Chan's clowning may have helped extend the life of the kung fu wave for several years. Nevertheless, he became a star towards the end of the boom, and would soon help move the colony towards a new type of action. In the 1980s, he and many colleagues would forge a slicker, more spectacular Hong Kong pop cinema that would successfully compete with the post-
Star Wars summer blockbusters from America.
Jackie Chan and the modern martial arts stunt action film in 2002 In the early 1980s,
Jackie Chan began experimenting with elaborate
stunt action sequences in films such as
The Young Master (1980) and especially
Dragon Lord (1982), which featured a pyramid fight scene that holds the record for the most
takes required for a single scene, with 2900 takes, and the final fight scene in which he performs various stunts, including one where he does a back flip off a
loft and falls to the lower ground. By 1983, Chan branched out into action films which, though they still used martial arts, were less limited in scope, setting and plot, with an emphasis on elaborate yet dangerous stunt sequences. His first film in this vein,
Project A (1983), saw the official formation of the
Jackie Chan Stunt Team and added elaborate, dangerous stunts to the fights and typical slapstick humor (at one point, Chan falls from the top of a clock tower through a series of fabric canopies). The new formula helped
Project A gross over in Hong Kong, and significantly more in other Asian countries such as Japan, where it grossed and became one of the
highest-grossing films of 1984.
Winners and Sinners (1983) also featured an elaborate action sequence that involves Chan skating along a busy high road, including a risky stunt where he slides under a truck. Chan continued to take the approach – and the budgets – to new heights in hits like
Police Story (1985), which is considered one of the greatest action films of all time. Here was Chan dangling from a speeding bus, destroying large parts of a hillside shantytown, fighting in a shopping mall while breaking many glass panes, and sliding down a pole covered with exploding light bulbs. The latter is considered one of the greatest stunts in the history of action cinema. The 1988 sequel called for explosions on a scale similar to many Hollywood movies and seriously injured leading lady
Maggie Cheung – an occupational risk Chan had already grown used to. Thus Jackie Chan created the template for the contemporary urban action-comedy of the 1980s, combining cops, kung fu and all the body-breaking potential of the modern city with its glass, metal and speeding vehicles.
Tsui Hark and Cinema City Chan's move towards larger-scale action films was paralleled by work coming out of
Cinema City, the production company established in 1980 by comedians
Raymond Wong,
Karl Maka and
Dean Shek. With movies like the spy spoof
Aces Go Places (1982) and its sequels, Cinema City helped make modern special effects,
James Bond-type gadgets and big vehicular stunts part of the industry vernacular. Director/producer
Tsui Hark had a hand in shaping the Cinema City style while employed there from 1981–1983 but went on to make an even bigger impact after leaving. In such movies as
Zu Warriors from the Magic Mountain (1983) and
A Chinese Ghost Story (1987, directed by
Ching Siu-tung), he kept pushing the boundaries of Hong Kong special effects. He led the way in replacing the rough and ready camera style of 1970s kung fu with glossier and more sophisticated visuals and ever more furious editing.
John Woo and the "heroic bloodshed" and "gun fu" triad films in 2005 As a producer, Tsui Hark facilitated the creation of
John Woo's epoch-making
heroic bloodshed movie
A Better Tomorrow (1986). Woo's saga of cops and the
triads (Chinese gangsters) combined fancifully choreographed (and extremely violent) gunplay (called
gun fu) with heightened emotional melodrama, sometimes resembling a modern-dress version of 1970s
kung fu films by Woo's mentor
Chang Cheh. The formula broke another all-time box office record. It also jump-started the faltering career of co-star
Chow Yun-fat, who overnight became one of the colony's most popular idols and Woo's favorite leading man. For the remainder of the 1980s and into the early 1990s, a deluge of films by Woo and others explored similar territory, often with a similar visual style and thematic bent. They were usually marked by an emphasis on the fraternal bonds of duty and affection among the criminal protagonists. The most notable other
auteur of these themes was
Ringo Lam, who offered a less romanticized take in such films as
City on Fire,
Prison on Fire (both 1987), and
Full Contact (1992), all starring Chow Yun-Fat. The genre and its creators were accused in some quarters of cravenly glorifying real-life triads, whose involvement in the film business was notorious.
The wire-work wave As the triad films petered out in the early 1990s, period martial arts returned as the favored action genre. But this was a new martial arts cinema that took full advantage of technical strides as well the higher budgets that came with Hong Kong's dominance of the region's screens. These lavish productions were often adapted from the more fantastical
wuxia novels, which featured flying warriors in mid-air combat. Performers were raised up on ultrathin wires to allow them to conduct gravity-defying action sequences, a technique known by Western fans, sometimes disparagingly, as
wire fu. As so often, Tsui Hark led the way. He produced
Swordsman (1990), which reestablished the wuxia novels of
Jin Yong as favorite big-screen sources (television adaptations had long been ubiquitous). He directed
Once Upon a Time in China (1991), which resurrected oft-filmed folk hero
Wong Fei Hung. Both films were followed by sequels and a raft of imitations, often starring Mainland
wushu champion
Jet Li. He went on to receive a special award for a
mainland China person at the 1995 Taipei
Golden Horse Film Festival. The other signature star of the subgenre was Taiwanese-born actress
Brigitte Lin. She made an unlikely specialty of androgynous woman-warrior types, such as the villainous, sex-changing
eunuch in
The Swordsman 2 (1992), epitomizing martial arts fantasy's often-noted fascination with gender instability. == International impact ==