8 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- THE ASSASSIN - Wang Yu as a conflicted swordsman hero in old China, 21 May 2001
Author:
Brian Camp from Bronx, NY
THE ASSASSIN (1967) is one of a series of swordplay adventures starring
Jimmy Wang Yu made at Hong Kong's Shaw Bros. studio in the 1960s. This
one is less bloody and action-packed and more austere and
character-driven, closer in tone and style to the Japanese samurai
films of the era but with a very Chinese flavor in terms of the visual
look and melodramatic feel.
The emphasis is on the conflict between ambition and obligation with
the latter playing a key role here in the life of a valiant swordsman
in old China (2300 years ago!). Wang Yu plays Nieh Cheng, a champion
sword-fighter who is forced to go into hiding when his school is
attacked by political rivals and his teacher and all his fellow
students killed. A year later he is sought out by Yen, a
minister-in-exile (Tien Feng) who requires his services in a political
assassination, one that will enable Nieh to avenge the death of his
teacher. Despite the offer of great payment and a ceremony in which he
becomes the minister's sworn brother, Nieh declines the job because
he's the sole support of his mother and sister. Years later, after his
mother has died and his sister is married, he seeks out the minister
and accepts the job. But first he has to locate his old sweetheart
(Chiao Chiao) to provide her with gifts, which she at first tearfully
declines, and spend a night with her before he goes off on what is
essentially a suicide mission.
In the course of the film's two-hour length, there are really only four
fight scenes, two of them quite short. The final action scene, as Wang
Yu attacks the Palace to get at the Prime Minster is a bit far-fetched
as he slashes his sword through dozens of soldiers and they are unable
to stop him. He even does some high leaping and short flights in the
air, a power he didn't display earlier in the film.
Still, it's a compelling and rich film with strong characters,
excellent acting and fascinating interplay of characters' social roles
and the accompanying little rituals and ceremonies. It's all very well
acted and beautifully photographed on a mix of studio sets and outdoor
backlots. Viewers who like Japanese samurai films, many of which offer
less action in favor of characters and relationships should like this
also. It's not as bloody and stylized as other Shaw Bros. movies of the
time nor is the melodrama as overwrought. HK action fans will probably
prefer such later Wang Yu films as ONE-ARMED BOXER, BEACH OF THE WAR
GODS and BLOOD OF THE DRAGON, although this one boasts a stronger story
and more complex character.
The only real problem here is a curious patched-together music score
with some lyrical Chinese melodies and one lovely choral song intercut
with a persistent annoying guitar riff, loud drum rolls and entire cues
lifted wholesale from John Barry's score for the James Bond film YOU
ONLY LIVE TWICE (also 1967). The Tai Seng VHS edition of this film is
in Mandarin with English subtitles with a full-frame transfer that cuts
off the subtitles on the sides, making some lines of dialogue a
challenge to decipher.
Addendum: (10/6/07) I have since watched the restored/remastered
letter-boxed Region 3 DVD of this film from Celestial Pictures. It's
beautiful. Seeing in its proper aspect ratio allows one to appreciate
the formal qualities of the direction, the attention to visual detail
and an eye for color, lighting and composition that weren't always
given such free reign in Chang Cheh's numerous other films. Also, being
able to read the subtitles in their entirety allows one to appreciate
the concise, elegant writing (also by Chang Cheh) and the distillation
of each dialogue scene to its essential points, establishing each
character's position clearly and believably as a story of moral, filial
and romantic obligation takes on epic proportions. All this is most
evident in the scenes between Nie Zheng (as his name is spelled in the
new subtitles) and the various women in his life, most notably his
sweetheart, Xia Ying (Chiao Chiao), his sister, Nie Rong (Li
Hsiang-Chun), and his mother (an actress I haven't been able to
identify). Seeing it again, in this high-quality version, and being
moved by it even more deeply, compels me to consider it one of the
finest Shaw Bros. productions ever.
As for the music, the original soundtrack does indeed contain the music
cues from YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE, but they didn't bother me at all this
time. Perhaps the restoration process involved smoothing over rough
spots in the soundtrack as well, since the different parts of the score
blend in so much better here and don't sound "patched-together" at all.
THE ASSASSIN has something in common with Zhang Yimou's HERO (2002) and
Chen Kaige's THE EMPEROR AND THE ASSASSIN (1998). All were based on
incidents from Chinese history taking place around 300-400 B.C., and
recorded in the early Chinese historical text, "Records of the Great
Historian," by Sima Qian.
