Stephan Chow's Journey to the West: Conquering Demons

Stephen Chow Has Started Working On A NEW CHINESE ODYSSEY
by Hugo Ozman, July 18, 2011 10:03 AM
Action, Asia, Comedy, Drama

Long before Stephen Chow came to fame in the West with SHAOLIN SOCCER and KUNG FU HUSTLE, he was already a superstar in Asia for many years and starred in many classic films. His 1994 films A CHINESE ODYSSEY PART ONE: PANDORA’S BOX and PART TWO: CINDERELLA were two of his early classics. Loosely based on the famous Chinese novel A Journey to the West, the films tell the story of the Monkey King travelling with his friends to the west to acquire sutras from India.

Now news has come that Chow has already started shooting A NEW CHINESE ODYSSEY. He is co-directing the film with Kwok Chi-kin (GALLANTS’ director), while also acting as the film’s producer and screenwriter.

According to reports, Chow was originally planning to play a master monk, but now is likely going to reprise his role as the Monkey King (on the request of the film’s investors). Anthony Wong will be playing the role of the master monk instead, while Taiwanese pop star Show Luo will be playing Pigsy. The gorgeous Shu Qi will be starring as the film’s heroine.

I think this news is most interesting not only because Stephen Chow is now making a new film and reprising an old role, but of the fact that Donnie Yen is also playing the Monkey King in his upcoming new film (titled THE MONKEY KING).

Been wondering what Chow was up to next. Never saw CO1. I really should…

Now titled Journey to the West?

Posted: Tue., Nov. 1, 2011, 5:26am PT
[URL=“http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118045373?refCatId=13”]Village Roadshow sets up shingle in China
Company to co-produce Zhang Ziyi starrer ‘Lucky Star’
By Clifford Coonan

Village Roadshow is the latest international shingle to enter the booming China market with the launch of Village Roadshow Entertainment Group Asia, a platform for Chinese production and distribution.

Its slate is headed by romantic comedy “My Lucky Star,” produced by and starring Chinese thesp Zhang Ziyi. VREG Asia and Dadi Media will jointly finance and co-produce the pic, which will be helmed by Dennie Gordon.

The slate also includes Stephen Chow’s “Journey to the West,” a version of the Monkey King legend. Chow will helm, produce and write “Journey,” while Bingo Group, VREG Asia and Edko Films are jointly financing and co-producing.

VREG Asia’s topper will be former Warner Bros. China exec Ellen Eliasoph, who has 25 years’ experience in the region, with Ming “Beaver” Kwei as executive VP of development and production, and Lizhi Chen as VP of marketing and distribution.

“Having worked with China’s filmmakers and film companies for many years in a joint effort to develop the film market, I am gratified to witness China’s growing emergence as a major player in the global film industry, and delighted to be a part of it,” said Eliasoph, who worked on Warner Bros.’ “Turn Left, Turn Right,” “The Painted Veil” and “Crazy Stone.”

“VREG Asia will propel this trend forward by working closely with China’s filmmakers, helping them tell their stories, and working to bring their films to an ever-widening audience around the world.”

VREG Asia has also formed strategic alliances with Australian vfx and animation studio Animal Logic; Cimarron Group, an entertainment marketing group with offices in Beijing and Los Angeles, and research and marketing information company Screen Engine.
Hopefully this means Chow’s Journey will get decent U.S. distribution.

i think he has a deal with sony so im sure itll be shown here…even thou they were ****ed at him for not doing KFH2 and green hornet(sony was the distributor on it) chow is still good money in the US.

**** I wish the DVD place on Elizabeth street was still open in NYC. i don’t have anywhere to really go to get imported DVD’s anymore.

[QUOTE=BakShaolinEC;1141351]**** I wish the DVD place on Elizabeth street was still open in NYC. i don’t have anywhere to really go to get imported DVD’s anymore.[/QUOTE]

i wanted to cry man…the one on mott is closed to…there are others tho, cant remember the street names…next time im in chinatown ill post them…but there is also places on 14th street that carry imports but they are like 14 bucks a pop.

Chow speaks… a little

24 May 2012 - 07H31
‘Monkey’ to go West again as cinema power shifts East

AFP - Generations of Chinese grew up under the spell cast by Wu Cheng’en’s “Journey to the West”, the 16th Century adventure epic which is the subject of two major upcoming film adaptations.

Hopes are that the tale will continue to leave audiences spellbound, with shooting now wrapped on actor and director Stephen Chow’s version of the tale and another starring “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” star Chow Yun-fat.

Lauded as one of China’s “Four Great Classical Novels”, it has inspired operas, including one penned by acclaimed British rocker Damon Albarn, a string of cinema hits dating back to the 1940s and a popular online game.

“‘Journey to the West’ is a story full of imagination,” Chow told AFP.

“The plot is beyond any other fantasy,” added the Hong Kong-based star, who is one of China’s biggest box office draws with films including “Shaolin Soccer” (2001) and “Kung Fu Hustle” (2004).

As China’s rapidly expanding film industry continues to break new commercial ground, Chinese filmmakers are increasingly looking to literary adaptations for their inspiration – with “Journey to the West” a time-honoured favourite.

