Prior to the financial success of director
King Hu's
Come Drink with Me (1966) left the
Shaw Brothers Studio. Cinematographer
Nishimoto Tadashi said that money was also a factor for Hu's departure as while
Come Drink With Me was performing well in the box office, he was only being paid
HKD 2,500 for his film. In 1965, director
King Hu left the Hong Kong-based
Shaw Brothers Studio just after completing
Come Drink with Me. Union Film’s partner and representative in Hong Kong, Zhang Taoran, had known Hu before his commercial success with
Come Drink with Me. Knowing Hu was unhappy working at Shaw Brothers, Taoran approached Hu about working in Taiwan after. The Union Film Company, was initially started in Taiwan in 1953 as a film distribution business. In 1963, they received investments from the Singapore-based
Cathay Organisation and co-founded the Grand Motion Picture Company. This was made with
Li Han-hsiang, another former Shaw Brothers employee who had left to work in Taiwan. Li Han-Hsiang partnership with Union ended in 1966 while the Cathay Organisation was having problems following the death of its chief executive,
Loke Wan Tho. This led to Union hiring King Hu as a production chief who would train new talent and buy equipment to facilitate the studios operations. With a new contract with Union Film, Hu was set to make HKD 18,000 per film in his first year and 20,000 per film in his second. Cinematographer
Nishimoto Tadashi said that money was also a factor for Hu's departure as while
Come Drink With Me was performing well in the box office, he was only being paid
HKD 2,500 for his film. Mainland China critic Song Ziwen, Hu had wanted to make another
wuxia film for the company based on the short story "
The Painted Skin" Wu dropped this idea and would only return to that story as a film for his last film,
Painted Skin (1992). After failing to maintain Hu as a director, Shaw Brothers sent
Raymond Chow to Taiwan to negotiate with Union's Sha Youngfung as Shaw Brothers insisted that hill still owed them six more films contractually. Shaw Brothers wanted Union to give them the distribution rights to the next four King Hu films in Singapore, Malaysia and Burma. Sha Youngfun did not agree, but as Shaw pressured that would they would go to the Taiwanese government to threaten them to investigate Hu's background. Youngfung worried that Hu could become backlisted as a communist which would not let him work in that country at all, which eventually had him accept Shaw Brothers requests. This all happened while Hu was busy shooting his next film,
Dragon Inn, in central
Taiwan in 1966. Hu himself credited the combat techniques to the choreography of
Han Ying-chieh, better known as the titual villian in the film
The Big Boss (1971). Han Ying-chieh had trained in the
Peking Opera with Hu stating they had designed their combat scenes as being more like ballets instead of plausible fights.
David Bordwell described the style the characters fight in Hu's films as an "unfussy, impersonal technique" where heroes rarely succumb to anger and often exchange sharp glances. Instead of floating through the air for extended periods like swordsmen characters in 1990s Hong Kong films, Hu's fighters they are rendered in short hand with quick editing, even when doing grander feats like the character of Cao Shaoquin leaping through trees in the end of
Dragon Inn. == Release ==