Wing Lam & Guolin (& Chan Sau Chung)
I wrote the bulk of the Wing Lam videotapes. Sifu Wing Lam is my teacher; I helped him build his company prior to working here at Kungfu Qigong. In fact, I was his first full-time employee.
Wing Lam actually had three video series. The first series was by another company - 10 shaolin and 10 hung gar videos shot in one weekend (when my Sifu was sick, no less.) Wing Lam was never happy with the production quality of the first series, so as soon as his ten year exclusivity contract expired, we began to make our own. (There was also another independant video that came out about Shaolin #6, but that company folded after making only one video - video production ain’t easy, especially at start up!)
The Wing Lam series was a massive undertaking - to capture his entire curriculum on video. We included reverse angles, slow motion, the traditional names of the movements, and at least one application for each technique (there are more, but we usually opted to show the simplest one, given our production schedule.) Ultimately, the overall response to that work was positive and those videos still do well. I hope you enjoy them and am always intersted in your commments on them.
Shi Guolin’s series is very interesting. The drunken videos are not actually by Guolin, the are by some of his disciples. They do have a wushu influence, but his Shao-Hong Chuan and internal videos (where he demonstrates) are traditional. Guolin is most renown for his iron body, so his internal stuff is particularly intriguing. Personally I like his routines videos. It’s all demonstration stuff by an array of monks and disciples - a lot of wushu, but some really amazing moves.
Lastly, I met Master Chan yesterday for the first time. I was most impressed by his height - he’s really short. Personally, I like the old and the small masters. Big fighters are always impressive, but they’re big and can just outgun you. I’ve known a lot of bouncers and bikers who never trained in martial arts, but they were formidable just because they were big. When they aren’t big, well, it’s got to be skill. Grandmaster Chan must be on to something to have developed such a reputation, given his height.
And, wow, did they give me an earful on Paulie Zink…
Gene Ching
Asst. Publisher
Kungfu Qigong Magazine & www.KungfuMagazine.com