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Shaw Brothers Studio

Shaw Brothers (HK) Ltd. (Chinese: 邵氏兄弟(香港)公司) was the largest film production company in Hong Kong, and operated from 1925 to 2011.

Shaw Brothers (HK) Ltd.
The Shaw Brothers logo, modeled after the Warner Brothers logo
TypePublic company
IndustryFilm production
Founded27 December 1958; 64 years ago (1958-12-27)
SuccessorClear Water Bay Land Company Limited
Shaw Brothers Pictures International Limited
Headquarters
Hong Kong (main; English-speaking)
Macau (main; Portuguese-speaking)
Area served
Worldwide
ProductsFilms
Shaw Brothers Studio
Shaw Studios, Tseung Kwan O, Hong Kong
Chinese邵氏片場
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinShào Shì Piànchǎng
Wade–GilesShao Shih P'iench'ang
Yale RomanizationShàu Shr̀ Pyànchǎng
IPA[ʂâʊ ʂɻ̩̂ pʰjɛ̂nʈʂʰàŋ]
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationSiuh Sih pin chèuhng
JyutpingSiu6 si6 pin3 coeng4
IPA[ɕìːu ɕìː pʰɪ̄n tsʰœ̏ŋ]

In 1925, three Shaw brothers—Runje, Runme, and Runde—founded Tianyi Film Company (also called "Unique") in Shanghai, and established a film distribution base in Singapore, where Runme and their youngest brother, Run Run Shaw, managed the precursor to the parent company, Shaw Organisation. Runme and Run Run took over the film production business of its Hong Kong-based sister company, Shaw & Sons Ltd, and in 1958 a new company, "Shaw Brothers," was set up. In the 1960s, Shaw Brothers established what was once the largest privately owned studio in the world, Movietown.

The company's most famous works include The Love Eterne, The One-Armed Swordsman, Come Drink with Me, King Boxer, Executioners from Shaolin, Five Deadly Venoms, and The 36th Chamber of Shaolin.

Over the years the film company produced around 1,000 films, some becoming the most popular and significant Chinese-language films of the period. It also popularized the kung fu genre of films. In 1987, the company suspended film production in order to concentrate on the television industry through its subsidiary TVB. Film production resumed in limited capacity in 2009.

In 2011 Shaw Brothers was reorganized into the Clear Water Bay Land Company Limited; its film production business was taken over by other companies within the Shaw conglomerate.

History

 
Runje Shaw, the eldest Shaw brother who started the film empire

Prior to their involvement in the filmmaking business, the Shaw brothers were interested in opera and happened to own a theater in Shanghai; their father also owned a cinema.[1] One of the plays in their theater, The Man from Shensi, was very popular. The Shaw brothers then bought their first camera, and Runje Shaw made this play into a silent film which turned out to be a success.[2] Runje Shaw and his brothers Runde and Runme formed a film production company in 1925 in Shanghai called the Tianyi Film Company (also known as Unique).[3][4] The company's earliest films, New Leaf (立地成佛) and Heroine Li Feifei (女侠李飛飛), were shown in Shanghai in 1925.[5][6]

A rival studio, Mingxing Film Company, formed a syndicate with 5 other Shanghai companies to monopolize the distribution and exhibition markets in order to exclude Tianyi films from being shown in theater chains in Shanghai and Southeast Asia.[7] The brothers therefore became interested in forming their own network, and Runme Shaw, who was then the distribution manager, traveled to Singapore to establish a movie distribution business for Southeast Asia.[4] Runme incorporated the Hai Seng Co. (海星, which later became the Shaw Brothers Pte Ltd) to distribute films made by Tianyi and other studios. In 1927, they operated their own cinema in Tanjong Pagar in Singapore,[1] expanded in Malaya, and opened four cinemas there.[8] The number of cinemas owned by the Shaw chain in South East Asia would eventually reach 200 by the 1970s before it declined.[2] In 1928 Run Run Shaw moved to Singapore to assist Runme.

In 1931, the Tianyi Studio in Shanghai produced what is considered by some to be the very first sound-on-film Chinese talkie, Spring on Stage (歌場春色).[9] In 1932, they teamed up with Cantonese opera singer Sit Gok-Sin (薛覺先) to make the first Cantonese talkie, White Golden Dragon (白金龍). This film proved to be very successful, and in 1934, they established the Tianyi Studio (Hong Kong) in Kowloon to make Cantonese films.[7][10] The move to Hong Kong was accelerated as the Nanjing government had issued a ban on martial arts films as well as Cantonese films, and two years later, they moved the entire film production operation from Shanghai to Hong Kong.[7] Tianyi was reorganized into Nanyang (南洋) Productions with Runde Shaw as the studio head.[11] They also announced plan for their first film production studio in Singapore in 1937 to make films in Malay; a studio was built in 1940 to make Malay and Cantonese films, followed by another called Singapore Film Studios in 1941 on Jalan Ampas.[12] It produced Malay films under the studio named Malay Film Productions (formally incorporated in 1949) which lasted until 1967.[13][14] The most prominent Malay actor, director and producer of this period was P. Ramlee.[12]