Chow is putting final touches to his 110 million yuan ($17.3 million) adaptation, whose working title is “Journey to the West” and stars Chinese actors Wen Zhang and Shu Qi. It will be the third time he has used it as source material for a film.

It will come up against another version featuring heavyweights Chow Yun-fat and Donnie Yen in the Soi Cheang-directed 3D epic “The Monkey King”, costing an estimated 400 million yuan and which is also in post-production.

Chow’s fascination with the ancient text was first fuelled 30 years ago when he watched a grainy, black-and-white Cantonese film version of the tale in his local cinema house.

“I think the reason it is still relevant nowadays – and people still find it attractive – is all down to its imagination. Until now I still don’t see it being surpassed.”

It is the sheer scale of the source material available in the original text that has Chow returning to those pages once again.

“The story is so creative. Yet it is so orderly arranged and structured. On the one hand the creative process is just as free as a bird but on the other hand the framework of the story is very well organized. This is very unique.”

The story is based on the legend of the monk Xuanzang’s journey to India during the Tang Dynasty (618-907) to retrieve sacred texts.

The monk is ordered on this quest towards spiritual enlightenment by Buddha and is placed under the protection of three disciples – Sun Wukong (the Monkey King), Zhu Bajie (the pig), and Sha Wujing (the water buffalo) – who are making up for past sins as well as a dragon prince who comes in the form of a horse.

The story first started to appear on the big screen in the 1940s and has since been used as the basis for such hits as “Monkey Goes West” (1966) and the Jet Li-starring “The Forbidden Kingdom” (2008) as well as Chow’s own “A Chinese Odyssey” parts one and two (1994).

It has also been retold in a number of television productions – most notably the Japanese series “Saiyuki” from the 1970s, which was then dubbed and screened around the world.

More recently the tale was the basis of the acclaimed opera “Monkey: Journey to the West”, put together by Blur and Gorillaz frontman Damon Albarn and Chinese stage director Chen Shi-zheng.

It has also surfaced in the Nickelodeon multi-player game “Monkey Quest”, which the company last month claimed was the “fastest-growing virtual world for kids” with 10 million registered users in its first year.

Kat Yeung, distribution executive at Filmko Films which is co-producing rival movie “The Monkey King” along with Mandarin Films, believes the lessons learned along the way by those characters still resonate centuries on.

She says her company is putting a very modern spin on how the tale is told. “3D technology can show the ‘Journey to the West’ like it has never been seen before,” she said.

“We want to take this story international, not only to Chinese territories, and we think “The Monkey King” will be just the first episode. There are lots of chapters in the books with independent stories that can be told.”

Both productions are underway at a time when China is cementing its status as a cinema powerhouse.

Box office takings surged 30 percent on-year in 2011, eclipsing those in North America. Beijing-based group Wanda is set to become the world’s biggest cinema operator by sales with its $2.6 billion purchase of US firm AMC Entertainment.

With the government-enforced quota of just 20 international films allowed in for screening each year still in place, it’s an industry in need of productions and ideas, with “Journey to the West” seen as rich source for inspiration.

Hong Kong-based film critic and historian Paul Fonoroff also believes its enduring success comes down to its universal themes.

“It’s a tale that has something for everybody: fantasy, adventure, cartoonish characters for the kids, an allegorical subtext for the adults, underlying themes of Buddhist enlightenment for the more spiritually inclined, and plenty of sex or at least sexual innuendo, depending on how the filmmakers want to play it,” he explains.

“The story’s themes are timeless and have a resonance regardless of one’s cultural background – think Wizard of Oz multiplied a thousand times. And with characters like a monkey, pig, a dragon, it’s not only loads of fun but – equally important for 21st Century filmmakers – it’s a synergistic marketing dream.”

Both “Journey to the West” and “The Monkey King” are scheduled for release in 2013.
I really must see Chinese Odyssey 1&2 before next year.

This is now going by “Slayer Legend” in some reports

Stephen Chow To Return as the Monkey King!

Big entertainment news — popular Chinese film star and director Stephen Chow is currently shooting scenes for his next motion picture, and it will be for another “Journey to the West” story!

Chow has not been seen on camera ever since “CJ7” (2008) or as it is known in Chinese, “” (pinyin: Cháng Jing Q Hào) the title of which which is a pun upon the Shenzhou 5 and Shenzhou 6 Chinese-manned space missions. Furthermore, Chow’s future projects have always been shrouded in secrecy, leading to speculation and rumor. Chow’s name has been attached to such projects as “The Green Hornet” (2011) before dropping out and being replaced by Jay Chou, Kung Fu Hustle 2, King of Comedy 2, and Tai Chi, a rumored English-language remake of Bruce Lee’s “Way of the Dragon” (1972).

The new Journey to the West movie is entitled “” (X Yóu Jì Zh Chú Mó Chuánqí) which loosely translates to “Journey to the West (Part III): The Legend of the Monster Slayer”. It is currently being secretly shot on a soundstage.

Chow had previously portrayed the Monkey King, also known as Sun Wukong (; Snwùkng), in the films “A Chinese Odyssey: Pandora’s Box”(1994) and “A Chinese Odyssey: Cinderella” (1994).

