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New
Mr. Vampire
 |
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Country
: |
Hong
Kong |
| Year: |
1986 |
| Genre: |
Horror
/ Comedy |
| Format: |
DVD |
| Running
Time: |
1h30 |
| Distributor: |
Tai
Sen |
| Date
reviewed: |
03/23/2003 |
| |
|
| Producer: |
x |
| Director: |
Billy
Chan |
Cast: Chung Faat, Chin Siu Ho,
Pauline Wong, Lui Fong, Huang Ha, Tai Bo, Wu Ma |
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Story:
Taoist Master Chin (Chung Faat) is always competing
with his devious brother, Master Wu. When a powerful
local man asks them to transport a body to its final
resting place, Chin is given the job, and Wu sets out
to sabotage his efforts. On the way, Chin and his assistant
meet a grave robber (Chin Siu Ho) who has accidentally
reanimated the body of a dead girl (Pauline Wong).
Deciding to stay overnight in a hotel, they smuggle
the vampire and dead girl inside, only to find out that
the girl’s lover, a local Policeman, is staying
there. He is in mourning, drunk, and certainly wouldn’t
be happy to find his dead concubine walking around,
or to bump into the hungry vampire hidden upstairs.
Review: This unofficial sequel (or ‘rip-off’)
to ‘Mr. Vampire’ was released in Hong
Kong cinemas shortly before ‘Mr Vampire 2’,
and despite trying its best to pay homage to the restless
dead, only pisses into the open grave of the official
series.
Fine, Chin Siu Ho is present, as are Wu Ma and Pauline
Wong, who all appeared in the earlier movies. They
play different roles, though, and Wu Ma is a mere
cameo appearance, which is a shame. Chung Faat plays
the main Taoist priest, which is a similar role to
the one he played in ‘Close Encounters of the
Spooky Kind’, and so his inclusion is fairly
relevant. The main man Lam Ching Ying is not here,
though, which is a mixed blessing – on one hand,
it’s hard to feel as if you are watching a Mr.
Vampire film without him, but on the other hand, he
doesn’t have to hang his head in shame like
Chin and Pauline should do for making this inferior
imitation.
As for the spooks, Pauline Wong plays a (strangely
fresh looking) reanimated corpse rather than the ghostly
minx that she did in the real thing. Her character
is actually better than the vampire of the film, and
she has the best scenes in the film as she imitates
Chin Siu Ho’s every movement in an amusing scene
typical of HK horror comedy. However, it is a little
weird that her death, her near revival to life, and
the mourning expressed by her lover is handled in
such a comedic way. One scene played for laughs, has
him dancing with her reanimated but soulless corpse.
It’s odd to see this as comedy, the same concept
could be really effective if played for shocks, and
anyway, isn’t this close to necrophilia?
The vampire in this movie is probably the feeblest
vamp in HK horror history, despite being played by
Huang Ha, who tried to latch onto Chin Siu Ho’s
neck in Mr. Vampire. In this movie, he barely attacks
until near the end of the movie, he doesn’t
hop, his make-up is inconsistent, and he doesn’t
seem to pose any real threat.
In case you hadn’t figured it out, New Mr.
Vampire is rubbish. Taoist tricks are thin on the
ground, the monsters aren’t scary, and the comedy
is rarely funny, despite trying so very hard to be
funnier than the original movie. If you really must
see all the Mr Vampire movies, then go ahead and buy
this, but it isn’t really worth bothering, as
it’s even worse than the awful ‘Mr. Vampire
2’.
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DVD
[ NTSC, All Region
] :
Description:
This poor release from Tai Seng seems to be the only
version of the film available. It is a VHS transfer,
cropped to 4:3. Everything makes sense when you spot
the ‘Ocean Shores’ imbedded credits which
appear near the start of the film. This also means
it’s English dubbed only. Sorry. This disk includes
trailers for 6 other Tai Seng releases, and chapter
selection. There is also an audio commentary from
Ric Meyers. His contribution gets 10/10 for effort,
but all he seems to do is list filmographies and ramble
on about his own achievements. Oddly, he even claims
to have come up with the idea for Mr Vampire before
Sammo Hung.
Reviewed
by Russ Houghton
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| Story |
Cast |
Entertainment |
Subtitles |
Overall |
| 2 |
2 |
3 |
n/a |
2 |

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| © 1999-2003 by KFC
Cinema. All rights reserved. |
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