 
Run Run Shaw in 1927

The Shaw Brothers continued to expand but suffered a setback during the Second World War when the Japanese occupied Malaya and Singapore.[15] After the war, they began to rebuild. In the 1950s, Nanyang started to switch film production from Cantonese to Mandarin as Communist takeover in mainland China had cut off the supply of Mandarin films to overseas Chinese communities. In this period, Nanyang Studio operated under the company name of Shaw and Sons Ltd.[16] The Mandarin films of the 1950s were primarily wenyi films (文藝片) in a contemporary setting as well as a few period dramas.[17] In 1957, Run Run Shaw moved to Hong Kong, set up a new company, Shaw Brothers (Hong Kong) Ltd., and built a new studio at Clearwater Bay, which officially opened in 1961 as Movietown.[4] In the mid-1960s, Movietown was the largest and best-equipped studio in Chinese filmmaking as well as the largest privately owned studio in the world, with 15 stages, two permanent sets, state-of-the-art film-making equipment and facilities, and 1,300 employees.[18] Period and music dramas were popular in the 1960s, and later in the decade Kung fu films also became popular. Some of Shaw Brothers' most notable films were made in this period, including The Magnificent Concubine, The Love Eterne, as well as One-Armed Swordsman, which broke the box office records and some spawned multiple sequels.[19] The studio popularized the kung-fu genre of films, which included Five Fingers of Death and The 36th Chamber of Shaolin made in the 1970s.[20] The 1960s was a period of intense rivalry between Shaw Brothers and Cathay Organisation, but eventually Shaw Brothers gained the upper hand and Cathay ceased film production in 1970. Sir Run Run Shaw became involved in television when TVB was launched in 1967.[19] In 1969, Shaw Brothers (HK) issued shares and became a public listed company.

In the 1970s, Shaw Brothers faced a strong challenge from a new studio, Golden Harvest, which had considerable success internationally with the martial arts film, Enter the Dragon starring Bruce Lee. Shaw Brothers then also began to co-produce films with Western producers for the international market,[21] and invest in films such as Meteor and Blade Runner.[22] However, Shaw Brothers ceased film production in 1986 because of competition from Golden Harvest and increasing piracy, focusing instead on TV production. In 1986, Movietown became TV City, which was leased to TVB for TV production. In 1988, the company was reorganized under the umbrella of the Shaw Organization.[4] In the 1990s, Shaw again started making a few films, but no longer on the same scale as before.[23] Shaw has since relocated to a new site in Tseung Kwan O, Hong Kong.

Legacy

Directors

Shaw Brothers is noted for film directors such as King Hu, Lau Kar-leung, P. Ramlee and Chang Cheh. King Hu was an early director who is best remembered for his film, Come Drink with Me, a martial arts film which differed from those of Chang Cheh in that it featured a capable female protagonist and revolved around romance in the martial arts world, rather than fast-paced action and the tales of brotherhood which Chang Cheh would later popularize. Chang Cheh, who was more fond of the latter components, would go on to be Shaw Studio's best-known director, with such films as Five Deadly Venoms, The Brave Archer (based on the works of Jin Yong), One-Armed Swordsman, and other classics of Wuxia and Wushu film. Almost equally as famous was fight-choreographer-turned-director Lau Kar-leung, who would produce such highly regarded kung fu films as The 36th Chamber of Shaolin and The Eight Diagram Pole Fighter. While P. Ramlee was known for Malay style romantics and comedy such as Nujum Pa' Belalang, Seniman Bujang Lapok and Do Re Mi.

Actors

 
A movie theater in Saigon (today's Ho Chi Minh City), South Vietnam, 1967, advertising for The Thundering Sword starring the "queen of swords" Cheng Pei-pei.

Shaw Brothers was modeled after the classic Hollywood system, with hundreds of actors signed to exclusive contracts. While other studios rotated cast members, Shaw Brothers assigned certain groups of actors to work exclusively with certain directors.

