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| caption = Film poster
| caption = Film poster
| director = [[Corey Yuen]]
| director = [[Corey Yuen]]
| producer = Jet Li
| producer = [[Jet Li]]
| writer = Chan Kin-chung<br/>Tsai Kang-yung<br/>[[Jeffrey Lau]]<ref name="hkarchive" />
| writer = Chan Kin-chung<br/>Tsai Kang-yung<br/>[[Jeffrey Lau]]<ref name="hkarchive" />
| starring = [[Jet Li]]<br>[[Josephine Siao]]<br>[[Vincent Zhao]]<br>[[Michelle Reis]]
| starring = Jet Li<br>[[Josephine Siao]]<br>[[Vincent Zhao]]<br>[[Michelle Reis]]
| music = [[Romeo Diaz]]<br>[[Mark Lui]]<br>[[Wong Jim|James Wong]]<ref name="hkarchive" />
| music = [[Romeo Diaz]]<br>[[Mark Lui]]<br>[[Wong Jim|James Wong]]<ref name="hkarchive" />
| cinematography = [[Jingle Ma]]<ref name="hkarchive" />
| cinematography = [[Jingle Ma]]<ref name="hkarchive" />
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| gross = HK$30,666,842<ref name="hkarchive" />
| gross = HK$30,666,842<ref name="hkarchive" />
}}
}}
'''''Fong Sai-yuk''''' ({{zh|t=方世玉|p=Fang Shi Yu}}, aka '''''The Legend of Fong Sai-yuk''''')<ref name="hkarchive" /> is a 1993 Hong Kong [[action film|action]] and [[comedy film]] directed by [[Corey Yuen]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.allmovie.com/movie/fong-sai-yuk-v132934|work=Allmovie|title=Fong Sai-Yuk(1993)|accessdate=4 September 2012|author=Brennan, Sandra}}</ref> and starring [[Jet Li]] as Chinese folk hero [[Fong Sai-yuk]].<ref>{{cite news|title= 10 classics provide visual poetry -- on video|publisher= [[The Los Angeles Times]]|date=|url= http://articles.latimes.com/2003/feb/27/news/wk-coverside27/3|accessdate=2011-01-06}}</ref> The film won the [[Hong Kong Film Award]] and [[Golden Horse Film Festival and Awards|Golden Horse Award]] for best action choreography. The film received positive reviews praising [[Josephine Siao]]'s acting and the action choreography.
'''''Fong Sai-yuk''''' ({{zh|t=方世玉|p=Fang Shi Yu}}, aka '''''The Legend of Fong Sai-yuk''''')<ref name="hkarchive" /> is a 1993 Hong Kong [[martial arts film]] directed by [[Corey Yuen]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.allmovie.com/movie/fong-sai-yuk-v132934|work=Allmovie|title=Fong Sai-Yuk(1993)|accessdate=4 September 2012|author=Brennan, Sandra}}</ref> and also produced by and starring [[Jet Li]] as Chinese folk hero [[Fong Sai-yuk]].<ref>{{cite news|title= 10 classics provide visual poetry -- on video|publisher= [[The Los Angeles Times]]|date=|url= http://articles.latimes.com/2003/feb/27/news/wk-coverside27/3|accessdate=2011-01-06}}</ref> The film won the [[Hong Kong Film Award]] and [[Golden Horse Film Festival and Awards|Golden Horse Award]] for best action choreography. The film received positive reviews praising [[Josephine Siao]]'s acting and the action choreography.


==Plot==
==Plot==
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[[Category:1993 films]]
[[Category:1993 films]]
[[Category:1990s martial arts films]]
[[Category:1990s comedy films]]
[[Category:1990s comedy films]]
[[Category:1990s martial arts films]]
[[Category:Cantonese-language films]]
[[Category:Cantonese-language films]]
[[Category:Films directed by Corey Yuen]]
[[Category:Films directed by Corey Yuen]]
[[Category:Films set in the Qing dynasty]]
[[Category:Films set in the Qing dynasty]]
[[Category:Hong Kong films]]
[[Category:Hong Kong action comedy films]]
[[Category:Hong Kong action comedy films]]
[[Category:Hong Kong films]]
[[Category:Hong Kong martial arts films]]
[[Category:Hong Kong martial arts films]]
[[Category:Kung fu films]]
[[Category:Kung fu films]]
[[Category:Martial arts comedy films]]
[[Category:Wuxia films]]
[[Category:Wuxia films]]

Revision as of 20:00, 9 September 2014

Fong Sai-yuk
Film poster
Directed byCorey Yuen
Written byChan Kin-chung
Tsai Kang-yung
Jeffrey Lau[1]
Produced byJet Li
StarringJet Li
Josephine Siao
Vincent Zhao
Michelle Reis
CinematographyJingle Ma[1]
Edited byCheung Yiu-chung[1]
Music byRomeo Diaz
Mark Lui
James Wong[1]
Production
company
Eastern Production Ltd.
Distributed byGala Film Distribution Ltd
Release date
  • 4 March 1993 (1993-03-04)
Running time
106 minutes
CountryHong Kong[1]
LanguageCantonese[1]
Box officeHK$30,666,842[1]

Fong Sai-yuk (Chinese: 方世玉; pinyin: Fang Shi Yu, aka The Legend of Fong Sai-yuk)[1] is a 1993 Hong Kong martial arts film directed by Corey Yuen,[2] and also produced by and starring Jet Li as Chinese folk hero Fong Sai-yuk.[3] The film won the Hong Kong Film Award and Golden Horse Award for best action choreography. The film received positive reviews praising Josephine Siao's acting and the action choreography.

