The Storm Warriors

For other uses, see (disambiguation).
The Storm Warriors

Teaser poster
Traditional 風雲II
Simplified 风云II
Mandarin Fēng Yún Èr
Cantonese Fung1 Wan4 Ji6
Directed by Danny Pang
Oxide Pang
Produced by Danny Pang
Oxide Pang
Alvin Lam
Cheung Hong-tat
Screenplay by Danny Pang
Oxide Pang
Pang Pak-sing
Timax Wong
Based on Fung Wan 
by Ma Wing-shing
Starring Aaron Kwok
Ekin Cheng
Nicholas Tse
Charlene Choi
Simon Yam
Kenny Ho
Music by Ronald Ng
Cinematography Decha Srimantra
Edited by Curran Pang
Production
company
Universe Entertainment
Sil-Metropole
Chengtian Entertainment
Distributed by Universe Films Distribution Co. Ltd.
Release dates
  • 10 December 2009 (2009-12-10)
Running time
111 minutes
Country Hong Kong
Language Cantonese
Box office US$5,668,356[1]

The Storm Warriors is a 2009 Hong Kong wuxia fantasy film produced and directed by the Pang brothers. It is the second live-action film adaptation of artist Ma Wing-shing's manhua series Fung Wan, following the 1998 film The Storm Riders. The Storm Warriors is based on Fung Wan's Japanese Invasion story arc The Death Battle. Ekin Cheng and Aaron Kwok respectively reprise their roles as Wind and Cloud, who this time find themselves up against Lord Godless (Simon Yam), a ruthless Japanese warlord bent on invading China. The film is a co-production between Universe Entertainment and Sil-Metropole Organisation.

A sequel to The Storm Riders was first announced in March 2008 after Universe gained rights to the Fung Wan franchise from former film distributor Golden Harvest. The Pangs aimed on creating a big-budgeted film involving visual effects and stated that The Storm Warriors would not be a direct sequel to its 1998 predecessor. Principal photography for The Storm Warriors began in April 2008 and ended in July; filming took place in three studios located in Bangkok, Thailand. The film is notable for being the first Chinese language film shot in bluescreen. During post-production, effects artists worked on scenes involving computer-generated imagery, focusing on the film's setting and backgrounds.

The Storm Warriors was released theatrically in Hong Kong on 10 December 2009.[2]

Synopsis

The evil Japanese warlord Lord Godless desires to conquer China. He threatens the General in command into surrender, takes the emperor captive and subdues a large number of martial arts masters using his special poison. Among the captives are Cloud who surrendered out of concern for Chu Chu, and the martial arts legend Nameless. Lord Godless gives them two choices, they can either surrender and work under him, or they will be executed. None of the masters accept the offer. Nameless then breaks free of his chains, revealing that Ghostly Tiger, Nameless' assistant sneaked in earlier to give all the masters the antidote to the poison. Cloud and Wind land direct blows on Lord Godless with no noticeable effect, and even though several other martial arts masters combine their powers to attack Lord Godless, they lose the contest of strength and are killed. Nameless uses his special attack on Lord Godless, using his chi to launch all the captured masters' swords at Lord Godless, Lord Godless takes the attack head on and blocks all the swords while Nameless suffers serious internal injuries because he overtaxed himself while not fully recovered from the poison. Some other martial artists raid the prison on horseback and Nameless, Cloud, Wind and Chu Chu manage to escape, while Lord Godless sends his son, Heartless and two lieutenants, Earth and Sky, after Nameless with an army, with orders to destroy any martial arts schools along the way who will not surrender.