I’ll change the thread title to “” (X Yóu Jì Zh Chú Mó Chuánqí) “Journey to the West (Part III): The Legend of the Monster Slayer” at some later date perhaps. :rolleyes:

Chinese Legend of the Odyssey of the Journey of the Slayer to the West

Chinavision takes Chow’s Journey
By Patrick Frater
Thu, 20 September 2012, 14:15 PM (HKT)
Production News

ChinaVision Media Group Ltd , the stockmarket-listed investment vehicle of Chinese film entrepreneur DONG Ping , has boarded Journey to the West , the upcoming picture by superstar Stephen CHOW (pictured).

Chinavision also announced an agreement with Chow (described in documents as Mr Chiau) to be involved in a further five Chow movies. It said it had obtained “an option to invest in the production of 5 motion pictures in which Mr. Chiau would play a significant role as filmmaker, producer, director, script writer, protagonist or other leading role within seven years from the date of the agreement.”

Chinavision is to pay RMB38 million ($6.0 million) for half of the stake in the film previously owned by Chow’s Bingo Group Holdings Ltd . That will give Chinavision “a 30% equity share of the rights to produce, market and distribute [Odyssey] on a worldwide basis”.

The film, which pegs Chow as screenwriter, executive producer and co-director (with Derek KWOK ) is notable as the first title for five years with Chow in a directing role. It is also likely to be the first movie to reach the market from the new Village Roadshow Entertainment Group Asia stable.

A spokesman for VREA told Film Business Asia that the Chinavision acquisition dilutes Chow and Bingo’s positions in Odyssey, but leaves unaltered the rights and positions of co-investors VREA and Edko.

Two nights ago it emerged that ChinaVision may also co-finance Police Story 2013, to be directed by DING Sheng and star Jackie CHAN , in which Wanda Media Co Ltd will also co-invest.
It’s all about Wanda now…

I’ve changed the title of this thread to ‘Stephan Chow’s Journey to the West’

It’s just easier that way for now, until they come up with a title that sticks.

Stephen Chow’s Journey To The West Second Teaser - BleedingCool.com

Stephen Chow unveils new Monkey King epic
By Zhang Rui
China.org.cn, November 21, 2012

Hong Kong comedian and director Stephen Chow announced on Tuesday in Beijing that his new epic “Journey to the West” is set to hit Chinese screen during the 2013 Spring Festival holiday season.

A first short teaser was unveiled at the press conference, along with the official movie poster. The “Kung Fu Hustle” director said that he didn’t take on any acting in this film and focused on the directing aspect of the production.

“I can’t afford myself because my remuneration is too high,” Chow joked. But the film’s producer Wang Zhonglei, boss of Huayi Brothers Media, said it was Chow himself who had asked not to let him act, because Chow only wanted to be the best director he could possibly be.

Chow, once the most popular comedian in all of China, didn’t elaborate on any of the movie’s plots, but did reveal there is definitely a love story somewhere in there.

Chow has previously spoken of his plans to create the most spectacular domestic special effects film ever to be produced in China in order to match Hollywood blockbuster standards, though the concept teaser shown to the press was not that impressive. Chow explained that it is still a work-in-progress and doesn’t deem it necessary to disclose the film’s final version just yet.

Although shooting wrapped a year ago, there was a long period of post-production due to the large proportion of computer generated special effects involving creatures and supernatural elements.

"We have a 500-member special effects team, "Chow said, “a home-made special effects film can still be on par with the Hollywood ones; the key to making that happen lies in the creative ideas.” Wang also revealed that he has seen the unfinished version, which is full of oriental fantasies and stretches far beyond human imagination.


Stephen Chow and Wang Zhonglei meet the press in Beijing, Nov. 21, 2012. [China.org.cn]

The Chow-styled humor will also be present in this film. Wang said audiences are in for a good laugh from beginning to the end.

A sequel to the Monkey King saga is highly possible, Chow said, “It will be such a waste if the story were to end here.” Even the title gives a hint as it reads “Journey to the West: Fell Monsters Chapter”, implying there will be more chapters. “‘Journey to the West’ is a most fascinating novel to dig into,” Wang added, “Stephen Chow carries his version in his heart, and he is the best director to take the novel from its pages to the big screen.”

According to previous reports, Derek Kwok is co-directing and the cast includes Shu Qi, Huang Bo, Wen Zhang and Show Lo.

Lauded as one of China’s “Four Great Classical Novels,” “Journey to the West” has inspired operas, a string of cinema hits dating back to the 1940s, cartoons and popular online games.

It will be the third time Stephen Chow has used it as material for a film. He once played the lead of Monkey King Sun Wukong in a pair of 1994 films “A Chinese Odyssey Part One: Pandora’s Box” and “A Chinese Odyssey Part Two: Cinderella,” directed by Jeffrey Lau, which are loosely based on the Chinese classic and combine slapstick comedy, Kung Fu adventure and a love story. “A Chinese Odyssey” films became a cult classic among young adults on Chinese mainland.