Shaw Brothers productions during the late 1950s to early '60s were dominated by actresses like Li Li-Hua, Ivy Ling Po, Linda Lin Dai, Betty Loh Ti, Li Ching in dramatic and romantic features. In particular, the Huangmei opera The Love Eterne, starring Ivy Ling Po and Betty Loh Ti and based on the Butterfly Lovers folk legend from the Jin Dynasty, is one of the highest-grossing features of the Shaw Studio. Its huge success is in part due to the ingenious casting of Ivy Ling Po, who was a relatively unknown supporting actress, as the male lead. In the story of Butterfly Lovers, the female lead, played by Betty Loh Ti, disguised herself as a male to attend college because social mingling between the sexes was forbidden. The film resonated with its audience, and reportedly some members of the audience in Hong Kong and Taiwan repeatedly bought tickets and watched the feature in theaters over and over again in 1962, with some having watched it over 20 times.

From the late 1960s onward, production of dramatic features was reduced in favor of martial arts features. The group of actors from the 1978 release, Five Deadly Venoms, and the subsequent series of films—known by the name the Venom Mob—were among the most memorable. They were Lo Mang, Lu Feng, Sun Chien, Chiang Sheng, and Kuo Chui, who had been stars in the Shaw Studio for years, but did not become memorable faces until Five Deadly Venoms. Wei Pai, who played the Snake (referred to as "Number Two" throughout the film Five Deadly Venoms), was also part of the Venom Mob, which numbered over 15 actors who appeared in almost all of the Venom movies.

In the first half of the 1970s, two other stars were particularly renowned and favored by the "Million-Dollar Director" Chang Cheh in his movies: Ti Lung and David Chiang. He is also accredited as a capable actor who reinforced his muscular glamor with strong characterization over his many films. Chiang, on the other hand, was slight and wiry and often played the sarcastic antihero to Lung's standard archetype. Chang Cheh, with his stars Ti Lung and David Chiang, were known as the cinematic "Iron Triangle" throughout Southeast Asia. In the middle of that decade, the duo was overshadowed by the rise of Alexander Fu Sheng, who had played supporting roles opposite them on many occasions. Fu was killed in 1983 in a car accident, at age 28, ending a brief but spectacular career.

Members of the Peking Opera School, including Jackie Chan, Yuen Biao, and Sammo Hung, played extras and bit parts in several Shaw Brothers films in the 1970s, although they were unknowns at the time.

Better-known female martial arts actresses of Shaw Brothers include Cheng Pei-pei, Lily Ho, Shih Szu, Lily Li, and Kara Hui Ying-Hung. Cheng Pei-pei in particular is relatively well-known for her starring role in King Hu's Come Drink with Me and more recently in Ang Lee's Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon as Jade Fox.

Influences

The films produced by the Shaw Brothers Studio were highly popular among Chinese communities in Hong Kong and Southeast Asia and they would have a significant influence on later filmmakers, particularly in the Kung fu genre. These films also reached the West and were popular for a time in the 1970s, and had some influence on filmmakers such as Quentin Tarantino, who paid homage to the studio by displaying their logo in his Kill Bill: Volume 1 and 2 films and adapting the styles of some of their films.[24]

Celestial Pictures acquisition and distribution

Many Shaw Brothers classic films have been bootlegged due to the popularity of particular kung fu/martial arts titles. Celestial Pictures acquired rights to the Shaw Studio's legacy and is releasing, on DVD, 760 out of the nearly 1,000 films[citation needed] with restored picture and sound quality. Many of these DVDs have come under controversy, however, for remixing audio and not including the original mono soundtracks.

Karmaloop TV's licensing deal

Karmaloop TV, a multi-platform programming network designed to help operators "reclaim" viewership among the 18- to 34-year-old demographic, announced its first film licensing deal with Celestial Pictures. The Hong Kong-based company owns, restores and licenses the world's largest collection of Chinese-made films including the Shaw Brothers library of fan-favourite kung fu and action classics such as The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, Five Deadly Venoms, and The One-Armed Swordsman.

The licensing deal with Karmaloop TV means that kung fu and action fans in the United States will see these films in their digitally restored versions, many of which will be premiering for the first time on U.S. television in high definition. The licensed collection includes more than 60 of the greatest martial arts masterpieces—movies which launched the careers of stars like Jimmy Wang Yu, Cheng Pei-Pei, Ti Lung, David Chiang, Alexander Fu Sheng, Chen Kuan-Tai, and Gordon Liu.

