BEIJING, March 29 -- Fifteen years ago, when as his
career was just starting to take off, Hong Kong director Wong Kar-Wai made a
martial arts movie, his only one so far. An adaptation of Louis Cha's famous
martial arts novel The Eagle-Shooting Heroes, Ashes of Time it was, as his films
would later be, a vague and strikingly beautiful piece of work. With the
original negatives lost and multiple versions now floating around the world,
Wong had long wanted to return to Ashes of Time for a restored, remastered and
definitive cut. The result is Ashes of Time Redux.
Set in ancient China, Ouyang Feng (Leslie Cheung) is
a fallen swordsman driven by greed toward both friend and foe. He is a perpetual
loner and afraid of love after having his heart broken but the bounty hunters
who work for him, like "Blind Swordsman" (Tony Leung Chiu Wai) and Hung Chi
(Jacky Cheung), discover the intangible secret of true love and teach him
precious lessons.
 |
|
Actress Maggie Cheung on stage of
martial arts movie Ashes of Time(Photo Source: China Daily) Photo
Gallery>>> |
Wong's
film had stunning photography, from a palette that included searing acid yellows
and scorched ambers and reliant on reflected light and layered images.
Shot in China's remote Gobi Desert, it featured
possibly the most impressive cast ever assembled in Hong Kong cinema. Even the
production crew, which includes action choreographer Sammo Hung, production
designer William Chang Suk-ping and cinematographer Christopher Doyle, are now
all legends in their own fields.
The film is no traditional Wu Xia movie, though - it
remains the most abstract of Wong's works and a poetic dream on unreturned love
and memory.
The film is set in five parts, representing four
seasons in the Chinese almanac, Lichun, Jingzhe Xiazhi and Bailu. Wong clarifies
the central narrative while intensifying the film's most inspiring moments,
including a vital scene in which Maggie Cheung delivers her sorrowful soliloquy.
The biggest change is the soundtrack: gone are the synthesizer tracks, replaced
by lush orchestral movements with cello by Yo-Yo Ma.
In Ashes of Time Redux, Wong has streamlined the
narrative without losing the essence of the original work. It is an aural and
visual feast that will doubtless prove as timeless as its star, the late Leslie
Cheung.
The long-anticipated movie opens this
weekend.
(Source: China Daily)