King Boxer and 36th Chamber of Shaolin DVD Review
King Boxer and 36th Chamber of Shaolin Video: King Boxer and 36th Chamber of Shaolin both boast restored picture quality that has been seen previously on releases on DVD by IVL in
King Boxer Audio: King Boxer features both Mandarin and English Mono. Both tracks are actually mono and feature no audio additions. This is important as a number of fans have expressed a dislike for many of the poor 5.1 remixes that Celestial has released to distributors. The audio is clean and clear and sounds as if it has been given an audio restoration to remove any imperfections. The one minor exception to this is a 3-5 second instance during the English dub of King Boxer when the audio momentarily warbles. This is quite short however and most likely due to the elements used. Otherwise the audio is in excellent condition.
36th Chamber of Shaolin Audio: 36th Chamber of Shaolin features Mandarin, Cantonese, and English Mono. The condition is just as good. I think I can state with confidence that I have never heard the English language versions of these films sound this good.
King Boxer Extras: King Boxer comes with some excellent extras. First off, it has interviews with the director Chang-Hwa Jeong, who talks about what separated King Boxer (in his opinion) from other Chinese directors at the time; this interview lasts about five minutes. We also have a nearly twenty-minute interview with Lar-Kar Wing, who served as action director on the film and talks about the process of setting up the fights. There are short interviews with David Chute and Andy Klein about some of the themes in the film. The disc contains (as can be seen in our screenshots) numerous trailers, including an alternate credit sequence which used the title Five Fingers of Death. There is also a commentary track featuring David Chute, Elvis Mitchell, and Quentin Tarantino. This commentary is interesting and talks about the structure and style of the Kung Fu film.
36th Chamber of Shaolin Extras: The disc comes once again with some nice interviews including an around fifteen minute-long interview with the Master Killer himself, Gordon Liu. The disc also contains a very interesting interview with the RZA in which he talks about his first experience with these films (and in a screenshot of the famous 42nd street in
Final Thoughts: These are the versions fans have been asking for and Dragon Dynasty delivers, with versions that are both a treat to look at and listen to, with some excellent extras too. I can easily say that both items are must buys.
Why would these have been converted from PAL at all? While the IVL DVDs were prepared from masters prepared for PAL SDTV broadcast, I can't imagine the Weinsteins didn't have the foresight and the loot (these Shaw titles are carryovers from the deep-pocketed Miramax days) to secure rights to the 24 fps HD masters that were created for many of the top-tier Shaw films. I'd imagine that's what these Dragon Dynasty Shaw releases were sourced from, not the PAL broadcast masters inexplicably used to source most of IVL and Image's Shaw Bros. discs.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate the gentle criticism of my goofs. (A few other places, people have been tearing me a new one.) For what it's worth, the worst embarrassment on the track -- my "Say wha?" when RZA identified Lo Lieh -- was a combination of a bunch of things. I was trying to find a fact in my notes and wasn't looking at the screen at that moment, and then started gibbering nervously to cover up, since I was kinda starstruck with RZA and had just been really dumb in his presence. (I swear I can ID Lo Lieh at a thousand paces.) I have to say: I was completely bowled over by the thoroughness of his knowledge of this film. I don't think it's so much a matter of him preparing specifically for this session as that his whole life has been preparation. I'm not sure I've ever met someone who knew a film shot by shot, frame by frame, like RZA knows this one. Plus: he was just a total kick to work with.
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