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Author
of the indispensable Hong
Kong Action Cinema (Overlook Press, can we have an updated version
now please?), a man whose commentaries on Hong Kong Legends’ DVDs
are accessible, fascinating master-classes in Chinese history, culture
and movie production, a raconteur not afraid to name names in his
juicy anecdotes, a one-time film critic who, after years writing about
HK movies, put his money where his mouth was, went out there and
started producing movies of his own and has not been shy in discussing
their shortcomings, and a bloke who can take as good as he gives, Bey
Logan is an Asian cinema institution.
And he shares his initials with Bruce Lee and Brigitte
Lin.
The
good news is he's also Mr Nice Guy, as approachable and open as he
seems on his commentaries, and a natural born talker who was kind
enough to give Dragon's Den a substantial chunk of his time to discuss
everything from 'The
Medallion' to the original version of
'New
Police Story', to his future projects and beyond.
Rob
Daniel: Please
describe yourself in 5 words.
BL:
Only
five? Okay. Gregarious, kind, impatient, creative and unusually
worried!
RD:
Why
worried?
BL:
Filmmaking,
producing and scriptwriting to a lesser degree, is a constant series
of problem solving and you're always worried that the problem you just
had is solved sufficiently and about the problem yet to come.
And about the problems that seemed to be insolvable.
I'm
lucky because the biggest problem most filmmakers have is they can't
get money for their films; the films that I’ve done, we had money
for them at least. But,
producing is always a worry, and I'm not talking about a rich guy who
slapped his name on the film or some guy who came in and attached his
name to a project to impress the ladies, I'm talking about someone who
physically comes in and produces a movie from the ground up, the way I
do. So if you're not
worried you're not doing your job.
RD:
So
now you're the moneyman?
BL:
I'm
the guy looking for the moneyman, would that I were the moneyman!

RD:
Why
did you get into producing and not just stick with writing or even
establish yourself as a director?
BL:
Every
time I wrote a brilliant script, and of course all my scripts are
brilliant, I would go through the rounds of showing them to producers
and getting nice comments, or not nice comments, and basically getting
nowhere because every producer, including me now, has a big pile of
scripts in the corner most of which will never get made.
But I had my naiveté and I think it's good for people to have
that because if they knew the odds the industry would grind to a halt;
nobody would want to be an actor, director, nothing.
The odds are so against you, you have to have this blind faith
in yourself and believe the industry is kinder that it really is.
Finally though, I thought I'd become the guy on the other side
of the desk as well.
The
way it happened was not really with any planned trajectory, but I
started off when I was at Media Asia, coming into write and write, and
right up until the end of 'The Medallion' I produced the Jackie
documentaries and I realized that if I wanted to get anything made I
should produce as well.
So I really took on full producer responsibilities on 'Twins
Effect', although I'm not sure the position of my credit on the film
reflects that.
The
short answer is that as a producer I can produce my own scripts!
I also think you can stay employed more often the more things
you can do in the business and obviously I've done everything except
direct.
Actually I have directed but didn't get credited for it.
RD:
Researching
you on the Internet, you seem to be working on three projects: 'Kung
Fu Master', 'Dragon Squad' and 'Sword Searchers'.
What can you tell us about these, and what else are you doing?
BL:
Of
these three, 'Kung Fu Master' has fallen by the wayside, which is a
shame. I very much
believe that film projects, like people, have their time, and there
comes a moment when their time passes.
I hope I know when it's my time to move!
There was a moment, after we finished 'Twins Effect', when we
could have moved forward with 'Kung Fu Master', and made an
exceptional martial arts film. As
it is, the film was about Fok Yun-kap, the master of Bruce Lee's
character in 'Fist Of Fury', and Jet Li is now doing his own Fok
Yun-kap film, so I think perhaps the moment has passed.
As with all my unmade projects, I might turn the script into a
brilliant novel in due course.
'Dragon
Squad' starts shooting March 15th, and we have a great
cast, with Sammo Hung, Michael Biehn and Maggie Q. It's
a real return to the glory years of Hong Kong action filmmaking.
'Sword Searchers' is still in development at Mandarin, and
latest word is that it should go into production later this year. I'm
also working on 'Three Kingdoms: Resurrection Of The Dragon', which is
a period epic that director Daniel Lee will make after 'Dragon Squad',
and on a German film called 'Finale', which Maggie Q and I are
co-producing.