It will vie against another film adaption version of “Journey to the West” to be screened next year, featuring heavyweights Chow Yun-fat and Donnie Yen in the Cheang Pou-Soi directed 3D epic “The Monkey King,” costing an estimated 400 million yuan (US$64.16 million) and which is currently also in post-production.

A teaser

Worth it just to see Shu Qi. :wink:

Get Behind The Scenes Of Stephen Chow’s JOURNEY TO THE WEST
Al Young

Huayi Bros have released a making-of video for Stephen Chow’s Journey to the West with Chow giving direction to Shu Qi on acting a comedic performance. Its amusing to see him get animated but unfortunately, he will be applying his “Mo lei tau” humor mostly behind the camera rather than infront of it since its been reported earlier that he will only take a minor role so he can concentrate on directing.

You’ll find the making-of video (No English subtitles) embedded below. The fantasy comedy arrives in during the Spring Festival in 2013.

Chinese Odyssey reviews

I can see why these were released within weeks of each other around Chinese New Year. Part Two starts right where Part One ends and then jumps 500 years prior to Part One. These films are very confusing that way, so if you’re looking for a sensible story arc (and why you would do that with Chow’s films is questionable) these aren’t for you. You could actually watch Part Two first as technically speaking, that is the prequel. If you are only planning to watch one of these, I’d watch Two as it is a better film, IMO. Also, you really need to be familiar with Journey to the West or it won’t make a lick of sense. Like Forbidden Kingdom, these films are based heavily upon that epic tale, although the story itself is new, completely outside of the traditional narrative. But unlike FK, there is no attempt to explain the characters at all. It’s just assumed you know who the Pigsy, Sandy, Bull King, the Spider Demon, et. al. are already.

I get the English titles now - Pandora & Cinderella - they are painfully bad translations but I can see how they arrived at them.

A Chinese Odyssey Part One - Pandora’s Box (1995 101)
This was enjoyable although not very coherent. Chow’s hijinks are funny, including SPOILER [SIZE=“1”]a repeated schtick about Chow’s **** catching fire and having to be stomped out, which I have to confess got me to giggle[/SIZE] END SPOILER. It’s all long before CGI but the wire work and cheesey effects aren’t that distracting, just a little dated. The martial arts are typical for fant-ASIA fare of the day - lots of flying about but it works surprisingly well, even now, given the subject matter. The connection to Monkey is slim beyond the Demons.

A Chinese Odyssey Part Two - Cinderella (1995 )
This one was the better of the two films as it includes more of the characters from Monkey. It also makes the first film make a lot more sense. Chow’s inspiration from Looney Toons is readily apparent, even with a classic bomb-with-burning-fuse-resulting-in-an-ash-faced-villain gag. Sanzhang as a bore was hysterical. The ‘only you’ song in prison was just wacky, so Stephan Chow. Overall, I liked his interpretation of the quest quartet. That was really missing for me in the first film. I started to get the female immortals mixed up, SPOILER [SIZE=“1”]which of course, got worse when they all changed bodies[/SIZE] END SPOILER but it kept me entertained.

I confess I have a soft spot for Chow’s Mo Lei Tau humor. At some point in every film, he always gets a smile out of me. Chow is the only one who would imagine giving Monkey a Bruce Lee ‘wataaah!’ That’s just wickedly funny.

I’m eager to see his next take on this.

Thanks for the review.

Shaolin Soccer is STILL one of my favorites. The scene where they sing the Shaolin song in the bar makes me laugh every single time. I even dragged my wife to see Kung Fu Hustle to the theatre when it came out.

I may have to watch CO.

[QUOTE=JamesC;1204581]Thanks for the review.

Shaolin Soccer is STILL one of my favorites. The scene where they sing the Shaolin song in the bar makes me laugh every single time. […][/QUOTE]

I’ve watched that scene so many times that I actually remembered the song. I find myself singing it sometimes. It always brings a smile to my face.

Wait…what?

HK celebrity Stephen Chow to advise CCP on Kung Fu choreography
By Beth Main

… no not really, he is going to advise them on politics.

Stephen Chow the 51 year old Hong Kong actor, comedian, screenwriter, film director, producer and most importantly star of Kung Fu Hustle has been appointed to Guangdong’s Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference Committee… but he isn’t actually a Communist.

He has been included as one of 281 members from Hong Kong and Macau in a ‘special invitation’ sector that makes up part of the 978 strong committee. The movie star is affiliated with the Zhigongdang of China (one of the eight parties in China that aren’t the CCP) but since the CPPCC is a political advisory body, which is dominated by the CCP anyway, he isn’t likely to be writing new laws any time soon.

978 members were adopted into the body during a provincial meeting in Guangzhou on Monday. Chow won’t be the only celebrity cast member, and he will be joined by actor Kent Tong Chun-yip, and presenters Sally Wu and Ma Dingsheng, who have served on the committee before. His participation is set to increase media coverage of the Committee for the next five years.

While many will question whether celebrities are qualified to advise politicians they can rest assured that Chow meets the CPPCC criter

What could a 978 member committee every accomplish? I’ve been on committees with less than a dozen people and the only thing we could agree on was when the meeting was over. :rolleyes:

‘Kung Fu Hustle’ Star Stephen Chow Appointed to China’s Top Political Advisory Body
8:28 PM PST 1/14/2013 by Clarence Tsui
Getty Images
The comedian-director – whose new film, “JTTW,” is released next month – will serve on one of the provincial arms of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference.