Shaw Studios

The Clearwater Bay site at Clearwater Bay Road and Ngan Ying Road is the former home of Shaw Studio (built 1960–1961), as well as the vacated TVB headquarters and studios (1986–2003, since relocated to TVB City) and Celestial Pictures.[25] There are also apartment blocks used to house Shaw actors. The newer Shaw House and Shaw Villa are there. The site has been vacant since 2003,[26] and has been targeted for redevelopment several times since 2006.[27] In 2015, Hong Kong's Antiquities Advisory Board declared the entire studio complex a site of cultural significance, and subsequent redevelopment plans have included measures to restore and preserve the existing structures.[27]

A new Shaw Studios (note the plural s) has been built at Tseung Kwan O Industrial Estate, and was opened in stages between 2006 and 2008.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "The Beginning 1924–1933". Shawonline.
  2. ^ a b Stephen H. Y. Siu (16 September 1972). "A New Made in Hong Kong Label". The Montreal Gazette.
  3. ^ . The Chinese Mirror: A Journal of Chinese Film History. Archived from the original on 19 April 2015.
  4. ^ a b c d Poshek Fu (2008). China Forever: The Shaw Brothers and Diasporic Cinema. University of Illinois Press. pp. 28–29. ISBN 978-0252075001.
  5. ^ Justin Corfield (2010). Historical Dictionary of Singapore. Scarecrow Press. p. 238. ISBN 9780810873872.
  6. ^ . The Chinese Mirror: A Journal of Chinese Film History. Archived from the original on 2 December 2013.
  7. ^ a b c Meaghan Morris, Siu Leung Li, Stephen Ching-kiu Chan (2006). Hong Kong Connections: Transnational Imagination in Action Cinema. Duke University Press Books. p. 193. ISBN 978-1932643015.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  8. ^ Matthew Fletcher and Santha Oorjitham. . AsiaWeek. Archived from the original on 23 June 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  9. ^ Gary G. Xu (2012). "Chapter 24 - Chinese Cinema and Technology". In Yingjin Zhang (ed.). A Companion to Chinese Cinema. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1444330298.
  10. ^ Lisa Odham Stokes (2007). Historical Dictionary of Hong Kong Cinema. Scarecrow Press. p. 427. ISBN 978-0810855205.
  11. ^ Poshek Fu (2003). Between Shanghai and Hong Kong: The Politics of Chinese Cinemas. Stanford University Press. pp. 56–59. ISBN 9780804745185.
  12. ^ a b "Shaw ventures into local Malay film productions". History SG. National Library Board.
  13. ^ . Shaw Online. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
  14. ^ "The Last Days Of Malay Film Productions". Shaw Online.
  15. ^ Richard Corliss (7 January 2014). "Run Run Shaw: The Last Emperor of Chinese Movies". Time.
  16. ^ "Shaw Cinemas in Asia, Japanese Occupation". Shawonline.
  17. ^ China Forever: The Shaw Brothers and Diasporic Cinema. University of Illinois Press. 2008. pp. 114–115. ISBN 978-0252075001.
  18. ^ Poshek Fu (2008). China Forever: The Shaw Brothers and Diasporic Cinema. University of Illinois Press. pp. 3–5. ISBN 978-0252075001.
  19. ^ a b "Run Run Shaw, Hong Kong film pioneer, dies aged 107". BBC. 7 January 2014.
  20. ^ Martin Chilton (7 January 2014). "Run Run Shaw, kung-fu film pioneer, dies aged 106". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022.
  21. ^ "Shaw Organization, 1970". Shawonline.
  22. ^ Vivian Wai-yin Kwok (15 November 2007). "Who Will Run Shaw Brothers After Run Run?". Forbes.
  23. ^ "Shaw Brothers History".
  24. ^ Chan, Kenneth. "The Shaw-Tarantino Connection: Rolling Thunder Pictures and the Exploitation Aesthetics of Cool" (PDF). Mediascape. Fall 2009.
  25. ^ "Shaw Online - About Shaw - Shaw History". Shaw.sg. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  26. ^ . Orientalsweetlips.wordpress.com. 17 September 2009. Archived from the original on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  27. ^ a b "Revised plans for development of old Shaw Brothers Studio building announced". Hong Kong Buzz. 19 May 2018. Retrieved 15 December 2019.

Further reading

  • Poshek Fu (2008). China Forever: The Shaw Brothers and Diasporic Cinema. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0252075001.
  • Glaessner, Verina. Kung Fu: Cinema of Vengeance. London: Lorimer; New York: Bounty Books, 1974. ISBN 0-85647-045-7, ISBN 0-517-51831-7.
  • Wong, Ain-ling. The Shaw Screen: A Preliminary Study. Hong Kong: Hong Kong Film Archive, 2003. ISBN 962-8050-21-4.
  • Zhong, Baoxian. "Hollywood of the East" in the Making: The Cathay Organization Vs. the Shaw Organization in Post-War Hong Kong. [Hong Kong]: Centre for China Urban and Regional Studies, Hong Kong Baptist University, 2004. ISBN 962-8804-44-8.
  • Zhong, Baoxian. Moguls of the Chinese Cinema: The Story of the Shaw Brothers in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Singapore, 1924–2002. Working paper series (David C. Lam Institute for East-West Studies); no. 44. Hong Kong: David C. Lam Institute for East-West Studies, Hong Kong Baptist University, 2005.

