Heroic bloodshed
Heroic bloodshed is a genre invented by Hong Kong action cinema revolving around stylized action sequences and dramatic themes such as brotherhood, duty, honour, redemption and violence that has become a popular genre used by different directors worldwide.[1][2] The term heroic bloodshed was coined by editor Rick Baker in the magazine Eastern Heroes[3] in the late 1980s, specifically referring to the styles of directors John Woo and Ringo Lam. Baker defined the genre as "a Hong Kong action film that features a lot of gun play and gangsters rather than kung fu. Lots of blood. Lots of action."[4]
Motifs
Protagonists in these films are often good-willed criminals, typically Triad members, hit men, or thieves with a strict code of ethics, which in some cases leads to the betrayal of their employers and the saving of many intended victims. The police officer with a conscience, who cannot be corrupted in any way, is also common, and is usually modeled after the hardboiled detective. Loyalty, family and brotherhood are the most typical themes of the genre. Heroic bloodshed films generally have a strong emotional angle, not only between, but during action sequences.
Pistols and submachine guns are frequently utilized by the heroes due to the light weight they provide, enabling their wielders to move more quickly. They are frequently dual wielded. The heroes are extremely agile and implement rolls, dives, slides, and falls while they duel, making for a graceful, ballet-like performance in the midst of gunfire.
Heroic bloodshed films often end on a downbeat or tragic note with the main heroes either dead, arrested by the police, or severely incapacitated.
History
John Woo's breakthrough film A Better Tomorrow (1986) largely set the template for the heroic bloodshed genre.[5] In turn, A Better Tomorrow was a reimagining of plot elements from two earlier Hong Kong crime films: Lung Kong's The Story of a Discharged Prisoner (1967) and the Shaw Brothers Studio film The Brothers (1979), the latter a remake of the hit Indian crime drama film Deewaar (1975) written by Salim-Javed.[6]
Woo has also been a major influence in its continued popularity and evolution in his following works, namely A Better Tomorrow 2 (1987), The Killer (1989) and Hard Boiled (1992).[7]
The heroic bloodshed genre had a considerable impact on world cinema, especially Hollywood.[8] The action, style, tropes and mannerisms established in 1980s Hong Kong heroic bloodshed films were later widely adopted by Hollywood in the 1990s, reshaping the way Hollywood action films were made.[6] Lam's City on Fire (1987) inspired Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs (1992);[9] Tarantino was an admirer of the heroic bloodshed genre.[10] The Killer also heavily influenced Luc Besson's Léon: The Professional (1994).[8] Eventually, John Woo himself introduced his brand of heroic bloodshed to Hollywood in the 1990s. By the late 1990s, Woo's style of cinema had become firmly established in Hollywood.[11]
Selected heroic bloodshed films
- The Brothers (1979)
- Cops and Robbers (1979)
- The Head Hunter (1982)
- Coolie Killer (1982)
- Mercenaries from Hong Kong (1982)
- On the Wrong Track (1983)
- Men from the Gutter (1983)
- Long Arm of the Law (1984)
- Danger Has Two Faces (1985)
- Pursuit of a Killer (1985)
- Hong Kong Godfather (1985)
- A Better Tomorrow (1986)
- Brotherhood (1986)
- Above the Law (1986)
- Legacy of Rage (1986)
- True Colours (1986)
- City on Fire (1987)
- Rich and Famous (1987)
- Tragic Hero (1987)
- Sworn Brothers (1987)
- Flaming Brothers (1987)
- Long Arm of the Law: Part 2 (1987)
- People's Hero (1987)
- A Better Tomorrow II (1987)
- Fury (1988)
- Walk on Fire (1988)
- Final Justice (1988)
- First Shot (1988)
- In the Blood (1988)
- Tiger Cage (1988)
- Die Hard (1988)
- The Dragon Family (1988)
- The Big Heat (1988)
- Hero of Tomorrow (1988)
- Gunmen (1998)
- City Warriors (1988)
- City War (1988)
- All About Ah-Long (1989)
- Bloody Brotherhood (1989)
- Long Arm of the Law 3: Escape from Hong Kong (1989)
- Runaway Blues (1989)
- My Heart is That Eternal Rose (1989)
- The Last Duel (1989)
- Close Escape (1989)
- Wild Search (1989)
- Casino Raiders (1989)
- The Killer (1989)
- Just Heroes (1989)
- A Better Tomorrow III (1989)
- China White (1989)
- Return Engagement (1990)
- The Unmatchable Match (1990)
- Killer's Romance (1990)
- Curry and Pepper (1990)
- A Moment of Romance (1990)
- Long Arm of the Law IV (1990)
- Bullet in the Head (1990)
- Gangland Odyssey (1990)
