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UCLA FILM AND TELEVISION ARCHIVE PRESENTS
HONG KONG NEON
October 3 - 7, 2001
The UCLA Film and Television Archive continues their trend of
being L.A.'s purveyor of quality Asian cinema with a survey of the newly
revitalized Hong Kong film scene, HONG KONG NEON, presented in conjunction
with the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office, San Francisco.
HONG KONG NEON will demonstrate that the world's third largest film industry
has roared back after a late '90s bout with both reunification concerns and
the Asian financial crisis. For a while it seemed as if Hong Kong had
suffered a serious brain drain to Hollywood, but many of its top-notch
talent have either returned to Hong Kong or settled into dual-track,
trans-Pacific careers. Also, filmmakers who remained in Hong Kong during
this period have continued to stretch and produce brilliantly personal work.
Highlights of the program include an in-person appearance by filmmaker
Stanley Kwan and his producer Zhang Yongning with Mr. Kwan's new film, the
U.S. premiere of director Lawrence Ah Mon's Spacked Out and two free
receptions for screening ticketholders.
An eclectic film mix including Twelve Nights, Victim, Juliet In Love, Expect
The Unexpected, Ge Ge, and Gen-X Cops rounds out the series and most
screenings in the program will be U.S. or West Coast premieres.
A complete schedule of screenings and events is attached.
All films will screen at the James Bridges Theater, located on the northeast
corner of the UCLA Westwood campus, near the intersection of Sunset
Boulevard and Hilgard Avenue. Tickets are available at the theater one hour
before showtime. General admission is $7. Tickets for students, seniors and
UCLA Alumni Association members with ID are $5. Parking is available in Lot
3 for $6. For further information, the public may call (310) 206-FILM or
(310) 206-8013, or visit www.cinema.ucla.edu.
-UCLA-
HONG KONG NEON
October 3-7, 2001
Unless otherwise noted, all films are in Cantonese with English subtitles.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3
7:30 p.m.
**Los Angeles Premiere**
GEN-X COPS
(Dak Ging San Yan Lui) (1999)
Directed by Benny Chan
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A box-office smash in Hong Kong, this movie about the crime-fighting high
jinks of a group of police-cadet rebels heralded its film industry’s current
resurgence. Pop heartthrob Nicholas Tse (TIME AND TIDE) leads the mod squad
of rookies charged with infiltrating a sinister arms-smuggling operation.
Hip and multilingual, these Gen-Xers represent an irreverent new breed of
Hong Kong action star. Director Benny Chan keeps his charismatic young
performers on the run, orchestrating a dazzling array of fights, stunts and
special-effects setpieces, liberally punctuated with doses of brazen humor.
Fetching American transplant Daniel Wu (BISHONEN) and tough guy-goofball
Francis Ng (THE MISSION) add supporting cast sparks, while producer Jackie
Chan drops in for a breezy cameo.
Producers: Jackie Chan, B. Chan. Screenplay: B. Chan, Peter Tsi, Koan Hui,
Lee Yee-Wa. Cinematography: Arthur Wong. Action Director: Nicky Li.
Editor: Cheung Ka-Fai. With: Nicholas Tse, Sam Lee, Stephen Fung, Daniel
Wu, Grace Ip, Eric Tsang. 35mm, 113 min.
FREE reception following the screening of GEN-X COPS
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4
7:30 p.m.
NEW FILM BY STANLEY KWAN!
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Best-known for his ravishing femme elegies of Chinas past—Anita Mui as a
1930s Hong Kong concubine in ROUGE (1987), and Maggie Cheung as the tragic
silent screen star Ruan Lingyu in CENTRE STAGE (1991)—acclaimed Hong Kong
director Stanley Kwan will present a sneak preview of his latest film.
There will be a discussion with Mr. Kwan and his producer Zhang Yongning
after the screening.
FREE pre-screening reception begins at 6:30 p.m.
In person: Stanley Kwan, Zhang Yongning
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5
7:30 p.m.
**US Premiere**
SPACKED OUT
(Miu Yan Ga Sai) (2000)
Directed by Lawrence Ah Mon
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A pointed inversion of his own male-centered lost-youth film GANGS (1988),
Lawrence Ah Mon's SPACKED OUT charts the delinquent pastimes of four
adolescent girls from the housing-project fringes of Hong Kong. Bingeing
through a landscape of broken homes, garish malls and karaoke joints, the
girls' two queer, two straight's grapple with friendship, sex, drugs and
abortion. The USC-educated Ah Mon (a.k.a. Lawrence Lau) coaxes startlingly
nuanced performances from his quartet of newcomers, and depicts their
marginal milieu with raw subjectivity. SPACKED OUT is an indelible portrait
of girls coming of age in a perilously adult world.
Producer: Johnnie To. Screenplay: Yeung Sin-Ling, Au Shui-Lin, Rat.
Cinematography: Lai Yiu-Fai. Editor: Chan Chi-Wai. With: Debbie Tam,
Christy Cheung, Angela Au, Maggie Poon. 35mm, 91 min.
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**West Coast Premiere**
TWELVE NIGHTS
(Sap Yee Yau) (2000)
Directed by Aubrey Lam
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Borrowing its narrative conceit from Bergman's SCENES FROM A MARRIAGE,
TWELVE NIGHTS traces the contours of a relationship in 12 episodes over the
course of a year. Cecilia Cheung, Hong Kong's “It-Girl” du jour, and Eason
Chan play the young couple whose tumultuous love life the film depicts with
wry humor and compassion. By increments, director Aubrey Lam fashions the
portrait of a woman groping towards maturity. With lustrous visuals and
insightful dialogue, the film is a smart, bittersweet chronicle of the
vicissitudes of modern romance. Director Peter Chan, for whom Lam penned
such films as WHO'S THE WOMAN, WHO'S THE MAN, produced her directorial
debut.