RD:
The
not always reliable IMdb still has 'Kung Fu Master' as being in
production with Gordon Chan directing.
BL:
Initially,
Donnie Yen and I had dinner with Gordon at the Cannes Film Festival,
and he agreed to direct. I
then wrote the script, and everyone liked it, except Gordon!
Although he was leaving Emperor Group, where we were working at
the time, I wanted to continue to develop the script, and keep Gordon
on-board as a producer. Unfortunately,
things got more complicated as things progressed, and the film finally
lost its momentum.
RD:
You've
collaborated with Gordon Chan on movie projects and three successful
audio commentaries. Could
you tell us about your relationship with him?
BL:
Gordon
is just the nicest man in the world, and I owe him a lot.
I first met him at Media Asia, and he was so kind and generous
with his time. I learned
a lot from him, and that was why, when he left to join EMG, I asked
him if I could join him there. I
think the process of making 'The Medallion' put a great strain on the
relationships of everyone involved, and that was why Gordon didn't do
a commentary for 'Final Option', which was a shame.
I think we're friends again now, and I look forward to working
with him, both as a filmmaker and a commentarian.

RD:
With
Sword Searchers, you are writing the English script.
How are you finding adapting the source comic book, 'Weapons of
God' by Tony Wong Yuk-long?
BL:
Another
writer did the actual adaptation.
I then worked with producer Raymond Wong on the English
version, to try and make the complexity of the characters and the
setting understandable to a non-Asian viewer.
The film's a period piece, so I devised a framing device,
whereby the modern day counterpart of the film's central character
meets an expert in Chinese studies, and he explains the story to the
boy, and, through him, the international audience.
The expert is to be played by David Carradine, who's an old
friend of mine, and a wonderful actor.
RD:
Now
the dust has settled, what are your thoughts on 'The Medallion'?
BL:
The
best train set a boy could have!
Just one of the most amazing experiences of my life, and
evidence that the journey really can be more important than the
destination. My son Ryan
loves it and I made a dear friend in Julian Sands, and, if that isn't
worth US$40m, I don't know what is...
RD:
I thought it was a hugely entertaining film, but do you think that
with Jackie Chan starring, Sammo Hung on action duties and Gordon
('Fist of Legend') Chan directing and you co-writing, expectations
were too high?
BL:
You're
too kind! I don't think we can blame audience expectations on that
particular film's shortcomings. Would that you could have seen the
film as it was originally conceived… I think, in retrospect, we
should have had either Gordon or Sammo direct, and avoided
having 'two tigers on the same mountain'.
RD:
What
were the main creative differences?
BL:
I
don't even think it could come down to creative differences, and there
were definitely no bad guys involved.
To have a creative difference you have to have two people with
separate visions that are in conflict.
But I think if 'The Medallion' had been shot entirely in
Ireland it would have at least been a very interesting film, it would
have been a noble failure, rather than an attempt to Hollywoodize an
English film and bring in American producers.
What I think it suffers from now is a lack of identity.
I almost wish it was a truly godawful bad movie like
Highlander: Endgame! Better
to be truly great or truly terrible, the worst thing in life is to be
average.
But
to answer your question, Gordon had a vision that was very much in
line with the script that I had written, and if you look at the scenes
shot in Ireland or the deleted scenes you get a sense of a different
kind of Jackie film; Sammo didn't have a separate vision for the film
but had a feeling he should be directing it.
So there was some tension on set, but I actually agree with him
and think it was a mistake for him at that position in his career to
be the action director.
And of course he should be making movies in America by now, and
maybe shouldn't have worked with Gordon because they didn't have a
particularly good relationship on 'Thunderbolt', so we should have
seen it coming.
But, you know what, if someone told me tomorrow "You're
going to work with Sammo, Jackie and Gordon again" I'd give it
serious thought.
These are three brilliant men.
And
I have to tell you the three years of making it were just the most
transforming of my life.
It was an incredible journey for someone who used to sit in
Birmingham, England watching Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung and Gordon Chan
movies, to be three years on the road making a movie with these guys.
Show me anyone who wouldn't wanna do that.
But,
you can also never gauge what is going to be liked.
Look at 'Around the World in 80 Days', which tanked but was a
great movie.
