5
Jun/14

ALL HAIL THE KING — THE FILMS OF KING HU: A TOUCH OF ZEN

5
Jun/14

King Hu’s 1971 wuxia classic, A TOUCH OF ZEN, is a trippy journey toward enlightenment

A TOUCH OF ZEN (King Hu, 1971)
BAMcinématek, BAM Rose Cinemas
30 Lafayette Ave. between Ashland Pl. & St. Felix St.
Friday, June 6, $13, 7:30
Series runs June 6-17
718-636-4100
www.bam.org

Watching King Hu’s 1971 wuxia classic, A Touch of Zen, brings us back to the days of couching out with Kung Fu Theater on rainy Saturday afternoons. The highly influential three-hour epic features an impossible-to-figure-out plot, a goofy romance, wicked-cool weaponry, an awesome Buddhist monk, a bloody massacre, and action scenes that clearly involve the overuse of trampolines. Still, it’s great fun, even if it is way too long. (The film, which was initially shown in two parts, earned a special technical prize at the 1975 Cannes Film Festival.) Shih Jun stars as Ku Shen Chai, a local calligrapher and scholar who is extremely curious when the mysterious Ouyang Nin (Tin Peng) suddenly show up in town. It turns out that Ouyang is after Miss Yang (Hsu Feng) to exact “justice” for the corrupt Eunuch Wei, who is out to kill her entire family. Hu (Come Drink with Me, Dragon Gate Inn) fills the film with long, poetic establishing shots of fields and the fort, using herky-jerky camera movements (that might or might not have been done on purpose) and throwing in an ultra-trippy psychedelic mountain scene that is about as 1960s as it gets. A Touch of Zen is ostensibly about Ku’s journey toward enlightenment, but it’s also about so much more, although we’re not completely sure what that is. The film kicks off BAMcinématek’s “All Hail the King: The Films of King Hu” series, which runs June 6-17 and pays tribute to the Shaw Brothers veteran with such other works as The Love Eterne, Come Drink with Me, All the King’s Men, and The Valiant Ones in addition to movies it influenced and/or is related to, including Nicholas Ray’s Johnny Guitar, Tsai Ming-liang’s Goodbye, Dragon Inn, Ang Lee’s Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, and Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai.