2009年3月24日星期二

In ´Cyborg,´ robots fight right

Director Jeff Lau ("A Chinese Odyssey") is transforming Chinese superheroes
with his 100 million yuan ($14.6 million) sci-fi romantic comedy "Kung Fu
Cyborg".


Posters of the film were released Monday at the Hong Kong Film Mart. A
trailer was previewed by film buyers and will be unveiled to the public in early
April.








'Posters from
Posters from "Kung Fu Cyborg"


Lau's inspiration for "Kung Fu Cyborg" came from the flood of superhero
movies that has come out of Hollywood since the early 2000s. "When I saw
'Spider-Man,' 'Superman' and 'Batman', I wondered why we don't have similar
superheroes in China," Lau asked.


For him, "Transformers" was the final trigger. "I burst out laughing when
watching 'Transformers'," he said. "The effects were amazing, but the robots
didn't know how to fight. So I decided our Chinese superheroes should be kung fu
experts."


Thirty percent of the "Kung Fu Cyborg" budget was spent on motion capture and
CGI to create gigantic mechanical robots transformed from normal-sized humanoid
automatons. One was designed based on Bruce Lee, with fiery wheels for legs;
another is a huge robotic version of "Mr. Vampire", the character made famous in
the 1985 horror comedy hit that also found a following in Japan.


Kung fu actor Wu Jing plays the super cyborg "K-88."


"The director didn't show me the script, but simply told me I'm the most
powerful robot in the world," he said. "I think he was testing me to see how
much imagination I have in my acting."


"Kung Fu Cyborg," which also stars Hu Jun, Alex Fong, Sun Li and Ronald
Cheng, will be released in July by Mei Ah in Hong Kong.







'Posters from
Posters from "Kung Fu Cyborg"


'Posters from

Posters from "Kung Fu Cyborg"

'Posters from

Posters from "Kung Fu Cyborg"

'Posters from

Posters from "Kung Fu Cyborg"


'Posters from

Posters from "Kung Fu Cyborg"

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