It had a lot of that anarchic British humour that I wanted to
bring into 'The Medallion', so maybe if we had done it my way it still
wouldn't have been successful.
But, I think it would have been a noble failure, and I think
'Around the World...' will be looked at in ten years time as a great
movie, the way people today look at movies like 'The Blues Brothers'
that didn't work at the time.

But
it's also a rule of fate that if I make the film, I'm never able to do
the commentary for it!
I believe I have become a quite respected commentarian so I
couldn't believe Columbia didn't contact me for 'The Medallion'.
The guy they brought in is one of the producers, Bill Borden,
who is a lovely man, he recently did 'Kung Fu Hustle', and Bill taught
me a great lesson:
I'm quite low-key in some ways (despite what people who know me
say), but not Bill, his credit is there centre frame, he's at every
photo op (look at the photo section of Kung Fu Hustle on IMdb.com),
he says "I'm the American producer, and I'm going to show you how
it's done!"
I should be more that way!
But,
you meet the odd person out there who liked it, then you meet ten
other people who rant and rave and say you should be burnt and the
stake and you can just say, "Sorry..."
You're
polite and nice, but I've had some people who are quite
confrontational.
But, you go into stuff thinking it's an interesting project,
you'll learn something and have an amazing experience, and it's almost
like a by-product that the film gets put out there and everybody's
bitching about it on the Internet.
I find that people who also lead interesting lives are far more
accepting of the limitations of me or the project.
It matters if the film sucked of course, but if you couldn't do
anything about it enjoy what you got from it.
I
try to say to people who just sit in the basement watching movies,
living life on the freeze-frame, press Play and get out there!
Words from The Beast!
RD:
They
say hindsight is 20/20; looking back what could have been done
differently?
BL:
In
the first week of shooting, I would have taken Jackie's dialogue coach
and Fed Exed her to Guatemala...
RD:
Jackie
Chan made a return to Hong Kong filmmaking with 'New Police Story'.
You translated the script for prospective Western buyers, what
did you think of the finished film?
BL:
I
think its hugely entertaining film and a remarkably brave stretch for
Jackie as an actor. I
have a unique perspective on the film, having read the original script
and seen the original cut. I
think the theatrical version is a very good film, but Benny Chan's
original director's cut is potentially a great film.
I hope the latter version gets a DVD release.
RD:
What's
different in the director's cut?
BL:
There
were longer dramatic scenes. Nick
(co-star Nicholas Tse) got a bit of a rough ride, because he had a lot
of funny and sweet scenes that were cut out.
At the beginning we saw him busting someone for illegal parking
and pretending to be a cop, and there was a longer scene in Jackie's
apartment when he's taking stuff out the fridge and there's a pillow
in the fridge for Jackie because it's nice for his head when he's
drunk. The emphasis
became more the love story, but when I read the script it was about
these two people, Jackie and Nick, who were both lost and by the end
were found by knowing each other.
I thought it was a touching story and a good transition film
for Jackie, but my feeling is Jackie looked at the film and thought
"I'm not old enough to be Nick's father yet!" so it became
more of a love story. The
ending in the police station with all the flowers was a reshoot
because that's what Jackie thinks is romantic.
But
I thought Nick was fantastic, everything he does is great and I'd love
to work with him again. Actually
we're talking about doing 'Gen-X 3', 'Gen-Z Cops' I guess we'd call
it, which I'd love to.

RD:
Could
you tell us about your friendship with Maggie Q?
How did it begin and why did you decide to form Shankara
Productions together?
BL:
We
knew each other in passing, because she was dating Daniel Wu and we
would be at the same events. I
was horrified when she was cast in 'Gen-Y Cops', because she was known
only as a model at the time, and the track record of models trying to
act in films is pretty pitiful. On
the first day of shooting, she so impressed me with her dedication,
talent and energy, I knew immediately that she could be a huge star.
Over the course of the shoot, we became very close, and, when I
left Emperor, I couldn't think of any one better to go into
partnership with!
RD:
What's
Shankara's ethos, and what's the story behind the name?
BL:
'Shankara'
is a Sanskrit word, an invocation of peace, which I felt I needed in
my life and the world beyond needed even more.
Our aim is to generate and contribute to projects that combine
the best elements of Asian and international filmmaking.
