Special Features and Technical Specs
• High Definition (1080p) Blu-ray presentations of King Boxer, The Boxer from Shantung, Five Shaolin Masters, Shaolin Temple, Mighty Peking Man, Challenge of the Masters, Executioners from Shaolin, Chinatown Kid, The Five Venoms, Crippled Avengers, Heroes of the East and Dirty Ho
• Brand new 2K restorations by Arrow Films from the original camera negatives of King Boxer, The Boxer from Shantung, Challenge of the Masters, The Five Venoms, Crippled Avengers and Dirty Ho • Brand new 2K master of the longer international cut of Chinatown Kid from original film elements • Original lossless mono Mandarin, Cantonese (where applicable) and English audio • Newly translated English subtitles for each film • Hours of bonus features including brand new commentaries and critic appreciations on selected films, new and archive interviews with cast and crew, alternate credit sequences, trailer and image galleries for each film and more to be announced! • 60-page book featuring new writing by David Desser, Simon Abrams and Terrence J. Brady, with cast and crew info for each film plus trivia and soundtrack info • New artwork for each film by artists including Matthew Griffin, Chris Malbon, Jacob Phillips, Ilan Sheady, Tony Stella, Darren Wheeling and Jolyon Yates Read More
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For those new to Shaw Brothers, Shawscope: Volume One is a good start. Arrow compiled 12 mostly-Kung Fu films, showcasing a variety of style and flavors.
According to the liner notes online, they lists six (see side bar) of the twelve films had a brand new 2K restorations from the original camera negatives, exclusive to Arrow. The rest of the titles were from a 1080p Bluray source, probably from Celestial Pictures (who originally restored about 700 films for DVDs).
It's also worth noting, that the other new item is a 2k transfer of a longer International cut of Chinatown Kid from the original source. This is the film that made Alexander Fu Sheng an International icon. Like James Dean, the rising star died very young in a car accident.
Personally speaking, since I’m only viewing the discs on a 1080p screen, all the titles looked great on screen. Certainly, much better than old VHS or DVDs that I previously own. Plus, since the audio is taken from a pure source, including the hard-to-come-by “English Dub”, it looks and sounds good to me.
If you didn’t know, the Shaw Brothers (Run Run and Runme Shaw) started producing films so they can show them in all the theaters they own throughout Asia. For about three, or so, decades, they had produced over a thousand films. Everything was done at the Shaw Brothers Studio, in Clearwater Bay, in Hong Kong. Everything was also own by the Shaws: writers, directors, film production, housing, distribution, and, most importantly, the actors were all contracted exclusively to Shaw Brothers. Despite become stars, these actors could not make movies for other companies, due to the restrictive Shaw Brothers contracts. This is how this mega company cranked out so many films within such a short amount of time.
While the Shaws made many different film genre, such as drama and horror, their biggest money-maker was Kung Fu pictures. When they saw those Martial Arts films were well-received, they certainly gave what the audience wanted.
The two key directors that helped shaped Kung Fu cinema were Chang Cheh and Lau Kar-leung , who are well represented here in this Shawscope set. Six titles are Cheh and four titles are Kar-leung. You can immediately tell who was in the director’s chair when you see the films. Most of Kar-leung’s films features Gordon Liu (with a little humor), while Cheh’s films had his so-called “Venom Mob” (and is starkly serious).
Speaking of which, the two key Venom films are collected here: Five Venoms and Crippled Avengers. Although the two films are unrelated, in America, they re-named the films Five Deadly Venoms and Return of the Five Deadly Venoms to suggest that they are sequels.
Overall, I’m very happy with this release of Shawscope: Volume One by Arrow Video, I do have two small complaints. First, I think it’s expensive, retailing for $179. If you divide it is about $14 per title… even less if you get it on sale. While I like many of the titles, I know many people aren’t interested in half the titles – and for those fans, the value just isn’t there for them.
Second, I’m not too thrilled about the packaging. I guess I’m just a sucker for putting things in uniform on my Bluray shelf. That is to say that I want all my Shaw Brothers collection in one area. With this oversized, extra long box, it just won’t sit correctly with the rest of my Shaw Brothers discs. The only way to display this is looking at the front cover.
I hope the boxset does well, and for Volume Two, I’m hoping to see more Venoms, and, perhaps some wacky horror pictures. Since Arrow and 88 Films have the Shaw Brothers license, I would just love to get a trilogy boxset for the 36th Chambers of Shaolin, Return to the 36th Chambers of Shaolin, and Disciples of the 36th Chambers of Shaolin.
There is also a two-disc bonus soundtrack of some selected films. This is great for Kung Fu music fan. Now you can play your favorite Five Venoms funky tracks.
P.S. I’m so happy with my Shawscope boxset that I will probably be ordering a few other boxsets from Arrow, after seeing what they’ve released on their website. They are pricey, but there’s a lot of love and effort put in that I appreciate.
There is another matter, in the 2k version, it feels like the film is "jumpier" at random frames. To be fair, Arrow Video said that they got the 2k scan from the "original film elements" - meaning that they didn't handle the transfer themselves. While I welcome the longer cut and better details of the 2k picture (downsized to 1080p for Bluray presentation), I think the new 2k transfer isn't as good as the original Celestial Picture version (at least to my eyes). Maybe later on, if I have time, I will look at the new 2k transfer for Five Venoms vs the Bluray version from Dragon Dynasty/Celestial Picture (which is basically the DVD transfer on Bluray).
Shaw Brothers Boxset (Arrow Video) |
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