HONG KONG – With his comeback movie just a month away from hitting Chinese cineplexes, Stephen Chow Sing-chi’s pedigree was given a major boost Monday with his appointment to the Chinese government’s top political advisory body.

The Hong Kong comedian-director – whose latest film, JTTW, is slated for release in his hometown Feb. 7 before opening across China on Feb. 10 – was among the 978 delegates named to sit on the Guangdong provincial committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference. His five-year tenure begins in January 2014, when he is expected to attend his first meeting in Guangzhou.

Having kept his public appearances to a minimum in recent years – his most recent production was CJ7, the 2008 film which he starred in and directed – Chow surprised many last year when he called a press conference to endorse the candidacy of Henry Tang Ying-yen in Hong Kong’s Chief Executive elections. Before that, the actor was not known for making public stances beyond show business matters.

Tang, a businessman who served as Hong Kong’s chief secretary for administration, eventually lost to Leung Chun-ying in a bitterly contested race, with his campaign undermined by revelations of an extramarital affair and also an illegally built basement in his mansion.

Unlike the National People’s Congress, China’s legislature, the CCPCC is largely an advisory body and was established by the Chinese Communist Party as a “united front” institution aimed at bringing non-party individuals into the establishment.

While largely ceremonial, a place on the CCPCC is highly sought after as it signifies a level of officially sanctioned social standing in China – something that could facilitate the office-holders’ professional career in the country. Among the directors and actors who have served the institution in recent years are Zhang Yimou and Gong Li, who were appointees on the national level of the CCPCC.

It remains to be seen what Chow’s level of participation will be. In the past, celebrity delegates have been reproached for not attending their annual meetings. Gong, for example, was subjected to much criticism in the Chinese media in 2008 for not turning up for meetings two years in a row, with officials forced to concede that such absence has become “a problem.”

JTTW – on which Chow serves as co-director (with Derek Kwok), screenwriter and producer – is a new take on the Journey to the West legend about the adventures of a mischievous Monkey King, which the Hong Kong star himself played in a series of hit films (named A Chinese Odyssey) in the 1990s. The film stars mainland Chinese actor Wen Zhang (The Sorcerer and the White Snake, Love is Not Blind) as the primate spirit in a case also featuring Shu Qi (Three Times, The Transporter), Anthony Wong Chau-sang (Infernal Affairs, The Painted Veil) and Huang Bo (Crazy Stone, Lost in Thailand).

more teasers

Chinese only. no subs.

I just realized Chu Chi Ling is in this. Cool!

New Trailer

In HD w/subs
(1080P HD)

Chow understands Monkey

I always used to look forward to Jackie’s new flick on Chinese New Year. Good to see Chow step up and put something out for the holiday again.

Journey To The West: Conquering The Demons
4 February, 2013 | By Edmund Lee
Dirs: Stephen Chow, Derek Kwok. China. 2013. 110mins


A glorious return to form after the slightly underwhelming CJ7 (2008) and his first ever directorial effort in which he doesn’t also play the lead role, Stephen Chow’s Journey To The West: Conquering The Demons is a thoroughly entertaining action comedy that suggests, a la Woody Allen, a promising new life behind the screen for the actor-director, who found an eager international audience with 2001’s Shaolin Soccer and 2004’s Kung Fu Hustle after having established himself as Hong Kong’s most iconic comedian since the early 1990s.

As is frequently the case for the recent Stephen Chow movies, violence and gore are used occasionally to comical effects.

Those who’re worrying that Chow is on an irreversible retreat into self-congratulatory mode could be in for a surprise: as someone whose image is synonymous with his oeuvre, the actor isn’t even making a notable cameo appearance in his latest film. Serving up a delirious blend of monster movie, romantic comedy and martial arts fantasy, this inventive new take on the classical novel Journey To The West also marks a long-awaited return to the material by Chow, who previously starred as the Monkey King in director Jeff Lau’s now-classic two-part adaptation A Chinese Odyssey (1995).

Clearly structured – and titled – as the first film of a potential movie series, Conquering The Demons opens in mainland China, Hong Kong and Singapore on February 7, as well as Taiwan on the following day, to coincide with the Chinese New Year holidays. While international sales should be less affected by the actor’s conspicuous onscreen absence, it remains to be seen if Chinese viewers will respond with the same enthusiasm they showed the Chow-starring comedies of the past.

Although the film is billed as “a Stephen Chow film” that is “produced, directed and written by” him, it is noteworthy that Chow, as a producer, only took up his directorial duties – and the head billing – midway through the production. Conquering The Demons is in fact co-directed by Derek Kwok (Gallants), who was initially the sole director – even if his name doesn’t currently appear in the opening credits.

While the film is still peppered with small and unpretentiously bizarre touches of humour that are unquestionably Chow’s own, the introduction of a new creative voice may have contributed to the refreshing dramatic focus here. Unlike seemingly every other movie in Chow’s acting career, which almost always features a bratty anti-hero battling against his underdog status, the protagonist of Conquering The Demons is surprisingly not the spotlight-hogging Monkey King – whose ironically unimpressive image is unveiled at the movie’s final showdown as an awkwardly hilarious sight gag – but a younger Xuan Zang before he makes the titular pilgrimage.

