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10th OLD SCHOOL KUNG FU FEST Wields The Festival Trailer With A Vengeance! [UPDATED]

UPDATE – April 17: A previous version of this article was updated with a new trailer with corrections by the festival.

The official trailer is now up and running for the 10th Old School Kung Fu Fest which kicks off its nine-day event one week from this article. As such, and as promised, the focus here will be Taiwanese cinema and the accomplishments of its noted directors with the requisite titles listed accordingly. Details are available at the official websites for Subway Cinema and the Metrograph.

Metrograph and Subway Cinema

In association with

Taipei Cultural Center in New York, Ministry of Culture, Republic of China (Taiwan)

Proudly Present

10th Old School Kung Fu Fest: Sword Fighting Heroes Edition!

April 21-30, 2023

Including US Premieres of THE KING OF WUXIA, THE SWORDSMAN OF ALL SWORDSMEN (Digital Restoration), and NIGHT ORCHID (2K Remaster)

The Old School Kung Fu Fest is back, and this time we’re flying through the air and chopping down fools with the biggest retrospective of Taiwanese wuxia (sword fighting hero) movies ever seen in New York City. Wuxia movies have a long history in Chinese cinema, but when King Hu’s Dragon Inn premiered in 1967, it kicked off a wuxia revival that reinvented action movies, so we’ve decided to celebrate the wuxia movies from King Hu’s homeland of Taiwan by going big or going home! With 12 movies on the big screen and three more online, we’re showcasing everything we could find, including:

– The US premiere of The King of Wuxia, an epic documentary about King Hu, the revolutionary filmmaker who re-invented wuxia movies and turned them into high art, plus three of his best films — the monumental and unmissable A Touch of Zen, and two of his most action-packed flicks, The Valiant Ones and The Fate of Lee Khan.

– All three movies in the essential Tsai Ying-jie Trilogy: Joseph Kuo’s The Swordsman of All Swordsman (US premiere of the new digital restoration), The Bravest Revenge (online only), and the wild and wooly Ghost Hill.

– So many sword-slinging heroines! We’ve got four films starring actress Hsu Feng (A Touch of ZenThe Fate of Lee KhanThe Valiant OnesA City Called Dragon), four starring Polly Shang-kuan (Swordsman of All SwordsmenGhost HillGrand Passion, The Bravest Revenge), and one starring the massive movie star, Josephine Siao Fong-fong (The Daring Gang of Nineteen From Verdun City) in which she’s only 12 years old. 

– So many discoveries, from the three female Chinese opera stars, Yang Li-hua, Liu Ching, and Chin Mei playing the heroic sisters of Vengeance of the Phoenix Sisters, a 1968 movie that feels like the French New Wave doing wuxia; to megastar Brigitte Lin in the underseen Night Orchid, a 1983 Taiwanese feature film remake of a wildly popular Hong Kong TV series.

– So many puppets in The Legend of the Sacred Stone, the all-puppet wuxia from the Huang family, master puppeteers who owned Taiwanese airwaves with their po-te-hi puppet storytelling in the 1980s.

– Shu Qi starring in Hou Hsiao-hsien’s 2015 deconstruction of the wuxia genre The Assassin, which is also his loving tribute to the movies he grew up on.

By the time this line-up is over, we’ll all have been sliced, diced, hacked, slashed, and blasted into submission with palm power.

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