A Chinese Ghost - Story I Ii Iii -1987-1990-1991-...

"It's too dangerous to be a hero." – Yin Chek-ha. But for one trilogy, it was worth it.

Before the CGI spectacles of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon or the global phenomenon of Squid Game , there was Leslie Cheung, Joey Wong, and a Taoist swordsman named Yin Chek-ha. This is the story of how a simple ghost story became a cultural monument. Directed by Ching Siu-tung (choreographer of Hero ) and produced by Tsui Hark, the original film was a revolutionary departure from the staid Shaw Brothers productions of the prior decade. It took a classic Qing dynasty tale from Pu Songling’s Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio and injected it with 80s MTV pacing, wire-fu poetry, and tragic romance. A chinese ghost story I II III -1987-1990-1991-...

Ling Choi-san is mistaken for a fugitive rebel and thrown into prison. The world has changed; evil ministers and demons (led by a centipede spirit) control the land. He meets a doppelgänger of the deceased Hsiao-ching (Joey Wong again, playing a human revolutionary named Ching). Alongside a new female sword-fighter (Michelle Reis) and the returning Yin Chek-ha, Ling must defeat a massive, transforming demon. "It's too dangerous to be a hero

In the pantheon of world cinema, there are few films that perfectly capture the intoxicating blend of sorrow, supernatural horror, and acrobatic wonder quite like Tsui Hark’s production of A Chinese Ghost Story (originally titled Sinnui yauman ). Released at the tail end of the 1980s and concluding in the early 90s, the trilogy spanning 1987, 1990, and 1991 remains the gold standard for the "oriental fantasy" genre. This is the story of how a simple

An entertaining, over-stuffed blockbuster. It lacks the soul of the original but is a crucial bridge to the madness of Part III. Part III: A Chinese Ghost Story III (1991) – The Taoist Unleashed Originally envisioned as a side story focusing solely on the Yin Chek-ha character, Part III is perhaps the most controversial entry among purists. Leslie Cheung is absent. Joey Wong returns, but not as Hsiao-ching.

Ten years after the first film, the Tree Devil has regenerated. A young monk (Tony Leung Chiu-wai, in a rare comedic role), Fong, travels to the temple to cremate his master’s remains. He meets a new ghost, Lotus (Joey Wong, playing a heartbreaking courtesan ghost serving the same Tree Devil). Yin Chek-ha (Wu Ma) returns, older and drunker, to help decapitate the monster once and for all.

Ling Choi-san (Leslie Cheung), a timid, debt-ridden debt collector, seeks shelter in the decrepit Lan Ro Temple. There, he meets the ethereal Nie Hsiao-ching (Joey Wong), a ghost enslaved by the monstrous Tree Devil (Lau Siu-ming). Forced to lure men to their deaths, Hsiao-ching instead falls for the naive yet pure-hearted Ling. With the help of the irreverent, sword-slinging Taoist warrior Yen (Wu Ma), Ling must battle the underworld to reincarnate his love.