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Glory Days of Hong Kong Cinema: Shaw Brothers Retrospective

Vengeance

Chang Cheh

Hong Kong China1970 98min 35mm Color

Synopsis

In 1920s Peking, hot-tempered Peking Opera performer Kuan Yu-lou confronts his boss over the boss’s attentions to his straying wife and takes on a room full of hatchet-wielding henchmen before dying a bloody death after a valiant fight. As Kuan’s brother, Kuan Hou-yu, comes to town seeking revenge and eventually fights it out with all the crime bosses and their minions.

Diretor

Chang Cheh

Born in 1923 in Hangzhou and moved to Chongqing during World War II. There he majored in political science and was an active member of the Cultural Movement Committee during the 1940s. CHANG Cheh began his film career as a screenwriter, and made his directorial debut with Wind and Storm over Alisan in Taiwan in 1949. After been courted by Run Run Shaw, he directed The One-Armed Swordsman (1967), which was the first film to gross more than 1 million Hong Kong dollars at the box office. From 1964 to 1981, he directed more than 70 films for the Shaw Brothers. He has influenced other directors such as John Woo and Liu Chiau Liang and made famous such Hong Kong stars as Keo Choi, Fu Sheng and Lung Ti. Until his death on June 22nd, 2002 he had made 101 films. His most revered works include Vengeance (‘70), The Blood Brothers (‘73) and Five Venoms (‘78).