It's a loose partnership, in that we both undertake separate
ventures. For example, I
wasn't involved in Maggie's German film, 'House Of Harmony', and she
isn't involved with 'Sword Searchers'.
However, we always look out for chances to work together.
On 'Dragon Squad', I'm producing and she's acting.
On 'Finale', we're both producing and she's acting.
As long as I stay away from acting, we’ll be fine...
RD:
But,
recently you've been very visible in front of the camera, in pretty
straight roles (if you can call anything in 'Naked Ambition'
straight!). How do you
find acting, and will you be appearing in front of the camera again
soon?
BL:
I
actually have no desire to be on film!
Maggie teases me unmercifully about my acting skills (or the
utter absence of them!). I'm
okay at a live event, I can talk and tell jokes and I sing pretty
well, but I never feel I look comfortable playing someone else on
screen. I'd like to have
a shot at a real comedy role, but I never get offered them!
RD:
Did
you make the final cut of '2046'?
BL:
No
I didn't, I'm on the cutting room floor where I belong.
But, if you ever get a chance in your life to act opposite
Zhang Ziyi for Wong Kar-Wai and Chris Doyle, don't pass it by even if
you know you'll be on the cutting room floor.
It was an amazing experience.
RD:
Your
documentary features on the Hong Kong Legends discs are consistently
rewarding. Are you
working on anything at the moment?
BL:
If
I were a musician, I'd define the HKL commentaries as my 'side
project'. I'm first and
foremost a filmmaker, but I'm proud and happy to be part of this
ongoing project to celebrate the best in classic and modern Asian
cinema. I'm constantly
shooting interviews and other bonus materials, and doing commentaries.
I just did 'Ju-on 2' and some interviews for 'New Police
Story'. Next up are commentaries for 'The Master' and 'Duel To The
Death'.
RD:
You
have described Hong Kong movies as "kids in the playground having
fun". Do you think
this still applies to current Hong Kong films?
BL:
I
can't remember saying that! (Bey
says it in his interview on Celestial's The Magic Blade DVD) I
remember feeling that way when I walked off 'Tiger Storm'/ 'White
Tiger', thinking all those 'kids' were having more fun than me!
I guess I made up for it since…I think that making movies
requires such stamina, such total commitment in terms of time and
effort, that it better be a fun experience, in terms of the actual
process and going to premieres and dating actresses and whatever.
Otherwise it'd be a lot of sour without the sweet!

RD:
In
a previous interview you said Hong Kong movies have to compete with
Hollywood and change their production methods.
'Hero', co-financed by Miramax, had a Hollywood sheen, yet was
in Mandarin with a structure more complex than 'Crouching Tiger,
Hidden Dragon' and still went to No.1 in the States.
Do you think if the look and feel is professional, whatever the
language, Hollywood will invest?
BL:
Absolutely.
It's already happening. We
have financing for 'Dragon Squad' coming from the US.
If there's one thing that's changed over the past few years,
it's the belief that subtitled Chinese language films won't 'play'
internationally. However, I think local filmmakers do have to be more
disciplined, in every aspect of production, from script development to
shooting to distribution, to meet the demands of the international
market.
RD:
What
do you think are the chances of current Asian smash 'Kung Fu Hustle'
crossing over to the West?
BL:
For
that particular film pretty slim in my opinion.
I thought the style of the humour was very 'local'.
It's long been the case that the better a comic film plays in
Asia the weaker it is in the west, and vice versa.
It'll be interesting to see what Columbia does with 'Kung Fu
Hustle'.
RD:
Is
Korean cinema the new Hong Kong?
BL:
No,
because they don't seem to have stars that transcend their films.
Korean movies are great, but do they have a Chow Yun-fat or
Jackie Chan or Jet Li or Tony Leung Chiu-wai?
The films have a cult following, but to really break in the
west you need your stars to develop an individual fan following.
There isn't a single Korean actor who means anything outside of
Korea, except maybe in Japan. Right
now, they have critical respect, but nothing close to the Hong Kong
cinema fan base.
RD:
Could
you tell us about your involvement in the Wong Fei Hung museum?
BL:
Can
I tell you a secret? I've
never even been there! A
couple of guys from the museum came to see me when I was at Media
Asia, and I donated a bunch of materials.