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8 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-
THE ASSASSIN - Wang Yu as a conflicted swordsman hero in old China, 21 May 2001
Author: Brian Camp from Bronx, NY
THE ASSASSIN (1967) is one of a series of swordplay adventures starring Jimmy Wang Yu made at Hong Kong's Shaw Bros. studio in the 1960s. This one is less bloody and action-packed and more austere and character-driven, closer in tone and style to the Japanese samurai films of the era but with a very Chinese flavor in terms of the visual look and melodramatic feel.
The emphasis is on the conflict between ambition and obligation with the latter playing a key role here in the life of a valiant swordsman in old China (2300 years ago!). Wang Yu plays Nieh Cheng, a champion sword-fighter who is forced to go into hiding when his school is attacked by political rivals and his teacher and all his fellow students killed. A year later he is sought out by Yen, a minister-in-exile (Tien Feng) who requires his services in a political assassination, one that will enable Nieh to avenge the death of his teacher. Despite the offer of great payment and a ceremony in which he becomes the minister's sworn brother, Nieh declines the job because he's the sole support of his mother and sister. Years later, after his mother has died and his sister is married, he seeks out the minister and accepts the job. But first he has to locate his old sweetheart (Chiao Chiao) to provide her with gifts, which she at first tearfully declines, and spend a night with her before he goes off on what is essentially a suicide mission.
In the course of the film's two-hour length, there are really only four fight scenes, two of them quite short. The final action scene, as Wang Yu attacks the Palace to get at the Prime Minster is a bit far-fetched as he slashes his sword through dozens of soldiers and they are unable to stop him. He even does some high leaping and short flights in the air, a power he didn't display earlier in the film.
Still, it's a compelling and rich film with strong characters, excellent acting and fascinating interplay of characters' social roles and the accompanying little rituals and ceremonies. It's all very well acted and beautifully photographed on a mix of studio sets and outdoor backlots. Viewers who like Japanese samurai films, many of which offer less action in favor of characters and relationships should like this also. It's not as bloody and stylized as other Shaw Bros. movies of the time nor is the melodrama as overwrought. HK action fans will probably prefer such later Wang Yu films as ONE-ARMED BOXER, BEACH OF THE WAR GODS and BLOOD OF THE DRAGON, although this one boasts a stronger story and more complex character.
The only real problem here is a curious patched-together music score with some lyrical Chinese melodies and one lovely choral song intercut with a persistent annoying guitar riff, loud drum rolls and entire cues lifted wholesale from John Barry's score for the James Bond film YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE (also 1967). The Tai Seng VHS edition of this film is in Mandarin with English subtitles with a full-frame transfer that cuts off the subtitles on the sides, making some lines of dialogue a challenge to decipher.
Addendum: (10/6/07) I have since watched the restored/remastered letter-boxed Region 3 DVD of this film from Celestial Pictures. It's beautiful. Seeing in its proper aspect ratio allows one to appreciate the formal qualities of the direction, the attention to visual detail and an eye for color, lighting and composition that weren't always given such free reign in Chang Cheh's numerous other films. Also, being able to read the subtitles in their entirety allows one to appreciate the concise, elegant writing (also by Chang Cheh) and the distillation of each dialogue scene to its essential points, establishing each character's position clearly and believably as a story of moral, filial and romantic obligation takes on epic proportions. All this is most evident in the scenes between Nie Zheng (as his name is spelled in the new subtitles) and the various women in his life, most notably his sweetheart, Xia Ying (Chiao Chiao), his sister, Nie Rong (Li Hsiang-Chun), and his mother (an actress I haven't been able to identify). Seeing it again, in this high-quality version, and being moved by it even more deeply, compels me to consider it one of the finest Shaw Bros. productions ever.
As for the music, the original soundtrack does indeed contain the music cues from YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE, but they didn't bother me at all this time. Perhaps the restoration process involved smoothing over rough spots in the soundtrack as well, since the different parts of the score blend in so much better here and don't sound "patched-together" at all.
THE ASSASSIN has something in common with Zhang Yimou's HERO (2002) and Chen Kaige's THE EMPEROR AND THE ASSASSIN (1998). All were based on incidents from Chinese history taking place around 300-400 B.C., and recorded in the early Chinese historical text, "Records of the Great Historian," by Sima Qian.
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