
I must confess that I, like a great many others, have been suffering from wuxia fatigue. In the aftermath of Crouching Tiger it seemed like everyone who was anyone wanted in on the wuxia game and high end, period set martial arts flicks came a'pourin' out of all corners of Asia and, for a while at least, it was fantastic. A-list directors and a-list stars got to indulge their love for the genre and some true gems came out at the beginning of the wave. But quality, sadly, soon began to lag, attention to character dipped and the pandering to international audiences became annoyingly obvious to the point that interest began to wane and box office faded. The end result, the full onset of wuxia fatigue, a syndrome that has led - sadly and bizarrely - to one of the best and most easily marketable of the wave - The Warlords*, with Jet Li, Andy Lau and Takeshi Kaneshiro - being unable to find a home of any sort in North America, and when the IFC's Magnet's and Dragon Dynasty's of the world can't be bothered to pick up a critically acclaimed blockbuster starring three of the biggest Asian film stars going you know something's up.
All of this to say that while I've been aware of Francis Ng's Chasing Shadows for some time now I've avoided talking about it simply because I wanted to keep my expectations low. There was reason to hope right from the outset, however. Ng has long been one of the very finest actors in all of Asia and is certainly - along with Anthony Wong - the very best Chinese language actor of his generation. He is smart, he is fantastically talented, and he has a sharp eye for quality scripts. So when a guy like Ng decides to make the step into the director's chair you'd do well to pay attention. And when Ng does so with the backing of an outfit like the Huayi Brothers - producers of films such as The Assembly, gifted with very deep pockets and international savvy - you'd really do well to pay attention. And when Ng say he wants to make the film as a tribute to classics such as Dragon Inn? Yeah, he's starting from the right place ...
Anyway, I've been hopeful but keeping quiet about it until there was something substantive to look at and that has arrived in the form of the first teaser for the picture. There is, unfortunately, a narrow band of distortion at the bottom of the picture but this looks absolutely fantastic. Check it out below the break.
*not actually a wuxia, I know, but it was created because of this current movement,

Bichunmoo, anyone?
blah, reminds me too much of CTHD. i do wish someone would pickup the warlords tho, that looks cool.
Not enough to get an idea, but that didn't look bad either. Also, since when is "The Warlords" a wuxia flick? Not to mention that i would take my reservations to praise it that much, Jet was great and the production values are good, but the script felt like a soap opera at times.
thought Warlords had more in common with Braveheart than wuxia. I'm not a big fan of the flying-fu style personally but this seems pretty good.
People! Asterisk! Bottom of the post! Read the whole thing! I know Warlords isn't a wuxia.
Looks pretty similar to all the rest, but then again I've been enjoying all the wuxia clones this decade. The action looks almost as graceful as Ching Siu-Tung's work (which has been admittedly a bit spotty of late), and it should as his protege Ma Yuk-Sing is handling action for this (he also did action for Shodowless Sword and Bichunmoo - good call Fraser)
basically anything with a rooftop scene reminds people of CTHD...anyway, looks pretty old school.. not sure if thats bad or good at this point
Whops, just saw the asterisk. Anyway, benefit of the doubt for this one for the moment, mostly for Francis Ng.
I do love my wire-fu. What I really need is something like the the 1983 classic "Duel to the death". And for all the bad reviews Bichunmoo got I really enjoyed it.
The trailer actually reminded me of Bichunmo, which I loved. But, it's a Francis Ng project, so I will check it out.
I love Francis Ng as much as the next fanperson (go here for evidence: http://beyondasiaphilia.wordpress.com/) but it's a bit of a stretch to say "he's got a sharp eye for quality scripts." Francis' career is littered with crappy movies, especially the drek he's been putting out in the past few years out of Mainland China--Curse of Lola, anyone? The Closet? Shamo? and whatever happened to Button Man, anyways? Not to say the man hasn't appeared in some classics (Exiled & Infernal Affairs 2 immediately come to mind) so I'm hoping that Chasing Shadows is a little better than his most recent output. An actor of his caliber definitely deserves better material than he's been getting lately.