Nameless is badly injured and will not be able to recover his full strength to fight with Lord Godless for a significant period of time, so he sends Cloud and Wind to find Piggy King's elder brother, Lord Wicked, who is the only person who can fight Lord Godless now. They go to the mountain where he has hid himself from the outside world but are unsuccessful in persuading him to help, until Wind's lover Second Dream shows up and aids in persuading Lord Wicked. Lord Wicked comes out of his cave, revealing that he had chopped off his own arms years ago. This was his attempt to stop killing innocent people because he had lost control of himself in his younger days while practicing evil kung-fu. He kicks some pebbles at Cloud and Wind to test how they react, Cloud crushes the pebbles totally while Wind only catches them intact. Lord Wicked states that Cloud is too aggressive and will not be able to handle training in the evil way, while Wind has more control and might be able to return to normal. Lord Wicked then starts training Wind in evil arts while Cloud is summoned to meet Nameless at Lin Yi Temple.

At Lin Yi Temple, Cloud fights a disguised Nameless, who states that Cloud has massive potential, able to accurately learn his styles in a short period of time, and trains him, eventually creating a new sword style which Nameless names "Ba", inventing a new character partially resembling the characters "Cloud" and "Sword". Lord Godless discovers where Nameless, Wind and Cloud have been hiding and dispatches Earth and Sky to kill Nameless while sending a few warriors after Wind. At the temple, Cloud easily defeats Earth and Sky in a single blow, but as Lord Wicked and the others are fighting off the warriors that Lord Godless sent, Second Dream gets injured and Wind interrupts his training to come out of the cave and save her, killing the warriors in the process. Afterward he leaves with his training unfinished, despite it supposedly not being possible to leave the pool yet. Cloud arrives to find Wind gone, and Lord Wicked sends Cloud after Lord Godless as he is trying to find the Dragon Tomb which contains a secret that deals with the destiny of China.

Lord Godless meanwhile has taken the Emperor and his family as hostages and is searching for the Dragon Tomb. The Emperor refuses to help him, but Heartless is able to find out which path into the tomb is the correct one through the use of his chi that generated a massive wind when he picked the correct passage. Once at the end of the path, Heartless starts threatening the Emperor for more information on the Dragon Tomb, but as he refuses to speak, Heartless starts killing his wives and sons. Cloud arrives, and the guards which were Imperial Guards that were forced to surrender, switch sides instantly and pull the Emperor out of harm's way. Cloud and Heartless exchanges blows, Heartless backs off after the first exchange, and Cloud and Lord Godless starts fighting, Cloud initially has the upper hand but is unable to injure Lord Godless due to his near invincible armor. In the fight, a pile of rocks is blown away, revealing the entrance to the real Dragon Tomb, which contains a human skeleton sitting upright. Lord Godless almost kills Cloud in the next exchange of blows, but Wind, who has been thoroughly possessed by the evil arts, arrives and fights against first Lord Godless, then Cloud, and then both of them, eventually killing Lord Godless by cutting off his arm from the underside of his armor, which was not as well protected and stealing the Dragon Bone, the secret of the tomb.

As Cloud chases after Wind, the Emperor begs Cloud to retrieve the Dragon Bone as it is crucial to the destiny of China. Second Dream eventually finds Wind at the secret place she had written to him in a letter about, but Wind just sits there with minimal response, and eventually the Emperor's guards arrive to try and take the Dragon Bone back. However, as the General struggles with Second Dream over the dragon bone, Heartless, which had escaped from the previous battle, grabs the bone and heavily injures the General, as the General and Heartless struggle for the bone, it breaks into two and Wind gets fully taken over by the evil spirit again. Cloud arrives and fights Wind to try and bring him back, but fails as Wind eventually wounds Second Dream and also kills Chu Chu. In a final gambit, Cloud hurls his sword at Wind, cutting him on the forehead and Wind miraculously regains control. The cliff side has taken serious damage in the battle however, and a large section collapses, causing Wind and Second Dream (who walks over to check on her beloved) to fall off the cliff. Cloud is not in the section of the cliff that collapses. However, Cloud jumps off the cliff as well, manages to fall faster than the Wind and Second Dream, and exerts a force to push Wind and Second Dream back to safety. In doing so, Cloud plummets into the depths, but there is no scene of him dying. Sitting safely on the stable part of the cliff, Wind laments about why Cloud did not kill him earlier when Cloud had the chance. The movie ends abruptly at this stage.[3]

