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Screen studies - The Legend
of Zu
Totally HK
by Vivienne Chow
Heart-throb Cecilia Cheung Pak-chi has a new assignment this summer. As
one of the next generation of Zu warriors, she will wield virtual weapons
against evil in director Tsui Hark's latest project, The Legend Of Zu.
Almost 20 years after 1983's acclaimed cult classic, Zu: Warriors From The
Magic Mountain, Tsui has brought the legendary warriors back to the big
screen.
Although the new Zu is still about martial-arts masters who dwell on Magic
Mountain, this film features a whole new breed of warriors. Only Sammo
Hung Kam-po returns from the original film as Longbrows, the
1,000-year-old founder of the Zu sect, Omei.

Local heart-throb: Ekin Cheng demonstrates the latest visual sorcery in Tsui Hark's follow up to Zu: Warriors From The Magic Mountain.
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Like its predecessor, The Legend Of Zu brings with it a feast of visual
effects. The film cost $90 million to make, three times the average budget
for a local film, and $40 million of that was spent on 1,600
computer-generated special effects.
Two Hong Kong companies and four from Hollywood were hired to produce the
computer effects for the film. One, Menfond Electronic Art and Computer
Design, which also collaborated with Tsui on Master Q 2001, took control
of more than two-thirds of the production. ''We started the project in
March this year,'' says Eddy Wong Wang-hin, director of Menfond. ''We
spent one month just having meetings with the director before we actually
started.''
Wong and his team then translated Tsui's concepts and sketches into
three-dimensional images. Within four months, Wong and 70 co-workers
created more than 800 shots, including a stunning opening scene and the
design of the warriors' weapons.
Tsui was a hard taskmaster. ''For certain parts we had lots of
amendments,'' says Wong. ''The worst one was Cecilia Cheung's sword. It
just took a lot of time to get it right.''
Cheung plays the role of Enigma, one of Longbrows' disciples, and her
weapon of choice is the Heaven Sword. ''We changed it 10 times and Tsui
still did not think it was right,'' Wong says. ''But finally the 11th
version was accepted.''
In one sequence, Enigma and Ying (Wu Jing), the owner of another of Omei's
holy weapons, the Thunder Sword, have to fly towards each other. The
studio footage contains just Cheung and Wu, carried by wires in front of a
bright green background. The virtual mountains and clouds behind the
characters in the film were created by computers.
''You can see that without computer-generated effects, this film could
never have been made,'' says Wong. ''We spent six weeks just constructing
the opening shot. Obviously, you can't film this sequence in a real
setting. Just these few seconds of screen time took us one-and-a-half
months to shoot. ''For Master Q 2001, we only had to create [the cartoon character] Master
Q and make him be able to act, so we only had to solve one problem. But
for The Legend Of Zu, every single effect is different.'' Wong says the
effects in The Legend Of Zu have come a long way from those seen in 1998's
The Storm Riders, another martial-arts adventure that leaned heavily on
computer animation. ''The Storm Riders was made more than two years ago
and this is a long period of time in the world of computer development,''
says Wong. ''We have made some big steps forward.''
Wong says the stunning computer-generated images are created using the
Maya software package, which also helped create Disney's first
computer-animated feature, Toy Story (1995).
''I know that many audiences still complain about Hong Kong's standard of
computer-generated effects,'' Wong says. ''But this is because of lack of
investment and time. If we are given the same amount of money as
Hollywood, I am sure Hong Kong could produce really high quality work. We
are slowly getting there.''
The Legend Of Zu opens in Asia on August 9 2002 |
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