city on fire
chapter 4: so many ways to be cops and rascals
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Woo's films began the genre known as 'heroic
bloodshed,' a term first used, according to Logan, by Rick Baker and his
staff as a film category in the British Hong Kong fanzine Eastern
Heroes. With A Better Tomorrow Woo reinvented the gangster film and was
commercially successful. Others took the opportunity to explore the
genre, like Ringo Lam with his 1987 City on Fire, released six months
after A Better Tomorrow. Lam, after leaving Hong Kong disappointed with
the television industry, studied film at Toronto's York University and
established Canadian citizenship. He returned to Hong Kong in 1981 to
make movies. He made four comedies, all based on scripts written by
others and successful at the box office. But Lam, who generally dislikes
comedies, wasn't happy. When Karl Maka gave him the chance to make
whatever he wanted, Lam wrote the script and developed the first On Fire
film. Lam selects the English titles for his movies, and chose 'On
Fire,' he says, to give them 'a sense of energy, of action.' Unlike
Woo's romanticized protagonists and dream-like settings, Lam's 'On Fire'
films, including City on Fire (1987), Prison on Fire 1 & 2 (1987,
1991), and School on Fire (1988), present conflicted characters and
hard-hitting urban realism dominates. Lam provides a social critique of
controversial issues most want to ignore-- street violence and abuses in
the police, prison and school systems. If Woo films his dreams, Lam
shoots his nightmares.
[Image: Ringo Lam's City on Fire; courtesy/permission of Media Asia,
copyright Star Filmed Entertainment]
Chapter 5
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