Cast

Production

The Storm Warriors is based on artist Ma Wing-shing's manhua Fung Wan, a comic book series created in 1984.[7] The film was directed by Oxide Pang and his brother, Danny Pang, who served as a co-editor on the 1998 film The Storm Riders. The film was produced as part of the Pangs' ten-year motion picture deal with Universe Entertainment.[8] A sequel to the 1998 film was first announced in March 2008.[9] Film distributor Universe Entertainment gained rights to produce the film from Golden Harvest after the latter company's ten-year production rights to the Fung Wan franchise expired.[10]

The film is based on Fung Wan's Japanese Invasion story arc The Death Battle, which follows Wind and Cloud as they fight against a Japanese warlord.[4] The Pangs have stated that The Storm Warriors is not a direct sequel to The Storm Riders, but more of a stand-alone film with a separate storyline.[11]

It was announced in April 2008 that the Pangs had changed the film's English title from The Storm Riders II to The Storm Warriors in order to avoid copyright conflicts.[12] The name change was made to head off any potential copyright disputes with the comic's current license holder who is no longer associated with the film's financiers.[13]

Casting

Ma Wing-shing was very concerned about the film's casting. He was especially adamant of Aaron Kwok and Ekin Cheng reprising their respective roles. Ma also dismissed that the actors might be too old for the film. He commented on the actors and their roles: "My concept of Cloud was someone with a tortured soul, and Aaron resembles the actual comic Cloud more today than he did 11 years ago. He is less baby-faced, and looks more mature and manly now...As for Ekin, he was more carefree in the first movie, but it will be more challenging for him this time around because he has to turn evil."[14]

Filming

Aaron Kwok and Ekin Cheng, along with the Pang brothers, executive producer Daniel Lam and the film's crew celebrated production of the film with a traditional Thai blessing ceremony. Filming for The Storm Warriors began in April 2008 and ended in July 2008.[15] Principal photography for the film took place entirely in three studios occupying 60,000 square feet (5,600 m2) in Bangkok's Pak-Gret district. Filming consisted mainly of a Thai production crew, as the Pangs decided to shoot the film in Thailand, rather than in their native Hong Kong: "We wanted to shoot the whole film...because we trust them, and because it's probably cheaper than shooting in Hong Kong, even though we have to fly in some of the props and costumes."[16] Members of the media and the film's distributors across Asia were invited to visit the shooting location. They also invited to view a fight scene between leading actors Ekin Cheng and Aaron Kwok as it was being filmed.[4]

Design and effects

Visual effects for the film was produced by Fat Face Productions, which has been a leader in digital effects work for the Asian region with past credits that include The Warlords, and Kung Fu Hustle. The Storm Warriors is notable for being the first Chinese language film to be shot in bluescreen. The Pangs intended on giving their film a similar look and feel to that of the 2007 American film 300.[17][18] The Pangs decided not to shoot the film entirely in bluescreen, as it would have gone over budgets and ruined the look of the film. Oxide Pang commented on the film's look: "We decided to make it more realistic-looking, and less like a comic book, but you will instantly know that it is a movie made out of a comic book just by looking at the background." During post-production, more than 1000 CGI shots involving the film's settings and background were created for the film.[19]

Release

The Storm Warriors was released theatrically in Hong Kong and Australia on 10 December 2009.[20][21]

Marketing

Ma Wing-Shing created a hand-drawn poster for The Storm Warriors for the Hong Kong Animation and Comic Book Convention in July 2009. Universe Entertainment later created a live-action version of Ma's poster.[22] A theatrical trailer for the film premiered on the film's official website and in cinemas on 17 June 2009.[23] The film's official website was launched in Beijing on 3 August 2009.[24]