That was it! I'm
writing a book on Lam Sai-wing and Hung Kuen at the moment, so I'll go
to Fatshan as part of my research.
No-one should ever go to China unless they have absolutely
unavoidable business there.
RD:
Can
you tell us about your martial arts history and what the study of
martial arts has given you?
BL:
I've
been training in martial arts most of my adult life. I explored
different systems, including Taekwondo, Kali and Muay Thai, but I've
always gravitated back to the Southern Chinese martial arts, and
specifically Hung Kuen.
I've been lucky in that, in my early training, I had one
instructor who was a fighter, Mark Houghton, and one who was a
teacher, Jim Uglow.
Now I train under Jesse Gooding, who is better as a fighter and
a teacher than anyone I've ever met.
I've also trained in Chen Tai Chi, and, in time, would like to
learn more about this art.
RD:
On
the 'Once Upon A Time In China' audio commentary, you mention it would
be good for Hong Kong movie fans to actually study martial arts rather
than watch sixteen movies a day.
Which style would you recommend for a thirty-year-old male
whose only form of exercise is bike-riding?!
BL:
I'd
say get a map, stick in a pin where you live and draw a circle, then
expand the circle until you find a reputable martial arts school near
your home. Then start
taking lessons. Just a
couple of times a week is okay.
RD:
But,
don't you think that Hong Kong movies act as the ultimate example of
wish-fulfilment? Most of
us will never be able to move like these people, even with wires, so
we watch Jet Li, Donnie Yen and Bruce Lee and project ourselves on the
screen.
BL:
You're
right. Kung fu movies
take martial arts to the next level.
I don't think I can ever be Bruce Lee or even Donnie Yen, but I
can and will be a better Bey Logan.
From martial arts, you develop grace, strength, flexibility,
self-defence, confidence… I think its great that enhanced though
they are, martial arts films serve to evangelise for the martial arts.
I think fans of these films should want to be in something like
the kind of shape their heroes are in.

RD:
Wong
Fei-hung has been the subject of hundreds of movies.
If you were to direct a Wong Fei-hung film, how would you
approach it? Who would be
your Wong Fei- hung?
BL:
To
answer your last question first, definitely Lau Kar-leung, who,
believe it or not, has never played Wong Fei-hung.
I'd construct it like most of the old Wong Fei-hung films.
We'd see the great master in action at the beginning, and then
he'd disappear while his students got into trouble, and then he'd come
back to save the day in the final reel.
I'd get these bright young guys like Andy On and Vanness Wu to
play the students, and have someone like Mark Dacascos as the villain.
Hey, now you've got me thinking…
RD:
Speaking
of directing, are you any closer to the director's chair?
I read you are planning to direct a romcom with Maggie Q called
'What You Wish For'. What
is the progress of this and your Hong Kong 'Cyrano de Bergerac'
adaptation?
BL:
I've
done every job, so I really should direct something before I retire.
Actually, I pretty much directed scenes in 'Gen-Y Cops' and
'The Medallion'. 'What
You Wish For' was conceived as an extra short film for the Emperor
anthology movie 'Heroes In Love', which was under running at the time.
Then they decided to use a narrator to fill the extra time, and
we thought about turning it from a short film to a feature.
I have to admit that I never quite got a handle on the script,
but this is actually one project I'd like come back to and take
another shot at. The
Chinese 'Cyrano' is called 'Canton Moon'. My manager in the US, Paul
Canterna, took it to every studio, but no luck yet.
RD:
You
must be sick of talking about your audio commentaries by now, but my
knowledge of Chinese culture and history has increased dramatically
through listening to you on the HKL discs.
What has been the most challenging aspect of Chinese culture
you've discussed?
BL:
You're
very kind, and I don't at all mind talking about the commentaries!
I think the hardest commentary for me was for 'Hong Kong 1941',
for which I really had to study a lot about wartime Hong Kong.
It was like prepping for an exam!
Otherwise, it's the linguistic stuff, for example, the joke
about losing a chicken or losing a pig in 'The Prodigal Son'.
You're very generous in your praise, but I'm always amused when
I read people nitpicking about a specific mistake I made on a
commentary. I do my
research and present literally hundreds of facts at rapid pace, but,
if sometimes I misspeak due to a pilot error, I'm sorry!
Contrary to published reports, I am only human.
