Saturday 5 January 2013

The ‘Acquired Taste’ of Cinema [Strike of Thunderkick Tiger aka. My Name is 'Twin Legs' (1982)]


From http://pics.imcdb.org/0is146/strike1h.2843.jpg

Dir. Park Woo-Sang
South Korea
Film #5 of The ‘Worst’ of Cinema

Martial arts cinema is its own genre, not just a mere sub-genre it once was, with its own infrastructure to be divided into types of sub-genres, and marketable to a wider audience than many cult genres of film. Even the ordinary person on the street will find them in a supermarket’s new release section and buy it, something that The Raid (2011) will continue to a new stage for the genre.  It has its own section in the nationwide British store HMV, and its own shelf (or two) in the second hand store I frequent. The latter is a vast source of both obscure gems and truly the obscurest of this cinema, of scratched, English dub only DVDs from long vanished distribution labels of varying quality. I picked this up out of interest, but ended up (consciously or subconsciously) considering it for this season, not because it sounded awful, but because this sounded like one of those films that are usually viewed as bottom of the barrel in the genre but can turn out to entertaining viewing. Interestingly, it fitted the season as it is a South Korea film that has ended up with an entirely different person taking credit for its direction on the opening credits of the version I saw, and has the name Joseph Lai as one of the producers, the man who helped produce the films of Godfrey Ho such as Ninja Terminator (1985). This feels like the sort of films this man distributed, or at least cut from the same cloth of these low budget releases from the period, in terms of its recognisable and ridiculous English dub synonymous with films from Lai. In my experience with these films – where Godfrey Ho took credit for other people’s work, and Lai took credit for Ho’s, and where I have seen a cut-and-paste ninja film exactly like Ho’s infamous sub-genre of his own creation that didn’t have his name on it at all – this confusion with even the basic origins of this film and the disguise that it has had forced upon it is to be expected. It exists with a cheaper, more erratic or dimestore craziness than other more well regarded types of martial arts cinema, truly distinct even if it’s only written about in select films like Ninja Terminator.

From http://img.youtube.com/vi/A12Cv7bxN_Y/0.jpg

Three men steal a large amount of loot, only for one to betray the other two. When he is murdered, the other two swoop over his daughter, like hawks, to get information on where it has been hidden, only for an outsider with a dangerous skill in combat to intervene and stake his claim for the loot as well. Like the Lai/Ho films, and anything pre-existing they had their hands on, it starts as a simplistic one-dimensional film with absolutely no regard for boundaries in entertaining the viewer. As the hunt for the loot takes place – using a Rubik Cube as an important key of all things – you are bombarded by amusing digressions, dubbed voices and numerous fight sequences one after another.  From a period, decades long, where these films were being churned out, and the aesthetics of the 1990s onwards was a long way off, these low budget meat-and-potatoes martial arts films, especially those from South Korea (like this) or places like Taiwan, are fascinating. The fashion in this film – scarves, white gloves, denim jacket and jeans – alongside the hairstyles is a back catalogue of style far too concentrated in its nostalgia for most people that it would cause aesthetic diabetes of the texture cognition of the mind. The characters are one note but stand out for their looks and dubbing, including that reoccurring trend of Asian martial arts cinema of an effeminate (ie. gay) character as a joke who is as over the top in his behaviour as possible, one of the villains who wears a full body, blue stocking for part of the film and has a best boy pasted in lipstick and white blush besides him. Its eye rolling as always with this cliché, but like many of these films, at least he is a skilled martial artist who can handle himself. He’s also one of the few villains I have seen who, using an anatomy chart, goes out of his way to advise his minions about the combat prowess of their enemy to warn them of who they’re facing; it is such a poorly developed virtue in main villains that it shows so much in the incompetence of their henchmen, something this one can be grateful isn’t one of his faults. This film in the first half keeps throwing moment after moment that are charmingly goofy or insane; it stands out as eliciting one of the oddest thoughts I’ve had watching a film – “Wait, did the man bring a harpoon with him??” – only for it to become obvious, in a film that is 99% set inland, that the other main villain has indeed brought a harpoon with him to stab people to death with. When it disappears, thinking about it, the harpoon-shaped absence it leaves makes the choice of weapon even more peculiar.  This film even continues the trademark of Ninja Terminator in “borrowing” music from other sources, this time going one further and using Wendy Carlos' reinterpretation of Henry Purcell's Music for the Funeral of Queen Mary, the theme for A Clockwork Orange (1971), for one sequence.

From http://pics.imcdb.org/0is4/strike5f.3897.jpg

Watching films like this however, unlike the more infamous Godfrey Ho works, is as much an act of patience, even masochism, too that not everyone has. The martial arts in this film is solid and well done, but outside of this or the wardrobe department, no one is bringing their best to the material; it starts to become the ponderous, disinteresting work it probably should have been since its beginning and the entertainment on from this fluctuates immensely. Its charm is still there – as when it suddenly becomes a Christmas film in a montage sequence, an instrumental rendition of Jingle Bells set over images of the daughter dressing up as the anti-hero in only his shirt, jacket and a drawn on moustache – but its sporadic. Also like a lot of films from this type of martial arts cinema, including Godfrey Ho’s own sadly, there is a bitter taste of sexism, especially with having its main female character beaten up continually, including by the anti-hero himself at one point. It’s a major issue with exploitation cinema – that is designed to exploit taboos regardless of moral judgement and good taste – but it’s very incongruous considering this genre is full of strong female protagonists, and actresses like Michelle Yeoh, who stand on their own two feet as incredibly skilled and talented martial artists.

It is a film for only the die-hard viewer or the person like me who dives into piles of films and DVDs for movies like this, as it is a film that gets it merits mostly from its ridiculousness, not necessarily for a cheap laugh, but to absorb the juxtapositions put onscreen and moments of goofy surprise. A large quota of the films on that second hand shelf I cross past continually is full of martial arts films like this, costing a mere pittance and probably only viewed by those film fans willing to give their time for lesser films that could either be mere hastily made bad cinema or great c-grade pulp. Strike of Thunderkick Tiger, like many of them, elicits mixed emotions that change from bad to entertaining continually throughout it, and because of this it’s an acquired taste if there ever was one. 

From http://i.ytimg.com/vi/GrHkbqssc10/0.jpg


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