Producer: Peter Chan. Screenplay: A. Lam. Cinematography: Cheng Siu-Keung.
Editor: Kwong Chi-Leung. With: Cecilia Cheung, Eason Chan, Ronald Cheng,
Candy Lo. 35mm, 91 min.
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SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6
7:30 p.m.
**US Premiere**
VICTIM
(Muk Lau Hung Gwong) (1999)
Directed by Ringo Lam
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Action maestro Ringo Lam infuses the crime thriller with the atmospherics of
supernatural horror. Lau Ching-Wan—often dubbed Hong Kong’s “everyman”
actor—is the nominal victim, a computer engineer who mysteriously disappears
after losing his life savings in the Asian financial crisis. Tony Leung
Ka-Fai plays the cop who tracks him down to an old haunted hotel. A
suspenseful cat-and-mouse tussle between Lau and Leung ensues, its
escalating skirmishes eventually exposing the terrifying vulnerability of
traditional masculinity to borderless capital. CITY ON FIRE meets THE
SHINING in this tense mood piece that blends genres as cannily as it
delivers offhand social commentary.
Producers: R. Lam, Joe Ma. Screenplay: J. Ma, R. Lam, Ho Man-Lung.
Cinematography: Ross Clarkson. Editor: Chan Chi-Wai. With: Lau Ching-Wan,
Amy Kwok, Tony Leung Ka-Fai, Hui Siu-Hung. 35mm, 104 min.
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**West Coast Premiere**
JULIET IN LOVE
(Jue Lai Yip Yue Leung Sann Ang) (2000)
Directed by Wilson Yip
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Director Wilson Yip earned notice as an action stylist with his pyrotechnic
balletics in BULLETS OVER SUMMER (1999). Here his exuberant camera
energizes a genre-bending tale of mismatched lonely hearts. Comedienne
Sandra Ng sheds her comic chops as a world-weary survivor of mastectomy and
divorce whose second chance comes in the unlikely figure of Francis Ng’s
street hoodlum. Simon Yam becomes their unwitting matchmaker as a triad
boss desperately in need of a nanny for his illegitimate baby. Melding the
gangster film and melodrama, JULIET IN LOVE adroitly transforms one’s cliché
into the other’s prospect, turning a story about two working-class losers
into an engagingly offbeat look at life’s unexpected twists.
Producer: Joe Ma. Screenplay: Matt Chow. Cinematography: Lam Wah-Chuen.
Editor: Cheung Ka-Fai. Action Director: Adam Chan. With: Sandra Ng,
Francis Ng, Simon Yam, Eric Kot. 35mm, 89 min.
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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7
2:00 p.m.
**Los Angeles Premiere**
EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED
(Fei Sheung Tak Yin) (1998)
Directed by Patrick Yau
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Shot through with post-reunification anxiety and the characteristic kinetic
flair of a Milkyway Image production, EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED is a
high-concept policier with a decidedly fatalistic bent. Lau Ching-Wan and
Simon Yam play the cops, a couple of cool pros taking on a band of jewel
thieves while competing for the affections of restaurateur Yoyo Mung.
Patrick Yau directs the action with bravura verve and injects the love
triangle as a refreshing comic digression. One of the standouts of recent
Hong Kong cinema, EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED helped shake the territory’s film
industry out of its mid-’90s slump.
Producers: Johnnie To, Wai Ka-Fai. Screenplay: Szeto Kam-Yuen, Yau Nai-Hoi,
Taurus Chow. Cinematography: Ko Chiu-Lam. Editor: Chan Chi-Wai. With: Lau
Ching-Wan, Simon Yam, Ruby Wong, Yoyo Mung. 35mm, 90 min.
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SPACKED OUT
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Repeat screening; please see film notes for Friday, October 5.
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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7
7:00 p.m.
**North American Premiere**
GEGE (2001)
Directed by Yan Yan-Mak
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Yan Yan-Mak journeyed to the remote Mainland province of Qinghai to shoot
her low-budget first feature. The minimalist plot concerns a Hong Kong man
on a quest in northern China to find his missing older brother. Guided only
by an old photograph, he
navigates warily through the unfamiliar rural terrain. His inconclusive
interactions with the locals gently reveal the unresolved gulf between city
and country, Hong Kong and the Mainland. An assured debut that has already
racked up critics’ awards and a Venice Film Festival berth, GEGE is a Hong
Konger’s self-reflexive inquiry into China’s vast heartland.
Producer/Screenplay: Y.Y. Mak. Cinematography: Siuki Yip, Eric Lau.
Editor: Tam Kwok-Ming. With: Tam K.M., Jin Caixia, Cai Tao, Ma Ke. 35mm,
in Mandarin with English subtitles, 90 min.
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VICTIM
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Repeat screening; please see film notes for Saturday, October 6.
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All films and events are at the James Bridges Theater in Melnitz Hall,
located on the northeast corner of the UCLA Westwood campus, near the
intersection of Sunset Boulevard and Hilgard Avenue.
Tickets are available at the theater one hour before showtime. Admission is
$7 general, $5 students, seniors and UCLA Alumni Association members with
ID.
Parking is available adjacent to the theater in Lot 3 for $6. For further
information, please call (310) 206-FILM or (310) 206-8013, or visit
www.cinema.ucla.edu.
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