SHE FLIES THROUGH THE AIR WITH THE GREATEST OF EASE,
April 14, 2010
THAT DARING YOUNG GIRL ON THE FLYING TRAPEZE…WIRE WORK, FIGHT CHOREOGRAPHY, SWORD MOVIES, REIGN OF ASSASSINS - GIFTS FROM ASIA.
Did you ever have those flying dreams as a teenager? I still do, occasionally. It’s supposed to mean you want to escape from something. (I guess that’s low budgets in my case.) In my conscious life, I actually have a mild fear of flying ( In aircraft; I suppress it. ) but the one stunt I would love to add to my limited repertoire is wire work, for many years a Hong Kong technique which finally made an impact on western audiences in CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON. What fun it must be to swoop, soar and glide, under the control of skilled puppet masters. My friend Angeles Woo made her maiden flight on her father’s latest production REIGN OF ASSASSINS, starring Michelle Yeoh. This is Michelle aloft on the blue screen stage.
Angeles plays a rival assassin, and in a preliminary trailer and you’ll see a cloaked and hooded Angeles fly through frame in an early shot.
When not working for her father’s company in several capacities, Angeles is an actress, and writer/director of experimental shorts. I look forward to her first feature one day. I know Angeles through fencing. We have fought many a foil and epee bout.

Here she is (on the left) winning the Vango Cup for Women’s Foil in Beijing in 2006, when her father was shooting RED CLIFF. She has now taken up Mixed Martial Arts, where I don’t intend to challenge her. I’ll stick to the blade. Fencing is gymnastic chess, a combat sport I try to practice at least once a week. I do all three weapons to a standard of adequate mediocrity, and did once tie for bronze at the Southern California Veterans in a thin year.
The REIGN OF ASSASSINS promo reflects some of what I love about fencing. Look at the furious - but strategically complex - exchanges of parry and riposte in Michelle Yeoh’s fight scenes. Excellent camera placement maximizes impact.
I became hooked on Asian cinema in the early ’60’s. Initially Japanese, then when King Hu made his breakout hit A TOUCH OF ZEN, I broadened my taste to Hong Kong. Then I discovered Chang Cheh, with his sweepingly choreographed tracking shots propelling the hero through a line of adversaries, who spun their slashed bodies to the camera as it passed.
Assistant directors in HK in those days had wider responsibilities than western ADs, and Chang Cheh’s assistant for many years was John Woo. When I met Mr. Woo, I told him HARD BOILED was my favorite of his early work. He felt THE KILLER was his best. They are both great. Here’s that amazing all-in-one-shot section of the HARD BOILED hospital gun battle.
I first went to Hong Kong in ‘73 to cover the Bruce Lee phenomenon for my quarterly magazine MOVIE , sold in Australian theaters and drive-ins (also to pitch THE MAN FROM HONG KONG to Raymond Chow of Golden Harvest, but that’s another story ). I came back talking of Hollywood East, but cultural differences prevented many of my colleagues from grasping the sophistication, efficiency and pure audience-pleasing power of Hong Kong film making. So I made a documentary - WORLD OF KUNG FU, and published a 2 issue magazine to co-incide with the telecast across Australia. It rated well, and the magazine sold out. After Bruce Lee’s death I made a follow up - KUNG FU KILLERS : Grant Page, Australia’s most famous stuntman goes to Hong Kong and investigates who will succeed Bruce Lee. ( We were told to ignore Jackie Chan..he was not going to last. Right…) Here’s one of my favorite DRUNKEN MASTER fights.
I watched Asian cinema develop to its present day level of style and innovative story telling. Now Hollywood remakes Asian hits, not just the other way round. The story of Hong Kong’s film industry and the progressive development of its unique visual style is available in an excellent on-line essay Anamorphic Adventures in Hong Kong by David Bordwell, PhD, a professor of film studies at the University of Wisconsin - Madison, and an authority on a wide variety of cinema topics. Go to: www.davidbordwell.net/essays/shaw.php
His website in general is a treasure trove of information for cineastes. This essay is meticulously researched, providing extensive background detail, and illuminating analysis of fight scene aesthetics. More importantly it reflects all the elements I found exciting when watching sword and fist movies in downtown backstreet theaters. So I look forward to REIGN OF ASSASSINS.
An epee bout with Michelle Yeoh would be fun too…














[…] SHE FLIES THROUGH THE AIR WITH THE GREATEST OF EASE, THAT DARING … […]
Dashing. Puts the fencing I did in college to shame.
Post some vid of you fencing, you piratical, swashbuckling fiend. A William Teach movie is waiting somewhere in the mist.
[…] SHE FLIES THROUGH THE AIR WITH THE GREATEST OF EASE, THAT DARING … […]
My parents forced me to watch Hong Kong movies growing up. I used to have this preconceived notion that Asians used to fly!
By the way, I was watched the Man from Hong Kong the other day and had gotten a few chuckles when Inspector Fang Sing Li killed Sammo Hung by drowning him in a toilet, and then having yellow wee run out of Hung’s mouth.
Awesome Blog, Dad. By the way, I posted a link to to the youtube clip of your “Strike of the Panther” brothel fight scene on my friend’s Facebook group “Aussies Kick Ass”, because it does demonstrate that Aussies do in fact kick ass.
enjoyed this post
Hi there Brian!
I’m a huge fan of your movies and I made a tribute video for The Man From Hong Kong with a remixed version of Sky High that I made which you can find on my You Tube website.
I really hope you like it!
Although I got permission to display the REIGN OF ASSASSINS teaser from John Woo’s daughter, the sales company FORTISSIMO FILMS has told U Tube to take it down. I think this is a short sighted response, given that the teaser was shown widely to the trade at the Berlin Film Festival, and they have ignored U Tube postings of raw ASSASSINS footage shot off a monitor, but it is their right. Michelle Yeoh was surprised to have it struck from her website also. Someone else has also posted the teaser on U Tube, and for the time being you can find it here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I5F0TvU14Pg
Hi
Really big fan of your films and am really looking forward to Arctic Blast.
I’m a writer for the UK film site HeyUGuys and would love to interview you for the site and to review Arctic Blast when it’s released. Let me know if you’d be interested in an interview.
I also recently recommended The Man From Hong Kong on our podcast - http://www.heyuguys.co.uk/2010/04/23/mouth-off-episode-17-the-losers-centurion-and-its-a-wonderful-afterlife/
Hope you like it.
Cheers
Craig