Played by Chinese actor Wen Zhang (Love Is Not Blind, The Sorcerer And The White Snake) with an endearing balance of determination and humility, the lead role of Xuan Zang barely possesses the bigger-than-life personality that typically defines Chow’s leading roles. As a demon-hunter with minimal martial arts skills, the character is guided only by an unwavering belief in the inherent goodness of every evil being: he strives to awaken the demons’ sense of innocence by singing from his treasured book of 300 Nursery Rhymes.

Aided by the original character Miss Duan (Shu Qi), a beautiful yet totally fierce fellow demon-hunter who’s fallen hopelessly in love with him, Xuan Zang spends the duration of the film consecutively conquering the three demons that will eventually become his famed disciples: a fish demon (which inspires a few Piranha-like sequences), a pig demon (whose exceedingly ugly look leads to a couple of very gross kisses) and a monkey demon aka the Monkey King. With an expected reference to A Chinese Odyssey’s most famous lines, Xuan Zang becomes a Buddhist monk and finally learns of the significance of ‘greater love’ through his love interest.

As is frequently the case for the recent Stephen Chow movies, violence and gore are used occasionally to comical effects; a malfunctioning blood-splashing device used by a character provides some of the movie’s funniest gags. And though the computer-generated demons, often in the guises of giant animals, are not at their most realistic, they do feel very much at home in a fantasy movie as wacky as Conquering the Demons.

Production companies: Bingo Movie Development Ltd, Village Roadshow Pictures Asia Ltd, Chinavision Media Group Ltd, Edko Films Ltd, Huayi Brothers Media Corporation, China Film Co Ltd

Co-producer: Wang Zhonglei

Executive producers: Stephen Chow, Ellen Eliasoph, Dong Ping, Bill Kong, Wang Zhongjun, Han Sanping

Screenplay: Derek Kwok, Huo Xin, Wang Yun, Fung Chih-chiang, Lu Zheng-yu, Lee Sheung-ching, Ivy Kong

Cinematography: Choi Sung-fai

Editor: Chan Chi-wai

Production designer: Bruce Yu

Action choreographer: Ku Huen-chiu

Music: Raymond Wong

Main cast: Shu Qi, Wen Zhang, Huang Bo, Show Lo, Lee Sheung-ching, Chiu Chi-ling, Chrissie Chau

Random tech PR

Nevertheless, I’d love to see this in 3D of course. That made all the difference with FS@DG.

February 06, 2013 08:00 ET
LA-Based Venture 3D Uses Signiant Media Shuttle™ for Accelerated Delivery of Massive 3D Movie Files

Ease and Flexibility of Cloud-Based Solution Facilitates Production of Upcoming Feature Film

BURLINGTON, MA–(Marketwire - Feb 6, 2013) - Signiant, the market leader in intelligent file movement software for media and entertainment, today announced that Venture 3D, a stereoscopic 3D conversion production company based in Los Angeles, is using its Media Shuttle™ hybrid SaaS file transfer solution to facilitate collaboration with partners in Hong Kong, Beijing, Seoul and Korea on an upcoming feature film. Built for workflows that demand fast, reliable delivery of massive files, and IT management features typically associated with more expensive solutions, Media Shuttle is allowing Venture 3D to dramatically broaden its business base in the Asia-Pacific region.

Known for its conversion work on “Titanic 3D” and “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader,” Venture 3D is using Media Shuttle to deliver the film “Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons,” directed by Stephen Chow of “Shaolin Soccer” and “Kung Fu Hustle” fame. Venture 3D’s business success on the project requires the ability to move massive files – sometimes 200-300 GB in a single transfer – to multiple entities across Asia. As such the company required a solution that would give their global partners access to large files without the administrative constraints of FTP. In addition Venture 3D needed ultimate control over who is accessing clients’ high-value-assets, for how long, and to set limits on their permission to files.

“What we needed was a tall order – the ability to transfer large files quickly, access them anywhere, control and track file access and not be limited by the size of the file or the number of people that could access those files,” said Todd Cogan, SVP, Operations, Venture 3D. “Using Media Shuttle we are able to go outside of our circle of local partners to expand our business in Asia, while making the workflow process extremely easy for our clients. Solutions we have used in the past made content delivery laborious and cost intensive but with Media Shuttle we are able to move content efficiently and affordably.”

Exchanging digital assets of this size and frequency can be complex and Venture 3D needed its delivery solution to be both reliable and effortless for its production partners. Media Shuttle’s onboard checkpoint restart feature automatically retries or resumes transfers if they are interrupted for any reason, and email notifications alert users when content is delivered. The system’s graphical dashboard gives Venture 3D complete visibility into all file transfer activity, including average transfer rate, file size and speed.

“The notification feature was a great selling point for us as it takes the onus off the client and makes Venture 3D a desirable collaboration partner,” Cogan continued. “Media Shuttle gives us the freedom to work with partners of our choosing and allows us to work globally regardless of location and file size. Additionally, we can now work with the multiple offices of our partners in the region – essentially anyone who needs to partner with us – easily without delays or limitations.”

