R
E V I E W : The Bride With White Hair
Reviewed 12/2/00 | Background | Movie
Review | DVD Review | Recommendation
Background
Tai Seng / 1993 / 88 minutes
Directed by Ronny Yu
Screenplay by David Wu and Ronny Yu
The film is based on a 1950's novel by Liang Yu-sheng that director
Ronny Yu was initially reluctant to film. He had not made a "sword-and-sorcery"
fantasy before. Eventually, his desire to try something new inspired
him. It was mostly filmed at night (being that it was summer and too
hot to wear the heavy costumes during the day), mostly inside a studio,
in a tight eight weeks, on a typical low Hong Kong movie budget (in
one scene, four horses are filmed to look like a large herd). [All these
details, by the way, are mentioned on the audio commentary for the DVD.]
Released during the incredibly fruitful 1993 (Hong Kong's equivalent
of Hollywood's 1939), which also saw the release of Iron Monkey, The
East is Red, Green Snake, Tai Chi Master, Butterfly and Sword, A Moment
of Romance II, Fong Sai Yuk I and II, etc., the film still established
a reputation as a masterpiece. It was a box-office success and played
the art-house circuit in the United States and Canada.
Director Ronny Yu made the sequel in the same year, then Phantom Lover
in 1995 before heading to Hollywood, where he has made the likes of
Warriors of Virtue, Bride of Chucky (unfortunate choice of title), and
the unseen Chasing Dragon. He is currently filming The 51st State.
Movie: plot, performances,
production, rating
The narrative unfolds in a somewhat straightforward manner. At heart,
it is a love story between Brigitte Lin Ching-Hsia and Leslie Cheung.
The two leads are heartwarming as they open up emotionally to one another,
elegantly erotic when they become lovers, and heartbreaking when one
betrays the other. Fine performances are also given by Francis Ng and
Elaine Lui as Siamese twins - you can talk about sibling rivalry all
you want, but these two portrayals are perhaps the most unique brother/sister
combo in the history of world cinema. The story's combination of romance,
action, comedy, and drama are mixed well and in just the right measure.
The sets, designed by Eddie Ma, are exceptional, and cinematographer
Peter Pau's lighting is equally good at capturing the right tone for
each scene. The musical score by Richard Yuen is especially evocative,
rousing when it should be and tender as needed. The colorful and extravagant
costumes are by Japanese designer Emi Wada. Director Ronny Yu deserves
credit for using style and filmmaking technique to enhance the emotional
core of the story.
The film is rated as Category II. There are many scenes of explicit
violence (bodies being sliced apart, blood spraying, and similar) and
brief flashes of nudity.
DVD: look, sound, subtitles,
and features
This is a beautifully photographed film. The DVD's widescreen (2.35
to 1) image quality is very good, although the print used reveals some
blotches and other imperfections. Blues and grays dominate the color
scheme, and these are rendered accurately.
The Dolby 2.0 sound is good, with adequate separation in the surrounds.
Cantonese, Mandarin, and English audio tracks are provided. Only English
subtitles are available - they are removable and easy to read.
A commentary by director Ronny Yu is included, and it is a real bonus.
He describes his goals in making the film, cites influences for specific
scenes (Shaw Brothers, pinball machines, etc.), and talks about some
of the film's techniques, especially the "step motion" that
was used extensively. Strangely, though, at the 52 minute mark he stops
talking, speaks briefly at the 62 minute mark, and doesn't speak again
until the 71 minute mark (all times approximate). Did he run out of
things to say? Fall asleep?
The original trailer is included, but it is the pan-and-scan version,
which feels quite cramped after viewing the widescreen splendor. Also
included are Tai Seng's own English-language trailers for their DVD
releases of The Bride With White Hair 2, Tai Chi 2, The Untold Story,
and Organized Crime and Triad Bureau (all 1.85 to 1).
There are 23 chapter markings, nicely illustrated in the Chapter Menu.
Filmographies for Leslie Cheung, Brigitte Lin Ching-Hsia, Francis Ng,
and Ronny Yu are included. Rounding out the package is a 12-minute "making
of" feature (full frame, in Cantonese with English burned-in subtitles)
that has interviews with the filmmakers and the two stars, a little
behind-the-scenes footage, and scenes from the film.
Buy, rent, or pass?
A wondrous film that lives up to its reputation and deserves multiples
viewings. The DVD quality is very good with several extra features.
There are several versions of this film available on DVD, but the Tai
Seng version appears to be the one to get. A definite buy.
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