Awards and nominations

Awards and nominations
Ceremony Category Recipient Outcome
29th Hong Kong Film Awards Best Art Direction Yee Chung-Man, Lau Man-hung Nominated
Best Costume Make Up Design Yee Chung-Man, Dora Ng Nominated
Best Action Choreography Ma Yuk-sing Nominated
Best Sound Design Ken Wong, Phyllis Cheng, Lam Siu-yu Nominated
Best Visual Effects Ng Yuen-fai, Chas Chau, Tam Kai-kwan Won

See also

References

  1. FUNG WAN II (THE STORM WARRIORS)
  2. "The Storm Warriors Release Date" (in Chinese). HK Headline. Retrieved 14 December 2009.
  3. The Storm Warriors Official Website
  4. 1 2 3 4 Chang, Michael (8 September 2008). "Role reversal in Storm Warriors". Star-ecentral.com. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
  5. "HKSAR Film No Top 10 Box Office: [2009.12.09] STORM WARRIORS PREMIERE". HKSAR Film No Top 10 Box Office. 8 December 2009. Retrieved 9 December 2009.
  6. "HKSAR Film No Top 10 Box Office: [2009.12.04] CHARLENE CHOI AND EKIN CHENG: ROMANCE IN A DIFFERENT SETTING". HKSAR Film No Top 10 Box Office. Retrieved 14 December 2009.
  7. Chang, Michael (8 September 2008). "Fung blows hot and cold". Star-ecentral.com. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
  8. "Pang brothers sign 10-year deal with Universe — Asia entertainment news from Variety". Variety Asia Online. Retrieved 7 August 2009.
  9. "The MovieBuff: 'Storm Riders 2' is coming". the-moviebuff. Retrieved 10 December 2009.
  10. "ekinpedia@wiki — The Storm Warriors". 1. Atwiki. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
  11. ""Storm Riders 2" to be Unleashed in 2009 — News —". Alivenotdead.com. 20 March 2008. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
  12. Pollard, Mark (21 May 2008). "'Storm Riders 2′ heads HK digital effects boom". Kungfucinema. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
  13. NJMedia (26 May 2008). "Storm Riders 2 is now Storm Warriors". Screen-power.com. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
  14. "Storm Warriors hits Malaysian cinema in December - 88news". 88news.net. 26 October 2009. Archived from the original on 29 October 2009. Retrieved 10 December 2009.
  15. CRI (26 June 2008). "Digital effects highlight "Storm Warriors"". China Daily. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
  16. "Wise Kwai's Thai Film Journal: Storm Riders II, Street Fighter shooting it out in Bangkok". Thaifilmjournal.blogspot.com. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
  17. "The MovieBuff: 'Storm Riders 2' is coming". The-Moviebuff.blogspot.com. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
  18. Martin, Peter (19 March 2008). "Hong Kong Filmart: 'Storm Riders II,' Western 'Rain,' Rebuilt 'Shanghai' - Cinematical". Cinematical. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
  19. "The Storm Warriors – CGI Before & After photos – Exclusive". CineAsia. 29 November 2009. Retrieved 10 December 2009.
  20. http://www.thestormwarriors.com The Storm Warriors Official Website
  21. "The Storm Warriors hits Australia: December 10". CineAsia. 22 November 2009. Retrieved 10 December 2009.
  22. "HKSAR Film No Top 10 Box Office: [2009.07.31] STORM WARRIORS POSTER". HKSAR Film No Top 10 Box Office. 30 July 2009. Retrieved 9 December 2009.
  23. "HKSAR Film No Top 10 Box Office: [2009.06.18] STORM WARRIORS TRAILER ARRIVES". HKSAR Film No Top 10 Box Office. 17 June 2009. Retrieved 9 December 2009.
  24. "The Storm Warriors II launches website". 888news.net. 3 August 2009. Archived from the original on 9 December 2009. Retrieved 10 December 2009.

External links

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