The newest addition to Signiant’s portfolio of accelerated file transfer solutions, Media Shuttle provides an effective alternative to FTP and public file sharing solutions – without associated file size constraints or security risks. Media Shuttle’s hybrid SaaS architecture lets users access fast file transfer capabilities through a simple interface in the cloud while maintaining the file cache within the secure control of their own network. Unlike other solutions, Media Shuttle gives IT the power to determine where content is stored – on private networks or in the cloud – and how network resources should be allocated for maximum enterprise efficiency. A flexible subscription-based pricing model makes Media Shuttle the ideal solution for project-based initiatives or enterprises looking to scale for demand.

“Venture 3D is leading the fast-growing market of 3D conversion and with Media Shuttle we are able to stay on the cutting-edge by having the most sophisticated solutions available to ourselves and our partners,” said Cogan. “Being able to defy the constraints of file size and distance and instead focus on creative collaboration we are able to perfect our specialty and in turn, advance the industry.”

About Signiant
Used by the world’s top content creators and distributors, Signiant is the market leader in intelligent file movement software for the media and entertainment industry. The company’s powerful software suite optimizes existing enterprise network infrastructure and media technologies to ensure secure digital media exchanges, workflow efficiency and superior user experiences. Headquartered in Burlington, MA, with offices around the world, today Signiant connects tens of thousands of media professionals in more than 50 countries. For more information, visit www.signiant.com.

Good in PRC

I doubt this will get any US 3D distribution. But we can hope…

Journey to the West conquers China
By Stephen Cremin
Mon, 11 February 2013, 17:15 PM (HKT)

According to its Mainland distributor, Stephen CHOW 's 3-D Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons has broken the opening day box office record for a local film in China, taking RMB76.5 million (US$12.3 million) yesterday on 1.86 million admissions.

The preliminary number was reported by distributor Huayi Brothers Media Corporation on its Weibo account, which also announced that cinema admissions for all films reached 2.60 million yesterday. Reliable numbers are still one week away, after the Chinese New Year holidays.

The previous Chinese-language record holder was Huayi’s own Painted Skin: The Resurrection , taking an estimated RMB70.0 million (US$11.2 million) last summer. The overall record holder remains Transformers: Dark of the Moon (2011) with approximately RMB100 million on opening day.

Journey opened day-and-date with the star-packed Better and Better — codirected by ZHANG Yibai and XIE Dongshen — andZHU Shimao 's romance Love Retake . The two films made an estimated RMB7.2 million (US$1.15 million) and RMB1.3 million (US$208,000) respectively.

According to Huayi, third-ranked yesterday was Cloud Atlas, securing RMB6.8 million (US$1.09 million). Fourth- and fifth-ranked were Skyfall and Hotel Deluxe with RMB4.3 million (US$738,000) and RMB4.3 million (US$689,000) respectively.

Journey had a relatively disappointing opening day in Hong Kong and Taiwan on Thurday, 7 Feb. In Hong Kong, it took HK$990,000 (US$128,000) on 78 screens. In Taipei, it was third-placed, taking NT$1.36 million (US$45,700) in 21 cinemas. Over the weekend, it is believed to have fallen to fifth place in Taipei.

Today, Journey, which stars WEN Zhang , SHU Qi and HUANG Bo , has a 41.6% share of all screenings in China, as its competitors are pushed aside. Leste CHEN 's romantic comedy Say Yes! , also starring Huang, opens in Mainland cinemas tomorrow.

Pook Karen Mok and Vicki Zhao

We shouldn’t forget what Chow did to Cecilia Cheung in SS (the cornrowed mustached player - wtf?) Mok already has unflattering teeth. I’ve always thought Chow had some issues with women…:rolleyes:

I’m prepared to be ugly, says Shu Qi
By Boon Chan
The Straits Times
Tuesday, Feb 12, 2013

For an actress, getting the lead role in a Stephen Chow Sing Chi movie is a big deal. It means joining a select club that includes Karen Mok, Vicki Zhao and Athena Chu, a group nicknamed the Sing girls.

Their roles in the Hong Kong funnyman and film-maker’s comedies were a springboard to greater fame and popularity - but often at a price. They were often made to look outrageously hideous. In The God Of Cookery (1996), Mok sported awful teeth and an unflattering mop. In Shaolin Football (2001), Zhao’s pretty face was buried underneath a score of synthetic scars.

So when Taiwan’s Shu Qi, 36, signed on for the fantasy adventure Journey To The West, a prequel to the well-known classic tale of the same name, she was prepared for a negative makeover.

“Once you accept his movie, you have to be prepared to be made ugly and I was actually looking forward to it,” she says in Mandarin to the media at Hong Kong’s Festival Walk mall on Wednesday night before the film’s gala premiere there.

Dressed in a Felipe Oliveira Baptista outfit, a one-piece which playfully mixes solid blue and zebra print, Shu is every inch the elegant sophisticate. It is a far cry from her role in the movie, which is currently showing in Singapore: a rough-around-the-edges demon hunter Miss Duan whose face is smudged with dirt and whose hair is wildly messy.

