Do Ma Daan
When I think of Hong Kong movies, martial arts is what comes
to my mind. Lots of wires, kung fu and sword fighting that looks more like
dancing than mortal combat. What I do not think of is comedies. Maybe for good
reason, comedy translates very poorly, but “Do Ma Daan” (“Peking Opera Blues”)
is such an entry on the List. Whether it is successful I think depends on the
viewer.
It is 1913 and China is politically a mess with warlords
coming and going and revolution brewing under the surface. General Tsao (Kenneth
Tsang) has just ousted General Tun and is into some hanky panky with foreign
bankers. His daughter, Tsao Wan (Brigitte Lin), is secretly a revolutionary and
want to steal the documents to help the revolution. In this endeavour she is
helped by Pak Hoi (Mark Cheng), another revolutionary. Sheung Hung (Cherie
Chung) is a courtesan of General Tuns whose quest for a treasure of jewellery
leads her to (and past) Tung Man (Cheung Kwok Keung), a soldier and cross paths
with Wan and Hoi. The local opera house is the eye of the storm and here the
acrobatic daughter, Bai Niu (Sally Yeh), of the owner fall in with the other.
Somehow a lot of things seem to happen, getting the
documents, avoid being taken by the secret police, getting in and out of the
opera house and getting entangled in the various armies. Beside the quest for
the documents, there is Hung’s quest for the jewellery, Niu’s ambition to act
in the all-male opera troupe and some romantic combinations.
It should be mentioned here that Peking opera is quite
different from western opera. Like in very different.
It was very difficult to find this movie. The version I
eventually dug up had English dubbing, complete with English names for the
characters but acted on a budget. The dubbing was so bad that a large share of
the comedy was the involuntary sort coming from these terrible voices. A movie
like “Kung-Pow” is having a lot of fun with this sort of dubbing, but the real
thing is... quite an experience.
Another large share of the comedy comes from the martial
arts. No Hong Kong movie without martial art and in an action comedy like this
one we get plenty. Much, if not most, is so exaggerated that it is funny. It is
hard to tell if it is intentionally comedic or just becomes that way in a movie
that does not really care if things make sense. The parts that definitely play
for comedy work poorly though and that is not very surprising. A lot gets lost
in the cultural translation.
It is rather incredible how much plot, action and characters
“Peking Opera Blues” manages to squeeze into its 105 minutes running time. It
is a very fast movie, quickly moving into the next scene. Look away for a
moment and you are lost.
This is an odd mix of helpless amateurism (in large part due
to the ridiculous dubbing) and very skilled physical acting and pacing. I am
caught between ridiculing and admiring the movie and it ends up in this strange
zone where I cannot tell if this was a good movie or not. I did enjoy watching
it, but often for the wrong reasons and so I believe it is very much up to the
individual viewer.
The Book is gushing about “Peking Opera Blues” and I am
happy I only read the entry after watching the movie. What I actually watched was
not bad, but very different from what the entry would have lead me to expect.
I found this film to be incoherent. I should honestly probably track down a dubbed version.
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