RD:
How
do you decide what is important to include on your talk-tracks?
BL:
Well,
with 'Hong Kong 1941' I didn't know Chow Yun Fat that well, I didn't
know Alex Man that well, we couldn't find Po Chi Leung, so I was like,
"Shit!"
I
go through the films a few times and make notes, and try to fill out
the dead spots with stories, facts and figures.
It's a question of over-researching, going in there and trying
to cram it all in, while trying to match the flow of the movie.
Sometimes something occurs to you that is interesting,
sometimes you look back and think "I should've mentioned
that" but on the day it does become kind of like a live
performance. So, I don't
make a decision of what is or isn't important, it's what fits the flow
of the movie.
Like
on 'Young Master' at the end I started talking about Hapkido, because
he's doing Hapkido and there're no other actors, there's no other
locations, and to say, “He kicks, he flips” would become like a
horse race. I'm amazed at
the number of commentarians who crash and burn repeatedly.
I had the same experience on 'Fist of Fury', my first
commentary, when I dried up halfway through.
So I went home, busted my balls for a day getting info
together, went back and finished it up and thought it was terrible.
But, people came to me and said they liked it and that was the
beginning of my career as a commentary guy.
But, what astounds me are these people who repeat that mistake
again and again and don't learn from it, doing these 'I've never seen
the movie before' commentaries.
RD:
Is
recording audio commentaries for 'Ichi the Killer' or 'The Grudge (Ju-on)'
more difficult than providing a voice track for 'Fist of Fury' or 'The
Prodigal Son'?
BL:
Very
much so, because I really have to do my research from the ground up.
I have a head start when I do the Hong Kong titles because I
have a lot of the material committed to memory.
I was actually quite nervous about doing solo commentaries on
Japanese or Korean titles, so always had Mike Leeder co-commentate.
He was unavailable for 'Ju-on', so I had to leap that hurdle
alone. I just did 'Ju-on
2' and, in researching that, I watched the film itself, watched the
American remake of the first 'Grudge', bought the Japanese double
disc, which has no subtitles, and then got a Japanese air stewardess
friend to come in and help me translate the deleted scenes and other
bonus materials. Actually,
now I think about it, the stewardess thing wasn't all that bad...

RD:
Are
there any early HKL releases you wish you had done a commentary on?
BL:
There're
a couple of them, yeah. I
don't believe I did 'Magnificent Warriors' or 'Eastern Condors'.
Originally, I thought, and so did the company, that people
would be sick of hearing me on every commentary.
Secondly, we originally planned to have a team of commentarians
and we would divide up the movies. And bear in mind I was paid per
commentary at that stage, so if I were a money-grabbing kinda guy I'd
have gone for every commentary in town and bugger the rest of them.
But, what happened was that most of the others sucked pretty
badly and those people didn't continue or weren't invited back.
And mine were well received and if I didn't do a commentary
perhaps the sales didn't do as well, so I had to do a commentary.
I
believe some of these movies are nearing the end of their Hong Kong
Legends life, so if we bring them out again I hope as a selling point
we can say “Now with a Bey Logan commentary - as you've never heard
them before!” on titles such as 'Snake in the Eagle's Shadow' and
'Drunken Master'.
RD:
I'd
love to hear a commentary for 'New Dragon Gate Inn'.
BL:
I
didn't do that? Well,
I’d love to do one, get Donnie back into the commentary room because
we had a good time on 'Iron Monkey', although he's such a flake,
always wanting to get paid!
RD:
Speaking
of commentaries, am I the only person in the world who likes your
'Once Upon A Time In China' track with Mark King?
BL:
No, you're not. You know,
that was supposed to be the idea; it was going to be like 'My Dinner
with Andre', presenting conflicting views.
My disappointment with Mark was he didn't rise to the occasion
with an informed counter argument, and he hadn't done any homework.
If he had recalled his experiences on the film and had a
cohesive argument as to why these films sucked, that to me would have
achieved its goal. But he
tried to be Mr Cool and Mr Sarcastic and it slightly rebounded on him,
and I thought it was unforgivable of him to come in not having watched
the film. Over time he's
got increasingly pissed off about it and our friendship kind of ended
because of it because he said I didn't look out for him.
