I recently learned that Ho Meng-hua passed away last month. Ho is best known in the West as the director of The Mighty Peking Man (1977) a gonzo Hong Kong King Kong but he was also one of Shaw Brothers' most versatile filmmakers.In 1958, Ho was signed up by the studio when Run Run Shaw saw a preview of his directorial debut, The Wild Girl (not released until 1960). Made under the auspices of Yan Jun's MP&GI-funded production company Guotai (Cathay), the movie was a Republican-era comedy starring Kitty Ting Hao. Ho's first film at Shaws was An Appointment after Dark (1958), a tragic romance starring Lucilla Yu Ming and Chao Lei; it was followed by Red Lantern (1958), an adaptation of a Shaoxing opera starring Chung Ching and Chao Lei. In 1959, he directed the murder mystery Enchanted Melody, Fanny Fan's first Mandarin film. Throughout the early 60s, he made mostly contemporary dramas, comedies, and a few thrillers, starring the likes of Pat Ting Hung, Betty Loh Tih, Grace Ting Ning, and Margaret Tu Chuan.
Then in 1965, Ho Meng-hua was recruited to helm Shaw's four-film adaptation of the epic fantasy tale Journey to the West: released as The Monkey Goes West (1966), Princess Iron Fan (1966), Cave of the Silken Web (1967), and The Land of Many Perfumes (1968). As Shaw's wuxia revival kicked into high gear, Ho continued to roll with the times and started making swordplay flicks including Cheng Pei-pei's last Shaw film, The Lady Hermit (1971). During the 70s, he adapted to the studio's new focus on exploitation fare, with such films as The Kiss of Death (1973), Black Magic (1975), Oily Maniac (1976), and The Psychopath (1978). In 1980, Ho finally left Shaw Brothers and retired shortly thereafter.
Ho Meng-hua always referred to himself deprecatingly as a commercial director, able to crank out whatever the Shaw studio wanted of him. But if you watch his sublime melodrama Susanna (1967), which won the Best Film award at the 14th Asian Film Festival, you will see that he was no mere hack. In a 2003 interview with Frederic Ambroisine, he said that he took one year to shoot the film. "I was supposed to direct four movies per year for Shaw Brothers. So I owed them. I tried to shoot more movies to have less debt, but they kept paying me. I couldn’t quit Shaw Brothers."
While he is sometimes maligned as a second-rate director who just got the job done, Susanna is evidence that Ho Meng-hua's career is due for reevaluation, especially his unavailable early work. More than any of his other films, Susanna reveals Ho's untapped genius which unfortunately seemed unable to thrive in a bottom-line studio like Shaw Brothers.
Here's a scene showing Ho's sensitive direction. Li Ching plays a spoiled girl who discovers she has terminal brain cancer and tries to make up for her selfish ways. (Allyson Chang Yen plays her stepsister and Diana Chang Chung-wen plays her mother.)
Further Reading
Tribute to Ho Meng-hua by Frederic Ambroisine
7 comments:
Great post.
Thanks for this, Dave. It turns out I was a fan of this director and didn't even know it. I love the Journey to the West films, as well as The Lady Hermit, and Mighty Peking Man and Oily Maniac are favorite not-so-guilty pleasures of mine. Knowing now that he was responsible for all of them, I have to say that his versatility was truly impressive.
I saw this on HKMDB News a few days ago and was amazed at how many of his films I had seen.
I'm happy to see so much love for Ho Meng-hua. :)
A great article and a wonderful tribute to the late Director Ho.
Dave, how I wish I could watch An Appointment After Dark,it is a Chinese version of A Place in The Sun, Chao Lei and You Ming plays the role that was formerly acted by Monty and Liz.A Place in The Sun remains one of my all time favourite Hollywood movies.
As for Enchanted Song, the story plots are similar to one of the Hitchcock's movies(I have yet to find out which one it is)....To watch Fanny Fan and Helen Hsia acting together in one movie is a pure visual feast...
Hi Oldflames! Somehow, I've never seen A Place in the Sun. I'll definitely check it out.
Yeah, I'd love to see any one of the films Ho made from 1958 to 1961. It looks like two of them of them were shot in Singapore and Malaysia: Malayan Affair (1960) and Rendezvous in the South Sea (1960).
Hi Dave, I would love to watch that two movies you have mentioned.They are definitely on the top of my "must watch" list.
In 1958, Shaw Hong Kong Chinese production unit has teamed up with Shaw Malay unit in Singapore,producing a movie called Sri Menanti馬來風月,starring Paul Chang,Tang Dan and other Malay actors......For my own reference,I like to call these three movies "Shaw's Malayan Trilogy".
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