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Since my interview with Cheng Pei Pei appears
in the current issue of AUDREY magazine, I figured
this would be a good time to roll out Celestial
Pictures’ exquisite DVD release of COME
DRINK WITH ME. For those of you who don’t
know, Pei Pei is the First Lady of wuxia (swordplay)
film. In the 60s and 70s, she made over 20 films
for Shaw Brothers, and this is the one that started
it all. COME DRINK WITH ME, along with DRAGON
GATE INN, is also legendary director King Hu at
his best.
The DVD jacket sums up the plot with one sentence:
“Here Cheng is Golden Swallow, who teams
with swordsman Drunken Cat to battle a corrupt
Buddhist monk with mystical martial arts powers.”
In Stephen Teo’s Hong Kong Cinema: The Extra
Dimensions, Hu admitted his preference for the
uncluttered story: “If the plots are simple,
the stylistic delivery will be even richer.”
And, oh, what style. Known for his painstaking
visual approach, Hu gives us a film in which virtually
every frame rivals the most beautiful of paintings.
Hu also confessed to a lack of martial arts knowledge.
He based his staged combat on Bejing opera and
told Cahiers du Cinema, “Kung fu, Shaolin
tales – I don’t understand anything
about that.” And yet COME DRINK WITH ME
has my all-time favorite fight scene ever…ever.
I have watched the temple fight from this film
at least a hundred times. Not for its realism
or spectacular special effects – but it
is still everything a fight scene should be. It
is a story within a story with its own peaks and
valleys. Tension and release. In music terms,
it has tempo variation and wide ranging dynamics.
Unlike today’s martial arts films –
which are shot so close and edited so fast, they
are incomprehensible – Hu’s scenes
employ medium and long shots, allowing us to see
the story unfold. Of course, this requires a lot
from the actors. It’s a price that few are
willing to pay now, so we should appreciate all
that Pei Pei’s dance background brought
to the screen. I fear that Michelle Yeoh may be
the last of a dying breed of Asian actresses with
that kind of training and discipline. As Corey
Yuen told the Los Angeles Times earlier this year,
“No one wants to work that hard anymore.”
As I already mentioned, this is the film that
made Pei Pei a star, and it’s easy to see
why, with her striking that tricky balance between
strength and vulnerability. And while she went
on to stretch her dramatic range in other Shaw
Brothers films, she was never more convincing
as a martial artist than under Hu’s direction.
For Yueh Hua (Drunken Cat), COME DRINK WITH ME
was the film that made him a star as well. Here
he provides an absolutely charming and endearing
comedic counterbalance to Pei Pei’s stoic
Golden Swallow.
My only complaint – and it is a big one
– is the jarring shift in focus, plot wise
and thematically, that occurs at the halfway mark.
It’s similar to the change that occurs in
Hu’s later film, A TOUCH OF ZEN, in which
swordplay gives way to mystical powers and the
cheesy predecessor to the Force.
It’s a major transgression to forgive,
but I do so without hesitation, for COME DRINK
WITH ME still is everything that today’s
martial arts films are not. No CGI, no wirework,
no close shots. No fast cutting, no unintelligible
fights, no leading ladies with a whopping 2 months
of martial arts training. Just a simple story
with a nice message and told with great care.
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