External links

  • Shaw Studios
  • Shaw.intercontinental.com—official site ((in English and Chinese) (Big5))
  • The Shaw Story—at the official company website.
  • Shaw Brothers History — at Hong Kong Cinema UK.
  • - Global international site
  • The Rise and Fall of the House of Shaw - scholarly essay by Tom Green.
  • Alexander Fu Sheng: Biography of the Chinatown Kid

shaw, brothers, studio, this, article, needs, updated, reason, given, according, article, company, stopped, operation, since, 2011, fact, 2022, still, active, producing, series, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, in. This article needs to be updated The reason given is According to the article the company stopped operation since 2011 but in fact as of 2022 it is still active in producing TV series Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information December 2022 Shaw Brothers HK Ltd Chinese 邵氏兄弟 香港 公司 was the largest film production company in Hong Kong and operated from 1925 to 2011 Shaw Brothers HK Ltd The Shaw Brothers logo modeled after the Warner Brothers logoTypePublic companyIndustryFilm productionFounded27 December 1958 64 years ago 1958 12 27 SuccessorClear Water Bay Land Company LimitedShaw Brothers Pictures International LimitedHeadquartersHong Kong main English speaking Macau main Portuguese speaking Area servedWorldwideProductsFilmsShaw Brothers StudioShaw Studios Tseung Kwan O Hong KongChinese邵氏片場TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinShao Shi PianchǎngWade GilesShao Shih P iench angYale RomanizationShau Shr PyanchǎngIPA ʂa ʊ ʂɻ pʰjɛ nʈʂʰa ŋ Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationSiuh Sih pin cheuhngJyutpingSiu6 si6 pin3 coeng4IPA ɕiːu ɕiː pʰɪ n tsʰœ ŋ In 1925 three Shaw brothers Runje Runme and Runde founded Tianyi Film Company also called Unique in Shanghai and established a film distribution base in Singapore where Runme and their youngest brother Run Run Shaw managed the precursor to the parent company Shaw Organisation Runme and Run Run took over the film production business of its Hong Kong based sister company Shaw amp Sons Ltd and in 1958 a new company Shaw Brothers was set up In the 1960s Shaw Brothers established what was once the largest privately owned studio in the world Movietown The company s most famous works include The Love Eterne The One Armed Swordsman Come Drink with Me King Boxer Executioners from Shaolin Five Deadly Venoms and The 36th Chamber of Shaolin Over the years the film company produced around 1 000 films some becoming the most popular and significant Chinese language films of the period It also popularized the kung fu genre of films In 1987 the company suspended film production in order to concentrate on the television industry through its subsidiary TVB Film production resumed in limited capacity in 2009 In 2011 Shaw Brothers was reorganized into the Clear Water Bay Land Company Limited its film production business was taken over by other companies within the Shaw conglomerate Contents 1 History 2 Legacy 2 1 Directors 2 2 Actors 2 3 Influences 3 Celestial Pictures acquisition and distribution 3 1 Karmaloop TV s licensing deal 4 Shaw Studios 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory Edit Runje Shaw the eldest Shaw brother who started the film empire Prior to their involvement in the filmmaking business the Shaw brothers were interested in opera and happened to own a theater in Shanghai their father also owned a cinema 1 One of the plays in their theater The Man from Shensi was very popular The Shaw brothers then bought their first camera and Runje Shaw made this play into a silent film which turned out to be a success 2 Runje Shaw and his brothers Runde and Runme formed a film production company in 1925 in Shanghai called the Tianyi Film Company also known as Unique 3 4 The company s earliest films New Leaf 立地成佛 and Heroine Li Feifei 女侠李飛飛 were shown in Shanghai in 1925 5 6 A rival studio Mingxing Film Company formed a syndicate with 5 other Shanghai companies to monopolize the distribution and exhibition markets in order to exclude Tianyi films from being shown in theater chains in Shanghai and Southeast Asia 7 The brothers therefore became interested in forming their own network and Runme Shaw who was then the distribution manager traveled to Singapore to establish a movie distribution business for Southeast Asia 4 Runme incorporated the Hai Seng Co 海星 which later became the Shaw Brothers Pte Ltd to distribute films made by Tianyi and other studios In 1927 they operated their own cinema in Tanjong Pagar in Singapore 1 expanded in Malaya and opened four cinemas there 8 The number of cinemas owned by the Shaw chain in South East Asia would eventually reach 200 by the 1970s before it declined 2 In 1928 Run Run Shaw moved to Singapore to assist Runme In 1931 the Tianyi Studio in Shanghai produced what is considered by some to be the very first sound on film Chinese talkie Spring on Stage 歌場春色 9 In 1932 they teamed up with Cantonese opera singer Sit Gok Sin 薛覺先 to make the first Cantonese talkie White Golden Dragon 白金龍 This