Chor Yuen started his directorial career with a bang. From its very first image, The Natural Son establishes Chor as a filmmaker of stylistic flourish, which would be sustained in various forms throughout his long tenure. Adapted from '30 cents' pulp fiction, it is a Kong Ngee melodrama made in the studio's mould, with Westernised characters and trendy middle-class lifestyles. Yet, Chor's first film is not exempt from the social urgency that characterises the Cantonese cinema of his father, Cheung Wood-yau. The film cloaks its entertainment in a moral deliberation on blood ties, its story about the raising of a bastard child a head-on challenge of archaic family values. An ostentatious start for a colourful and eventful career.
Title | The Natural Son |
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Year | 1959 |
Genre | Drama, Family |
Country | Hong Kong |
Studio | Kong Ngee Motion Picture Production Company |
Cast | Patsy Ka Ling, Nam Hung, Patrick Tse Yin, Kong Yat-fan, Keung Chung-Ping, Wong Cho-San |
Crew | Chan Kon (Cinematography), Chor Yuen (Director), Chan Ki-Yui (Art Direction), Poon Bing-Kuen (Production Manager), Kwok Keung (Editor), Tam Wang-Yuen (Recording Supervision) |
Keyword | literary adaptation, wenyi (melodrama) |
Release | Mar 11, 1959 |
Runtime | 107 minutes |
Quality | HD |
IMDb | 0.00 / 10 by 0 users |
Popularity | 1 |
Budget | 0 |
Revenue | 0 |
Language | 广州话 / 廣州話 |