It was a look she found to be fashionable, given that unkempt is in, she says in jest.

“It saved a lot of make-up and hair time. The stylist just took dust and mud and mucked about with it.”

Certainly, Shu seems to have got off very lightly compared to previous Sing girls Mok and Zhao.

Is it favouritism or is Chow getting soft with age?

Neither, says Chow, 50, in protest: “Look at Miss Shu. How could you possibly make her ugly? I’ve already tried my best. I bet with you that you cannot do it.”

But did he not manage to transform Mok and Zhao, neither of them laggards in the beauty department, into spectacularly ugly specimens?

He shoots back with a laugh: “Oh, them I could.”

On a more serious note, he adds that Zhao, for example, was not truly ugly, either. He says: “Even though I made her look like that, her innate spirit was still beautiful.”

Such talk of inner beauty seems at odds with the man best known as a pioneer of Hong Kong’s “mo lei tau”, or nonsensical, comedy, which is akin to the absurdist humour of Britain’s Monty Python.

In conversation, however, his humour is more restrained and deadpan.

And on a film set, according to his cast, he is meticulous and methodical.

Even though Chow does not act in it, there are traces of him everywhere, from China actor Wen Zhang’s expressive turn as the good-hearted demon hunter Xuanzang to sexy starlet Chrissie Chau’s sinuous dance. She plays a demon hunter who is Shu’s lone female follower.

Chau, 27, recalls that Chow would “personally demonstrate everything, including the dance” and adds that he did it better.

So it is no empty boast when Chow claims: “I was very focused on my role as director so, in a way, every role is me. I put my soul into every character, so you can see my style in each of them.”

He adds: “I think every actor is a shadow of me - plus his own special characteristics.”

Journey To The West is a departure for Chow as he is not acting in a film he wrote, produced and directed.

But he does not think this significant. For him, it all starts with the script rather than “what role I want for myself”. Only when he is satisfied with the screenplay does he start thinking about casting, and then he would simply approach whoever he thought was “most suitable”.

“I’m very good, I’m not selfish. If I were a little more selfish, I would go ‘Hey, I’ll take on this as well’, can make more money this way you know,” says a deadpan Chow, who is togged out in an ensemble of black peaked cap, black zip-up hoodie, black jeans and grey New Balance sneakers.

He started out in television shows in the 1980s and later shot to stardom with the gambling comedy All For The Winner (1990). He began directing in 1994 with the action comedy From Beijing With Love and would often wear several hats, including producer and screenwriter, in his later projects.

Some of his biggest hits and best-known works include the Fight Back To School series (1991-1993), The God Of Cookery, King Of Comedy (1999), Shaolin Football (2001) and Kung Fu Hustle (2004). His last film was the sci-fi comedy CJ7 (2008), in which he acted, directed and wrote.

The two-part A Chinese Odyssey (1994), his loose adaptation of the Journey To The West classic folk tale, is a cult favourite in China, despite it being a box-office flop. Many mainland Chinese movie fans watched it on bootlegged copies and can even quote lines from the movie.

A pivotal scene in it had Chow saying that he would love someone for 10,000 years. The classic line of dialogue gets a twist in the new movie, Journey To The West, as Shu says it is better to love now than to wait 10,000 years.

Chow says that he has watched the current film “several thousand times” and he would still get moved and cry every single time.

He muses: “Time is now more precious than ever so, say, I want to invite Miss Shu to a meal, I should do it now rather than wait till next week or next month. Now is important because you don’t know what’s going to happen to the world tomorrow.”

Still, one does not buy a ticket to a Stephen Chow movie for only the tears to flow - laughs are expected, even demanded. Naturally, the film-maker delivers.

In one flirtatious exchange with China actor Huang Bo, who plays the crafty Monkey King Sun Wukong, Shu had her comic capacity tested to its limit. On film, it looks like an NG scene - a no-good or ruined outtake - that Chow used anyway because of its sheer energy.

Shu reveals: “There was no NG but the scene was too long. It was so funny that Chow just didn’t yell ‘cut’. But I was laughing so hard that my stomach was hurting, and I couldn’t continue acting.”

Shu is often cast as the emotionally fragile urbanite in dramas such as A Beautiful Life (2011) and If You Are The One 2 (2010). Asked about the difficulty of making this film and her response is immediate: “Rhythm.”

She says: “For art films, you get to go along with your emotions. But in Chow’s comedies, he has his unique rhythm. You need to ‘shoufang’ (rein in and let go) suddenly and that was a pretty big challenge.”

Waiting around on set for filming to start was no laughing matter either.

Chow was constantly rewriting the dialogue even while shooting and, once, she had to wait 10 hours to do a scene. She recalls: “I slept and woke, woke and slept in the dressing room. Waiting is the tiring part.”

She “could not bear to punish him” though, as he is “even more tired than me”.

Still, Shu had high praise for her director for opening her eyes to comedy. She says: “I discovered that comedy is another world. And it would have been very difficult for me without Chow’s direction. Hand the same script to any other director and he might not have the same ideas and that’s where Chow is special.”