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love of Asian horror generalizing to other Asian genres?
After managing to burn myself out on Asian horror for a bit, I've been watching more Asian action flicks lately - mostly of the martial arts variety - which I've always loved but haven't seen many. Last one I saw was The Protector. Anyway, I was curious whether this is a common experience. That is, does love of Asian horror lead you to explore other genres of Asian film?
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good timing with this thread. i just ordered ong bak and warrior king last night, my first asian non horror movies. also, i was given shogun assassins a while ago and would like a review if possible, dave?
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I'd say I did the same. Moved from the horrors into the Revenge trilogy and Ichi.
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do you recognise this movie? a squad of japanese soldiers somehow get teleported back to feudal japan. things go fine until they fall out with the local warlords. things descend into guns with limited ammo taking on hundreds of samurai in a fight to the death seige. was probably made in the eighties
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because you have to focus more so than usual because of the subtitles you take every detail in. if you switch off and miss a couple of lines of dialogue you're fucked. unlike english speaking movies where you can switch to auto pilot. i don't mind, i'm loving every movie. but then, you lot are screening them for me. thanks
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Genre jump
My love of Japanese monster movies and Ultraman shows actually led me into the J-horror thing in the first place, as i was digging around for laserdiscs and videoCDs in Chinatown years ago. I found a VCD of the original Ring, with a great cover of Sadako's eye on it. The owner of the shop said to me in cracked English, "You like scary movies?", and dug out Ring 2 for me as well!
I've been upto my neck in J-horror ever since. While I still track Japanese horror carefully, the trail has lead me into the world of imported DVDs - the equally wonderful South Korean horrors, Thai horrors, older Japanese horror films, offbeat Japanese comedies (like Kamikaze Girls, or even Swing Girls), new samurai films (like Red Shadow, Azumi, Hidden Blade), the violent Korean black comedies (Oldboy, Lady Vengeance), Japanese killer schoolgirls (Sukeban Deka).... ...all kinds of stuff, old and new, that's miles away more interesting than anything on TV! |
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