Cora Miao – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st Sat, 18 Nov 2023 17:12:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/cropped-Vintage-Movie-Camera-Icon-32x32.png Cora Miao – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st 32 32 Sylvia Chang – Zui ai AKA Passion (1986) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2022/10/sylvia-chang-zui-ai-aka-passion-1986/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2022/10/sylvia-chang-zui-ai-aka-passion-1986/#respond Mon, 31 Oct 2022 06:37:41 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=178930 Silvia and Cora are very good friends for many years. Both of them are widows and each has a daughter living with them. On a brightly-shining Saturday afternoon, two old friends just stay at the balcony, chattering and reminiscing. With or with no intention, some hidden things on their minds, even the love affairs between …

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Silvia and Cora are very good friends for many years. Both of them are widows and each has a daughter living with them. On a brightly-shining Saturday afternoon, two old friends just stay at the balcony, chattering and reminiscing. With or with no intention, some hidden things on their minds, even the love affairs between Silvia and Cora’s husband, George, are being raised and touched. Thus, the two great friends seem to be walled up. However, they have to live and thing would past no matter how serious they are. The two bosom friends then enter the restaurant with smiling faces as if nothing has happened.




1.60GB | 1h 30m | 854×460 | mkv

https://nitro.download/view/9C3A2E2C92B71A5/Zui.ai.AKA.Passion.1986.480p.BluRay.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

Language:Cantonese
Subtitles:English,Mandarin

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Ann Hui – Woo Yuet dik goo si AKA The Story of Woo Viet (1981) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2019/08/ann-hui-woo-yuet-dik-goo-si-aka-the-story-of-woo-viet-1981/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2019/08/ann-hui-woo-yuet-dik-goo-si-aka-the-story-of-woo-viet-1981/#comments Fri, 09 Aug 2019 08:30:09 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=106142 Quote:Hong Kong, 1980. The Vietnam War has been over for five years and the ethnic cleansing of Chinese has begun. As the “boat people”, refugees of Vietnam, flood out of the country, Hong Kong becomes know as “port of first asylum”. Among these boats is Wu Yiet (Chow Yun-Fat), a former South Vietnamese soldier still …

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Hong Kong, 1980. The Vietnam War has been over for five years and the ethnic cleansing of Chinese has begun. As the “boat people”, refugees of Vietnam, flood out of the country, Hong Kong becomes know as “port of first asylum”. Among these boats is Wu Yiet (Chow Yun-Fat), a former South Vietnamese soldier still recovering from the ravages of war. For him, Hong Kong is the first step for life in the United States, and he soon falls for fellow immigrant Sum Ching (Cherie Chung). Yet the promise of a new beginning doesn’t come easy: the refugee camps have been infiltrated by murderous Viet Cong agents, and an act of violence forces Wu Yiet on the run and deeper into a vortex of crime and brutality. Can he and Sum make it to the United States, or will he forever be stuck in the perpetual cycle of killing inherited from the war? Cora Miao (The Terrorizers) and Lo Lieh (all sorts of bad-assery) co-star in Ann Hui’s grim study of immigrant life. Alfred Cheung’s writing famously won Best Screenplay at the 1st Hong Kong Film Awards.

After tackling the mystery film in The Secret and the horror comedy in The Spooky Bunch, The Story of Woo Viet provides us with Ann Hui’s take on the urban crime drama. Yet, even among the various gritty, realist crime dramas that trickled out of the Hong Kong New Wave, Woo Viet deserves special notice. Perhaps more than any other, Hui’s film breaks with the commercial ambitions of Hong Kong cinema, more attuned to the social-realism of 70s Western cinema (and which was slowly creeping into Chinese and Taiwanese films at the time). While the basic outline of a genre film is perceptible, Hui’s film owes very little to the Action and Melodramatic tradition of HK filmmaking. Films like The Club and Man on the Brink may have provided a look at a social milieu until then ignored by HK cinema, but they were still in essence action films. A movie like Dangerous Encounters – 1st Kind may have been uncommercially bleak and violent, but you can’t deny the kinetic thrill provided by Tsui Hark’s various setpieces. The entire New Wave itself was initiated by a kung-fu film: Jumping Ash. The “action” here isn’t mannered or precisely choreagraphed; they’re brief and unsettling bursts of violence which happen too quickly and too shockingly to thrill.