film proved to be very successful and in 1934 they established the Tianyi Studio Hong Kong in Kowloon to make Cantonese films 7 10 The move to Hong Kong was accelerated as the Nanjing government had issued a ban on martial arts films as well as Cantonese films and two years later they moved the entire film production operation from Shanghai to Hong Kong 7 Tianyi was reorganized into Nanyang 南洋 Productions with Runde Shaw as the studio head 11 They also announced plan for their first film production studio in Singapore in 1937 to make films in Malay a studio was built in 1940 to make Malay and Cantonese films followed by another called Singapore Film Studios in 1941 on Jalan Ampas 12 It produced Malay films under the studio named Malay Film Productions formally incorporated in 1949 which lasted until 1967 13 14 The most prominent Malay actor director and producer of this period was P Ramlee 12 Run Run Shaw in 1927 The Shaw Brothers continued to expand but suffered a setback during the Second World War when the Japanese occupied Malaya and Singapore 15 After the war they began to rebuild In the 1950s Nanyang started to switch film production from Cantonese to Mandarin as Communist takeover in mainland China had cut off the supply of Mandarin films to overseas Chinese communities In this period Nanyang Studio operated under the company name of Shaw and Sons Ltd 16 The Mandarin films of the 1950s were primarily wenyi films 文藝片 in a contemporary setting as well as a few period dramas 17 In 1957 Run Run Shaw moved to Hong Kong set up a new company Shaw Brothers Hong Kong Ltd and built a new studio at Clearwater Bay which officially opened in 1961 as Movietown 4 In the mid 1960s Movietown was the largest and best equipped studio in Chinese filmmaking as well as the largest privately owned studio in the world with 15 stages two permanent sets state of the art film making equipment and facilities and 1 300 employees 18 Period and music dramas were popular in the 1960s and later in the decade Kung fu films also became popular Some of Shaw Brothers most notable films were made in this period including The Magnificent Concubine The Love Eterne as well as One Armed Swordsman which broke the box office records and some spawned multiple sequels 19 The studio popularized the kung fu genre of films which included Five Fingers of Death and The 36th Chamber of Shaolin made in the 1970s 20 The 1960s was a period of intense rivalry between Shaw Brothers and Cathay Organisation but eventually Shaw Brothers gained the upper hand and Cathay ceased film production in 1970 Sir Run Run Shaw became involved in television when TVB was launched in 1967 19 In 1969 Shaw Brothers HK issued shares and became a public listed company In the 1970s Shaw Brothers faced a strong challenge from a new studio Golden Harvest which had considerable success internationally with the martial arts film Enter the Dragon starring Bruce Lee Shaw Brothers then also began to co produce films with Western producers for the international market 21 and invest in films such as Meteor and Blade Runner 22 However Shaw Brothers ceased film production in 1986 because of competition from Golden Harvest and increasing piracy focusing instead on TV production In 1986 Movietown became TV City which was leased to TVB for TV production In 1988 the company was reorganized under the umbrella of the Shaw Organization 4 In the 1990s Shaw again started making a few films but no longer on the same scale as before 23 Shaw has since relocated to a new site in Tseung Kwan O Hong Kong Legacy EditDirectors Edit Shaw Brothers is noted for film directors such as King Hu Lau Kar leung P Ramlee and Chang Cheh King Hu was an early director who is best remembered for his film Come Drink with Me a martial arts film which differed from those of Chang Cheh in that it featured a capable female protagonist and revolved around romance in the martial arts world rather than fast paced action and the tales of brotherhood which Chang Cheh would later popularize Chang Cheh who was more fond of the latter components would go on to be Shaw Studio s best known director with such films as Five Deadly Venoms The Brave Archer based on the works of Jin Yong One Armed Swordsman and other classics of Wuxia and Wushu film Almost equally as famous was fight choreographer turned director Lau Kar leung who would produce such highly regarded kung fu films as The 36th Chamber of Shaolin and The Eight Diagram Pole Fighter While P Ramlee was known for Malay style romantics and comedy such as Nujum Pa Belalang Seniman Bujang Lapok and Do Re Mi Actors Edit A movie theater in Saigon today s Ho Chi Minh City South Vietnam 1967 advertising for The Thundering Sword starring the queen of swords Cheng Pei pei Shaw Brothers was modeled after the classic Hollywood system with hundreds of actors signed to exclusive contracts While other studios rotated cast members Shaw Brothers assigned certain groups of actors to work exclusively with certain directors Shaw Brothers productions during the late 1950s to early 60s were dominated by actresses