A Chinese Ghost Story I Ii Iii -1987-1990-1991-... ✮ (TESTED)
The ethereal ghost trapped by a demonic master.
If you think you know ghost stories, think again. The A Chinese Ghost Story trilogy (originally Sinnui yauman ), produced by Tsui Hark and directed by Ching Siu-tung, redefined the wuxia-horror-romance genre. But what makes this trilogy so unforgettable? Let’s break it down. A chinese ghost story I II III -1987-1990-1991-...
From 1987 to 1991, the A Chinese Ghost Story trilogy set a benchmark for East Asian fantasy cinema. The ethereal ghost trapped by a demonic master
Ling Choi-san (Leslie Cheung), a timid, debt-ridden debt collector, seeks shelter in the decrepit Lan Ro Temple. There, he meets the ethereal Nie Hsiao-ching (Joey Wong), a ghost enslaved by the monstrous Tree Devil (Lau Siu-ming). Forced to lure men to their deaths, Hsiao-ching instead falls for the naive yet pure-hearted Ling. With the help of the irreverent, sword-slinging Taoist warrior Yen (Wu Ma), Ling must battle the underworld to reincarnate his love. But what makes this trilogy so unforgettable
Set 100 years later, a new monk (Tony Leung Chiu-wai, very young and monk-ish) battles the same tree demon and falls for a different ghost (Joey Wong again—now playing a seductive spirit). The tone is darker, more erotic, and more tragic. Wang Zu-xian’s double role cleverly echoes the first film but ends in devastation. Tony Leung and Joey Wong are magnetic.