare World Of Chih-Hung Kuei". Issuu. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
- ^ Abrams, Simon. "The Nightmare World of Kuei Chih-Hung". Fangoria, Bonus Pages. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
- ISBN 978-962-8050-59-8.
- ISBN 978-962-8050-59-8.
- ISBN 978-962-8050-59-8.
- ISBN 978-962-8050-59-8.
- ISBN 978-962-8050-59-8.
External links
- Kuei Chih-Hung at IMDb
- Kuei Chih-Hung at the Hong Kong Movie Database
- http://www.celestialpictures.com/co-shaw-star.asp?id=23 Celestial Pictures Biography
- http://www.hkcinemagic.com/en/people.asp?id=1413 Hong Kong Cinemagic Biography
- https://web.archive.org/web/20111006122337/http://www.shaw-brothers-reloaded.com/html/hkiff_celebrates_shaw_director.html "HKIFF Celebrates Shaw Director Kuei Chih-Hung"
- http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/kuei-chih-hungs-work-offered-169566 "Kuei Chih Hung's Work Offered Up to New Generation"