The influence of the crime genre isn’t absent: the theme music purposely brings to mind film noir, a late scene is a riff on one from The Godfather, and in certain ways, it echoes Oliver Stones’ treatment of Cuban refugees in Scarface (and with the film getting a wider release than usual, including a screening at Directors’ Fortnight, you must wonder whether he saw it). Yet, Hui’s focus isn’t on subverting genre thrills, but instead on social realism, on the plight and vulnerability of the Vietnamese immigrant, as well as the capturing the psychological turmoil of her characters as they find themselves stuck in a perpetual cycle of violence and hopelessness. Her film is subdued, mininimalist and quietly intense, in line with anguished cries of urban squalor like Taxi Driver and The Claws of Light (if not as good as either).

It’s a byline she would carry to its conclusion with the following year’s The Boat People, a film which owes nothing to HK Genre cinema, and which is about as close as the industry got to “art” cinema at the time. In fact, that may ultimately be Hui’s ultimate legacy to the New Wave: directors like Tsui Hark, Kirk Wong and Alex Cheung were harbingers (and later participants) of the “Second Wave” of the latter 80s, where the techniques and styles of the New Wave were re-appropriated in a completely commercial form which disregarded its most radical aspects. Yet Ann Hui, along with Patrick Tam and Allen Fong, were perhaps too far ahead of the curve: their films point towards the “Third Wave” of the 90s, the emergence of a serious, personal and independent cinema in HK, epitomized by the films of Wong Kar-Wai, Stanley Kwan and Fruit Chan. It’s no surprise that after these two films, she would retreat to more commercial fare, lending her deft touch to romantic dramas and period pieces (with the occasional excursion back like Song of the Exile and Ordinary Heroes). The Story of Woo Viet isn’t a perfect film, but it is an emblem of how uncompromising and unconventional the films of the HK New Wave could be.

2.13GB | 1 h 29 min | 1024×576 | mkv

<https://nitro.download/view/01969E45FBCC4A0/Ann_Hui_-_(1981)_The_Story_of_Woo_Viet.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/E78DDE60DBA1263/Ann_Hui_-_%281981%29_The_Story_of_Woo_Viet_-_eng_02.srt

Language:Cantonese
Subtitles:English

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Edward Yang – Kong bu fen zi aka The Terrorizers (1986) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/06/edward-yang-kong-bu-fen-zi-aka-the-terrorizers-1986/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/06/edward-yang-kong-bu-fen-zi-aka-the-terrorizers-1986/#comments Fri, 22 Jun 2018 17:40:25 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=70232 Quote:The lives of anonymous strangers become intricately intertwined in this 1986 effort by late Taiwanese auteur Edward Yang. Following the sudden death of his superior, a doctor frames his colleague in order to succeed as the clinic’s director. The doctor’s writer wife, meanwhile, is experiencing a mid-life crisis, struggling to finish her next novel while …

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The lives of anonymous strangers become intricately intertwined in this 1986 effort by late Taiwanese auteur Edward Yang. Following the sudden death of his superior, a doctor frames his colleague in order to succeed as the clinic’s director. The doctor’s writer wife, meanwhile, is experiencing a mid-life crisis, struggling to finish her next novel while surrendering to the advances of an ex-boyfriend. Elsewhere, a hippie photographer randomly snaps a delinquent girl escaping from a crime scene and becomes obsessed with her. The girl is locked up at home by her mother, and begins making random prank calls, which in turn affect the lives of the doctor and his wife.

The collage of chance encounters in The Terrorizers vividly portrays the degenerating psychic life of the Taipei city dwellers through disjointed narrative and multiple storylines. Set for brief moments against an eye-catching poster of Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Woolf? on the wall, the irony constructed by Yang turns out to be all the more poignant, considering how his quiet characters never really speak up amid their simmering rage, before boiling over completely. Similar treatment is given to the film’s supposedly dramatic plot elements, such as extramarital affairs, police raids and violence, which are delivered with unusual calmness and tranquility.

As with many other examples of Taiwanese New Wave cinema in the 1980s, The Terrorizers realistically records the people’s private sentiment at a specific moment of Taiwan’s rapid socio-economical transformation. Nevertheless, the film’s depiction of the experience of urban ennui and desperation remains largely universal. No matter how one sees fit to interpret the film’s double endings, Yang’s vision of urban life looks all but doomed. The director once explained that this is essentially one tragic ending – that somebody would inevitably be hurt – told in two different ways. For a bleak story narrated without any comic relief, it is a fitting conclusion that is at once profound and disturbing.

2.68GB | 1h 49m | 1024×576 | mkv

https://nitro.download/view/20EBFA600817EA0/Edward_Yang_-_(1986)_The_Terrorizers.mkv

Language(s):Mandarin, Min Nan
Subtitles:English

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