like Li Li Hua Ivy Ling Po Linda Lin Dai Betty Loh Ti Li Ching in dramatic and romantic features In particular the Huangmei opera The Love Eterne starring Ivy Ling Po and Betty Loh Ti and based on the Butterfly Lovers folk legend from the Jin Dynasty is one of the highest grossing features of the Shaw Studio Its huge success is in part due to the ingenious casting of Ivy Ling Po who was a relatively unknown supporting actress as the male lead In the story of Butterfly Lovers the female lead played by Betty Loh Ti disguised herself as a male to attend college because social mingling between the sexes was forbidden The film resonated with its audience and reportedly some members of the audience in Hong Kong and Taiwan repeatedly bought tickets and watched the feature in theaters over and over again in 1962 with some having watched it over 20 times From the late 1960s onward production of dramatic features was reduced in favor of martial arts features The group of actors from the 1978 release Five Deadly Venoms and the subsequent series of films known by the name the Venom Mob were among the most memorable They were Lo Mang Lu Feng Sun Chien Chiang Sheng and Kuo Chui who had been stars in the Shaw Studio for years but did not become memorable faces until Five Deadly Venoms Wei Pai who played the Snake referred to as Number Two throughout the film Five Deadly Venoms was also part of the Venom Mob which numbered over 15 actors who appeared in almost all of the Venom movies In the first half of the 1970s two other stars were particularly renowned and favored by the Million Dollar Director Chang Cheh in his movies Ti Lung and David Chiang He is also accredited as a capable actor who reinforced his muscular glamor with strong characterization over his many films Chiang on the other hand was slight and wiry and often played the sarcastic antihero to Lung s standard archetype Chang Cheh with his stars Ti Lung and David Chiang were known as the cinematic Iron Triangle throughout Southeast Asia In the middle of that decade the duo was overshadowed by the rise of Alexander Fu Sheng who had played supporting roles opposite them on many occasions Fu was killed in 1983 in a car accident at age 28 ending a brief but spectacular career Members of the Peking Opera School including Jackie Chan Yuen Biao and Sammo Hung played extras and bit parts in several Shaw Brothers films in the 1970s although they were unknowns at the time Better known female martial arts actresses of Shaw Brothers include Cheng Pei pei Lily Ho Shih Szu Lily Li and Kara Hui Ying Hung Cheng Pei pei in particular is relatively well known for her starring role in King Hu s Come Drink with Me and more recently in Ang Lee s Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon as Jade Fox Influences Edit The films produced by the Shaw Brothers Studio were highly popular among Chinese communities in Hong Kong and Southeast Asia and they would have a significant influence on later filmmakers particularly in the Kung fu genre These films also reached the West and were popular for a time in the 1970s and had some influence on filmmakers such as Quentin Tarantino who paid homage to the studio by displaying their logo in his Kill Bill Volume 1 and 2 films and adapting the styles of some of their films 24 Celestial Pictures acquisition and distribution EditMany Shaw Brothers classic films have been bootlegged due to the popularity of particular kung fu martial arts titles Celestial Pictures acquired rights to the Shaw Studio s legacy and is releasing on DVD 760 out of the nearly 1 000 films citation needed with restored picture and sound quality Many of these DVDs have come under controversy however for remixing audio and not including the original mono soundtracks Karmaloop TV s licensing deal Edit Karmaloop TV a multi platform programming network designed to help operators reclaim viewership among the 18 to 34 year old demographic announced its first film licensing deal with Celestial Pictures The Hong Kong based company owns restores and licenses the world s largest collection of Chinese made films including the Shaw Brothers library of fan favourite kung fu and action classics such as The 36th Chamber of Shaolin Five Deadly Venoms and The One Armed Swordsman The licensing deal with Karmaloop TV means that kung fu and action fans in the United States will see these films in their digitally restored versions many of which will be premiering for the first time on U S television in high definition The licensed collection includes more than 60 of the greatest martial arts masterpieces movies which launched the careers of stars like Jimmy Wang Yu Cheng Pei Pei Ti Lung David Chiang Alexander Fu Sheng Chen Kuan Tai and Gordon Liu Shaw Studios EditThe Clearwater Bay site at Clearwater Bay Road and Ngan Ying Road is the former home of Shaw Studio built 1960 1961 as well as the vacated TVB headquarters and studios 1986 2003 since relocated to TVB City and Celestial Pictures 25 There are also apartment blocks used to house Shaw actors The newer Shaw House and Shaw Villa are there The