Shaw Brothers – Come Drink with Me
$12 General Admission
$9 Student/Senior
$7 NWFF & Grand Illusion Members
About
The premise of Come Drink with Me is straightforward. There are bandits, they’re a menace, and the government can’t stop them. When the bandit leader (Chan Hung-lit, in a ghostly Lee Marvin-esque role) learns of Golden Swallow, the only warrior who could stand in their way, he grins and declares, “I look forward to meeting him.” The outlaws are blithely unaware that that Golden Swallow is, in fact, a woman. Hu favors a light-footed dance between actors and camera over “realistic” combat, so he wisely cast 19-year-old ballet dancer Cheng Pei-pei in the lead rather than a seasoned martial artist.
Come Drink with Me was the first commercial success for director King Hu (Dragon Inn, A Touch of Zen), despite the Shaw Studio having rushed Hu through his fastidious, perfectionist process to complete the film. It’s tempting to dream of what an unhurried Come Drink could have become, since even the Shaws’ rush-job is already wonderful: beautiful and ruthless, bloody and refined, with sweeping lateral camera movements, choreography that’s delicately integrated with space, breathtaking location photography, rhythmic metric editing, and a musical number with singing orphans (Jackie Chan claims to have been among them – good luck confirming that one). The film established a new class of wuxia films and set both King Hu and the Shaw Studio’s reputations in stone as forces in filmmaking to be reckoned with.
Description by Morgan Akana.
“Peipei’s performance set the standard for the cinematic xia nü (lady knight-errant) model. Though a warrior, she never loses her femininity even when disguised as a male, and this is what constitutes Hu’s breakthrough in the genre: the female sex is entirely comfortable as warriors and accepted as such by their male counterparts.” – Stephen Teo, Senses of Cinema
Sponsored by the Confucius Institute of the State of Washington
Learn more about CIWA’s programs to enrich local engagement with Chinese language and culture at their website
Co-presented with Grand Illusion Cinema
G.I. members receive the NWFF member rate at our martial arts screenings, and vice versa! They’ll be showing two wonderful Sammo Hung flicks from Golden Harvest after our Shaw Bros series: Blade of Fury (Jan. 30, Feb. 1 & 3) and Pedicab Driver (Feb. 6, 8, 10 & 14). NWFF members receive the G.I. member rate for both shows.