3/16/2024 0 Comments Beach of the war gods 1973Wang Yu and his cinematographer Chiu Yao-Hu make great use of the wide frame with some nicely composed shots enriched with depth and movement. There’s more than a flavour of samurai cinema in the film’s visuals too. With half the length to play with, we only get five ‘samurai’ here and much less fleshed-out characters, but you can’t fail to see the comparison. Most notably, Wang Yu has cribbed Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai for his narrative. Whilst you can see splashes of King Hu and Wang Yu’s mentor Chang Cheh in the DNA of Beach of the War Gods, as well as a flavour of the spaghetti western, it’s Japanese samurai movies that seem to have been most on Wang Yu’s mind when making his film. Whilst Beach of the War Gods is fiercely anti-Japanese on the surface though, the great irony is that Wang Yu owes a great debt to Japanese cinema for the film’s style and story. So, whilst Wang Yu was going against the grain in making a wuxia, he wasn’t entirely setting himself apart from the crowd in making a patriotic film with the Japanese as the villains, a trope key to both his own The Chinese Boxer and Bruce Lee’s Fist of Fury, among others. He couldn’t take on an army of wokou all by himself though, so uses the days leading up to the Japanese deadline to assemble a team of skilled Chinese fighters to join their cause. The poor villagers can’t possibly meet those demands but, thankfully, a wandering swordsman, Hsia Feng (Wang Yu), is passing through and volunteers to help them. The film takes place in one such village, where the wokou (led by Shinobu Hashimoto, played by Lung Fei) are demanding a huge sum of money from the inhabitants or they will burn their homes to the ground. It’s set in 1556, a time when Japanese pirates, who were nicknamed ‘wokou’ (which translates to the derogatory ‘dwarf pirates’), were ravaging Chinese shores, attacking the locals and holding towns and villages to ransom. The film is very loosely based on actual historical events. I got my hands on a copy and my thoughts follow. Wang Yu made most of his films in the country from the 70s onwards, due to an injunction by Run Run Shaw after the actor walked out on his Shaw Brothers contract to move over to Golden Harvest.ĭespite its initial commercial failure, Beach of the War Gods has its supporters and Eureka have deemed it worthy of their first-class Eureka Classics treatment on Blu-ray. Released in 1973 to a disappointing box office, Beach of the War Gods was entirely made in Taiwan, with a largely Taiwanese cast and crew, despite being a Golden Harvest production. Whilst hand-to-had combat became the name of the game, dominating Hong Kong screens for several years following The Chinese Boxer, in 1972 Wang Yu decided to take a step back to make a film in the genre that had previously dominated, the wuxia (or wuxia pian). The film is even believed to have inspired Bruce Lee to come back to Hong Kong to make The Big Boss. Wang Yu (or Jimmy Wang Yu, as he became known in the West, following the release of The Man From Hong Kong in 1975) is widely considered to have kick-started the modern kung-fu film boom in 1970, following the huge success of The Chinese Boxer, which he wrote, directed and starred in. Starring: Jimmy Wang Yu, Lung Fei, Tien Yeh, Hsieh Han, Chang Yi-Kuai, Shan Mao, Tsai Hung, Min Min
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