But I told him to watch the film, bring a sweater and have his
arguments worked out. He
didn't watch the film, he didn't bring a sweater so he was wimping out
for the last half hour and he didn't have an argument.
All he had was a mantra: I DON'T REMEMBER AND THESE FILMS SUCK,
and there's me jollying him along.
But,
I agree, I think it does make for entertaining listening.
And the interesting thing about it is, contrary to what he
thought, that he's the cool guy and I'm the geek, unanimously people
thought "Oh poor Bey, he's so patient and so nice" but
that's me in real life and on the commentary.
RD:
What
also comes through in your commentaries is that you have a scholar's
knowledge of all film history, not just Hong Kong movies.
What Western films and filmmakers have influenced you and your
career?
BL:
So
many! Maggie gave me a
special DVD cupboard for my office, which holds about 500 DVDs, and it
was full in about a week. Pathetic,
isn't it? By the way,
most of the films weren't Asian films.
In terms of favourites (with my track record, I daren't call
them influences!), I have to cite several of the usual suspects,
Martin Scorsese, Oliver Stone, John Ford, Akira Kurosawa.
My favourite films of all time include 'Raging Bull', 'Ed
Wood', 'Fargo', 'Seven Samurai', 'In The Heat Of The Night',
'Tombstone', 'Star Wars', 'High Fidelity'... The list goes on!
RD:
Hong
Kong films are much more than wirework and weaponry.
Do you think there will ever be room in the Hong Kong Legends
library for such recent gems as 'Just One Look' or 'Anna Magdalena'?
BL:
I'm
so glad you mentioned 'Just One Look', because I absolutely adore that
film. I think it was far
and away the best film we made during my time at Emperor.
It's kind of the second film in a Riley Ip 'Remembrance of
Youth' trilogy, after 'Metade Fumaca', and I can't wait to see what
the third one will be. The
problem is that each HKL title receives so much care and attention,
from remastering to packaging to marketing, that we can only release a
certain number a year and we have such a backlog of more 'commercial'
titles to put out. I have
to admit I've never seen 'Anna Magdalena', so I'll have to get back to
you on that!

RD:
Like
most HK film fans I'm a huge fan of Brigitte Lin.
Can you give us an update on the proposed HKL release of
'Peking Opera Blues', my personal favourite?
BL:
To
the best of my knowledge, it's still pending, and I'm looking forward
to working on it. I doubt
we'll get Brigitte Lin, but I look forward to talking with Tsui Hark
about the film.
RD:
It's
a shame you're not contributing to Celestial's Shaw Brothers releases
anymore. What happened?
BL:
Well,
it was kind of a debacle. Ten
days before their first release they decided they needed commentaries
and bonus material and they should've planned it a long time before.
And they were pitching them for the wrong market; logistically
doing English materials for Hong Kong is a waste of time, so there
should have been a project in conjunction.
I mean when you have a brand as strong as HKL, with the
recognition and material they have, to consider bringing out a
barebones DVD of an old Kung Fu movie?
Good luck!
RD:
And
technically, some of the commentary recordings on the Celestial DVDs
aren't really up to scratch.
BL:
The
weird thing about Celestial is that we used the same technical
facilities as I use for HKL, but with wildly different results!
It was cursed from the start.
RD:
You
‘re a man who makes films with Jackie Chan and Sammo Hung, are best
friends with Donnie Yen, regarded with genuine affection by fans and
operate out of your own production company in Hong Kong.
Do you feel you have truly “made it”?
BL:
Career-wise,
absolutely not. I'm
bitterly disappointed with every film I've ever made, and I feel I
have so many great stories to tell, and movies to create, so I hope I
get to make at least some of them before I'm too old!
In terms of lifestyle, absolutely.
I have a wonderful life. Sadly,
my marriage didn't work out, but my wife and I are still friendly, and
we have three absolutely gorgeous kids.
I have my health, some of the best friends a man could ask for,
I live in the most exciting city in the world and I work in the
industry I always dreamed of, and with the heroes of my youth.
I date some gorgeous women, and I have, in Maggie, the best
partner and pal a man could ask for.
RD:
Finally,
thanks very much for sharing your time with us and I look forward to
seeing "A Bey Logan Film" very soon!
BL:
Bless
you! Thanks for your
support, kind words and interesting questions.
Dragon's
Den UK would like to say a big thank you to Bey Logan for this
interview
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