Plot

The brash and ambitious Fong Sai-yuk meets the beautiful Ting-ting during a track and field competition and falls in love with her. Ting-ting is the daughter of the hot-headed hooligan Tiger Lui. Tiger Lui stages a martial arts competition for interested men to participate and win his daughter's hand in marriage. The contestant must defeat Tiger Lui's wife, Siu-wan, in order to win. Fong Sai-yuk joins the contest at his friends' urging and defeats Siu-wan. He catches a glimpse of his future bride, who is actually a servant maid to replace the temporarily missing Ting-ting. Fong Sai-yuk decides to forfeit the match and leaves.

Fong Sai-yuk's mother, Miu Chui-fa, enters the contest disguised as a man to help her son win back the lost glory. She defeats Siu-wan by knocking her off the scaffold, but catches her as she falls and the two land safely on the ground. After that intimate moment together, Siu-wan becomes romantically attracted to Miu Chui-fa, unaware that Miu is actually a woman in disguise. Tiger Lui then forces Miu Chui-fa to marry his daughter. To save his mother from embarrassment, Fong Sai-yuk marries Ting-ting on behalf of his "brother" (his mother in disguise as a man), and is confined in his father-in-law's house. He is unaware that his bride is actually his love interest and they fight in the dark. They discover each other's identities eventually.

Miu Chui-fa manages to persuade Tiger Lui to let her son return home. Just then, Fong Sai-yuk's father, Fong Tak, returns home from a trip. Fong Sai-yuk discovers that his father is a member of the Red Flower Society, an underground resistance movement that aims to overthrow the ruling Ching Dynasty. While Fong Tak is having a conversation with fellow members, they are ambushed by the Governor of Nine Gates and his soldiers. The Governor demands that Fong Tak hand over the name list of the society's members, but the latter refuses. Just then, Fong Sai-yuk and his mother appear, and Fong Sai-yuk fights with the Governor and holds him off until his parents have escaped to safety.

Fong Sai-yuk and his parents hide in their in-laws' house to evade the authorities, but the Governor pays a visit to Tiger Lui and recognizes them. In the ensuing battle, Fong Tak is captured while Siu-wan dies from a gunshot wound. Fong Sai-yuk lies to his mother that his father has been rescued and decides to save his father alone without letting her know. He attempts to storm the execution ground and fights with the Governor to save his father. At the critical moment, Miu Chui-fa appears together with the Red Flower Society's members and their leader, Chan Ka-lok. They defeat the Governor and his men and succeed in freeing Fong Tak. Before the film ends, Fong Sai-yuk becomes Chan Ka-lok's godson and joins his godfather on their noble quest as they ride off towards the sunset together.

Cast

Jet Li (pictured) played the role of Fong Sai-yuk as well as being the producer of the film.[1][4]

[1][4]

Release

Fong Sai-yuk was a box office hit on Hong Kong, grossing HK $30,666,842.[1] A sequel, Fong Sai-yuk II, was released in the same year.[5]

Reception

In Hong Kong, Corey Yuen and Yuen Tak won the Hong Kong Film Award for Best Action Choreography at the 13th Hong Kong Film Awards.[6] Josephine Siao and Zhang Yao-zong were nomainted for best actress and best editing respectively as well.[6] A the 1993 Golden Horse Awards, Peter Cheung won the award for Best Editing, while Corey Yuen and Yuen Tak won the award for best action choreography.[7]

The film received a positive review from Time Out London who referred to the script as "cobbled together", but praised actress Josephine Siao, noting "a show-stopping culmination of three decades of fine work in the Hong Kong cinema".[8] The Austin Chronicle praised the film's fight choreography as the "most breathtakingly choreographed fight scenes witnessed in years," and noted the liberated female characters, calling them "a refreshing change of pace from years past, when women were frequently used as either cookie cutter stereotypes or the requisite damsels in distress".[9] TV Guide gave the film four stars, praising both Siao and Jet Li's roles and Corey Yuen's direction stating "it's astonishing to find that the director also helmed the ridiculous Stateside kung fu fest No Retreat, No Surrender (1986), Jean-Claude Van Damme's film debut; on home ground, he proves a filmmaker of consummate skill and style."[10]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Fong Sai-yuk". Hong Kong Film Archive. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
  2. ^ Brennan, Sandra. "Fong Sai-Yuk(1993)". Allmovie. Retrieved 4 September 2012.
  3. ^ "10 classics provide visual poetry -- on video". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 6 January 2011.
  4. ^ a b "Fong Sai-Yuk (1993) - Cast & Crew". Allmovie. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
  5. ^ Blaise, Judd. "Fong Sai-Yuk 2". Allmovie. Retrieved 4 September 2012.
  6. ^ a b "第十三屆香港電影金像獎得獎名單". Hong Kong Film Awards (in Chinese). Retrieved 16 September 2012.
  7. ^ "Taipei Golden Horse Awards". Golden Horse Awards. Retrieved 17 September 2012.
  8. ^ TR. "Fong Sai-Yuk (1993)". Time Out. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
  9. ^ Savlov, Marc (24 September 1993). "The Legend of Fong Sai-Yuk". Retrieved 16 September 2012.
  10. ^ "Fong Sai-Yuk Review". TV Guide. Retrieved 16 September 2012.