site has been vacant since 2003 26 and has been targeted for redevelopment several times since 2006 27 In 2015 Hong Kong s Antiquities Advisory Board declared the entire studio complex a site of cultural significance and subsequent redevelopment plans have included measures to restore and preserve the existing structures 27 A new Shaw Studios note the plural s has been built at Tseung Kwan O Industrial Estate and was opened in stages between 2006 and 2008 See also Edit Hong Kong portal Film portal Companies portalCelestial s Shaw Brothers Film Library Golden Harvest Hong Kong action cinema List of Shaw Brothers films Shanghainese people in Hong KongReferences Edit a b The Beginning 1924 1933 Shawonline a b Stephen H Y Siu 16 September 1972 A New Made in Hong Kong Label The Montreal Gazette 1925 The Start of a Legendary Studio The Chinese Mirror A Journal of Chinese Film History Archived from the original on 19 April 2015 a b c d Poshek Fu 2008 China Forever The Shaw Brothers and Diasporic Cinema University of Illinois Press pp 28 29 ISBN 978 0252075001 Justin Corfield 2010 Historical Dictionary of Singapore Scarecrow Press p 238 ISBN 9780810873872 Heroine Li Feifei 1925 and Shuomingshu The Chinese Mirror A Journal of Chinese Film History Archived from the original on 2 December 2013 a b c Meaghan Morris Siu Leung Li Stephen Ching kiu Chan 2006 Hong Kong Connections Transnational Imagination in Action Cinema Duke University Press Books p 193 ISBN 978 1932643015 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Matthew Fletcher and Santha Oorjitham Autocrat AsiaWeek Archived from the original on 23 June 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Gary G Xu 2012 Chapter 24 Chinese Cinema and Technology In Yingjin Zhang ed A Companion to Chinese Cinema Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1444330298 Lisa Odham Stokes 2007 Historical Dictionary of Hong Kong Cinema Scarecrow Press p 427 ISBN 978 0810855205 Poshek Fu 2003 Between Shanghai and Hong Kong The Politics of Chinese Cinemas Stanford University Press pp 56 59 ISBN 9780804745185 a b Shaw ventures into local Malay film productions History SG National Library Board About Shaw Shaw Studio Pre War The Great Depression 1930 Shaw Online Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 The Last Days Of Malay Film Productions Shaw Online Richard Corliss 7 January 2014 Run Run Shaw The Last Emperor of Chinese Movies Time Shaw Cinemas in Asia Japanese Occupation Shawonline China Forever The Shaw Brothers and Diasporic Cinema University of Illinois Press 2008 pp 114 115 ISBN 978 0252075001 Poshek Fu 2008 China Forever The Shaw Brothers and Diasporic Cinema University of Illinois Press pp 3 5 ISBN 978 0252075001 a b Run Run Shaw Hong Kong film pioneer dies aged 107 BBC 7 January 2014 Martin Chilton 7 January 2014 Run Run Shaw kung fu film pioneer dies aged 106 The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Shaw Organization 1970 Shawonline Vivian Wai yin Kwok 15 November 2007 Who Will Run Shaw Brothers After Run Run Forbes Shaw Brothers History Chan Kenneth The Shaw Tarantino Connection Rolling Thunder Pictures and the Exploitation Aesthetics of Cool PDF Mediascape Fall 2009 Shaw Online About Shaw Shaw History Shaw sg Retrieved 8 December 2011 Shaw Brothers Studios Clearwater Bay Hong Kong amp Macau Stuff Orientalsweetlips wordpress com 17 September 2009 Archived from the original on 8 March 2012 Retrieved 8 December 2011 a b Revised plans for development of old Shaw Brothers Studio building announced Hong Kong Buzz 19 May 2018 Retrieved 15 December 2019 Further reading EditPoshek Fu 2008 China Forever The Shaw Brothers and Diasporic Cinema University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0252075001 Glaessner Verina Kung Fu Cinema of Vengeance London Lorimer New York Bounty Books 1974 ISBN 0 85647 045 7 ISBN 0 517 51831 7 Wong Ain ling The Shaw Screen A Preliminary Study Hong Kong Hong Kong Film Archive 2003 ISBN 962 8050 21 4 Zhong Baoxian Hollywood of the East in the Making The Cathay Organization Vs the Shaw Organization in Post War Hong Kong Hong Kong Centre for China Urban and Regional Studies Hong Kong Baptist University 2004 ISBN 962 8804 44 8 Zhong Baoxian Moguls of the Chinese Cinema The Story of the Shaw Brothers in Shanghai Hong Kong and Singapore 1924 2002 Working paper series David C Lam Institute for East West Studies no 44 Hong Kong David C Lam Institute for East West Studies Hong Kong Baptist University 2005 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shaw Brothers Studio Shaw Studios Shaw intercontinental com official site in English and Chinese Big5 The Shaw Story at the official company website Shaw Brothers History at Hong Kong Cinema UK Shaw Brothers Reloaded Global international site The Rise and Fall of the House of Shaw scholarly essay by Tom Green Alexander Fu Sheng Biography of the Chinatown Kid Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shaw Brothers Studio amp oldid 1127668892, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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