- Dragon in Jail (1990)
- Triad Story (1990)
- Blood Stained Tradewinds (1990)
- Once a Thief (1991)
- Casino Raiders II (1991)
- The Last Blood (1991)
- Bullet for Hire (1991)
- Hong Kong Godfather (1991)
- Point Break (1991)[6]
- Invincible (1992)
- Blowback: Love & Death (1992)
- Hard Boiled (1992)
- The Shootout (1992)
- Fatal Chase (1992)
- Dust of Angels (1992)
- With or Without You (1992)
- Gun n' Rose (1992)
- Reservoir Dogs (1992)
- Full Contact (1992)
- A Moment of Romance II (1993)
- First Shot (1993)
- No More Love, No More Death (1993)
- The Killer's Love (1993)
- Crime Story (1993)
- Hard Target (1993)
- Story of Kennedy Town (1993)
- Aatish: Feel the Fire (1994)[6]
- Rock N'Roll Cop (1994)
- Léon: The Professional (1994)[6]
- Return to a Better Tomorrow (1994)
- Tian Di (1994)
- A Taste of Killing and Romance (1994)
- Hunting List (1994)
- Revanchist (1994)
- Alone in the Night (1994)
- Man Wanted (1995)
- Peace Hotel (1995)
- Enemy Shadow (1995)
- Love, Guns & Glass (1995)
- The Adventurers (1995)
- Young and Dangerous (1996)
- A Moment of Romance III (1996)
- Shanghai Grand (1996)
- Big Bullet (1996)
- Broken Arrow (1996)[6]
- Somebody Up There Likes Me (1996)
- Dang Bireley's and Young Gangsters (1997)
- Face/Off (1997)
- Full Alert (1997)
- Postman Blues (1997)
- Mahjong Dragon (1997)
- Island of Greed (1997)
- A True Mob Story (1998)
- The Longest Nite (1998)
- The Replacement Killers (1998)
- Ballistic Kiss (1998)
- Cheap Killers (1998)
- Beast Cops (1998)
- Expect the Unexpected (1998)
- A Hero Never Dies (1998)
- The Mission (1999)
- Dead or Alive (1999)
- Friendship Breakdown (1999)
- Century of the Dragon (1999)
- The Matrix (1999)[6]
- Killer (2000)
- Double Tap (2000)
- A War Named Desire (2000)
- Dead or Alive 2: Birds (2000)
- Mission: Impossible 2 (2000)[6]
- Born Wild (2001)
- Fulltime Killer (2001)
- Color of Pain (2002)
- Dead or Alive: Final (2002)
- Devil Face, Angel Heart (2002)
- Infernal Affairs (2002)
- PTU (2003)
- Heroic Duo (2003)
- Infernal Affairs II (2003)
- Infernal Affairs III (2003)
- Moving Targets (2004)
- Jiang Hu (2004)
- Explosive City (2004)
- Divergence (2005)
- Set to Kill (2005)
- Wo Hu (2005)
- Dragon Squad (2005)
- The City of Violence (2006)
- Dog Bite Dog (2006)
- On the Edge (2006)
- The Departed (2006)[6]
- Exiled (2006)
- Like a Dragon (2007)
- Invisible Target (2007)
- Blood Brothers (2007)
- Brothers (2007)
- Triangle (2007)
- Hong Kong Bronx (2008)
- Fatal Move (2008)
- The Moss (2008)
- Chaos (2008)
- Beast Stalker (2008)
- The Sniper (2009)
- Vengeance (2009)
- A Better Tomorrow (2010)
- Black Ransom (2010)
- Monga (2010)
- The Stool Pigeon (2010)
- Let the Bullets Fly (2010)
- Drug War (2012)
- The Last Tycoon (2012)
- The Viral Factor (2012)
- The Gangster (2012)
- The White Storm (2013)
- That Demon Within (2014)
- John Wick (2014)
- Wild City (2015)
- The Mobfathers (2016)
- Trivisa (2016)
- Extraordinary Mission (2017)
- A Better Tomorrow 2018 (2018)
- Queen & Slim (2019)
See also
- Cinema of Hong Kong
- Crime film
- Gangster film
- Gun fu
- Girls with guns
- John Woo
- Johnnie To
- Mumbai underworld films, which have similarities to heroic bloodshed films.[12]
- Ringo Lam
References
- Fitzgerald, Martin (2000). Hong Kong's Heroic Bloodshed. Pocket Essentials. ISBN 1-903047-07-2.
- Davies, Steven Paul (2001). A-Z of Cult Films and Film-Makers. Batsford. p. 26. ISBN 0-7134-8704-6.
- Logan, Bey (1996). Hong Kong Action Cinema. Overlook Press. pp. 191. ISBN 0-87951-663-1.
- Stokes, Lisa Odham; Michael Hoover (1999). City on Fire: Hong Kong Cinema. Verso. pp. 333. ISBN 1-85984-716-1.
- Morton, Lisa (2001). The Cinema of Tsui Hark. McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-0990-8.
- "Heroic Bloodshed: How Hong Kong's style was swiped by Hollywood". British Film Institute. 11 July 2019. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
- Morton, Lisa (2001). The Cinema of Tsui Hark. McFarland. p. 62. ISBN 0-7864-0990-8.
- Volodzko, David (13 June 2015). "30 Years Later, This Chinese Film Still Echoes in Hollywood". The Diplomat.
- Spicer, Andrew (2010). Historical Dictionary of Film Noir. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810873780.
- Ingham, Michael (2009). Johnnie To Kei-Fung's PTU. Hong Kong University Press. p. 115. ISBN 9789622099197.
- Fang, Karen (2004). John Woo's A Better Tomorrow: Autobiographical Stories by Modern Chinese Women Writers. Hong Kong University Press. p. 85. ISBN 9789622096523.
- Banker, Ashok (2002). Bollywood. Penguin Group. p. 83.