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Thread: Herman Yau's The Legend is Born: Ip Man

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  1. #1
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    Quote Originally Posted by Vankuen View Post
    The main guys looks a lot like Donnie Yen.
    Well it was DY playing Yip Man in the 1st film. I think he was set to reprise his role.

  2. #2
    Quote Originally Posted by CFT View Post
    Well it was DY playing Yip Man in the 1st film. I think he was set to reprise his role.
    But that guy looks too young to actually be DY. At first I was like alright its Sammo and Donnie but then as I watched it further the guy looked the same but different...and younger.

    So I don't think its Donnie actually....
    "I don't know if anyone is known with the art of "sitting on your couch" here, but in my eyes it is also to be a martial art.

    It is the art of avoiding dangerous situations. It helps you to avoid a dangerous situation by not actually being there. So lets say there is a dangerous situation going on somewhere other than your couch. You are safely seated on your couch so you have in a nutshell "difused" the situation."

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by Vankuen View Post
    But that guy looks too young to actually be DY. At first I was like alright its Sammo and Donnie but then as I watched it further the guy looked the same but different...and younger.

    So I don't think its Donnie actually....
    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1386932/fullcredits#cast

    I saw Yuen Biao and Louis Fan Siu-Wong from the 1st film. But you're right that is not Donnie Yen.
    Last edited by CFT; 02-09-2010 at 10:26 AM.

  4. #4
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    Looks very good!

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by CFT View Post
    Well it was DY playing Yip Man in the 1st film. I think he was set to reprise his role.
    DY will be in IP MAN 2.

    i think this one 'Legend is born' is the prequel

  6. #6
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    This story seems to be of the young Yip Man learning in Foshan and then learning from Leung Bik...

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by Saboi Osmosis View Post
    DY will be in IP MAN 2.

    i think this one 'Legend is born' is the prequel
    No wonder! I was expecting this to be the sequel.

  8. #8
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    The reigning World Kung Fu Champion!

    It'll be tough to take the Ip Man role away from Donnie, but maybe he can in Ip Man 3.

    Dennis To: The new Bruce Lee?
    Wed, Jul 07, 2010
    By Fiona Ho

    Dennis To Yu-Hang probably has his close physical resemblance to Donnie Yen to thank, for winning the titular role in The Legend is Born - Ip Man.

    After all, it was Donnie's portrayal of the late Wing Chun master that has won audiences from around the world.

    But surely there is more to the 29-year-old than just his comely physique.

    For one, he is the reigning World Kung Fu Champion.

    He is also an expert in numerous kung fu styles, including Wing Chun, which he studied for eight years. Moreover, he is the "grand-student" of Ip Chun, Ip Man's real-life eldest son.

    With all his martial arts credentials, it definitely looks like Dennis has what it takes to play Ip Man.

    But the rising star admits that he felt a lot of pressure playing the martial arts master.

    "I was worried about my acting," he said.

    "Ip Man was my 'great-grandmaster'. I really wanted to do justice to his character and to all Wing Chun disciples too."

    While some critics have called his acting 'wooden' and 'emotionless', Dennis insists that he did what the director (Checkley Sin) wanted - adding that the real Ip Man was said to be the strong, silent type.

    However, Dennis thinks that his duel with Ip Chun (who plays Leung Bik) in the film really allowed him to shine.

    "Grandmaster was fun to work with. He has a great sense of humour," said Dennis of the 86-year-old master.

    The fresh-faced actor himself embodies a whole new generation of Kung Fu masters.

    "I'm very honoured to be recognized alongside the great Kung Fu masters, but I still feel very inexperienced in the entertainment industry," he said.

    For Dennis, the whole acting experience has been tough - "the ending scene has been changed five times! But the end-result makes everything worth it."

    "I hope to spread Chinese Kung Fu around the world (through his films). In a way, I do feel like I'm representing the Chinese, just like Bruce Lee did," he said.

    "Someone who isn't Chinese can practice Kung Fu and even be good at it, but they can never be as authentic. Kung Fu is one of the most precious things in the Chinese culture."
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  9. #9
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    Anyone seen this yet?

    The race for the first review here is on. SPJ? doug?
    Rose of steel

    MODEL-TURNED-ACTRESS Rose Chan (below) tackles her first major movie role as Ip Man’s fellow Wing Chun practitioner who has a crush on him.

    The petite 17-year-old literally packs quite a punch on her own as Chan has been *studying Wing Chun for two years and is a fellow practitioner of the martial art like lead actor Dennis To.

    “Part of the movie’s aim is to promote the art and tell people that Wing Chun is actually suitable for women as well,” she says during a recent promotional tour to Malaysia with To.

    Chan was only 15 when she met Wing Chun master Checkley Sin who *encouraged her to take up the art.

    She says: “I was never into exercise all my life. I started from zero and then, this opportunity came along.

    “It was scary initially to be working with so many big names. Dennis was the only one I knew but they were all very kind and understanding. We were like a family because we got together a month before shooting to prepare ourselves, and *practised from sunrise to *sunset.”

    The singer reveals she will be focusing on acting, *perhaps taking up more *action roles, but hopes to have the chance to try other genres as well.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  10. #10
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    Ip Chun

    Thu, Jun 24, 2010
    Winging it with Ip Chun
    By Tay Yek Keak

    THE son of Ip Man has never been in a real fight.

    Gongfu master Ip Man - whose story propelled the legendary martial art of wing chun to it status of the Chinese martial art du jour (and therefore turning Ip Man into the new Chinese action hero) - and his art didn't spur his eldest son, Ip Chun, into going mano-a-mano with anyone else, even when he was a hot-headed teen.

    Instead, he was a pacifist by default. "When I was a kid, no one dared to fight me. I was Ip Man's son," he said in Cantonese with a laugh.

    The sprightly, chatty 86- year-old was here recently to promote the prequel Ip Man: The Legend Is Born, now out in cinemas.

    In the movie, Hong Kong world gongfu champion Dennis To plays Ip Man as a young man. Ip Man is known to audiences, thanks to Donnie Yen, who played the master in two films, Ip Man (2008) and Ip Man 2 (2010).

    In The Legend Is Born, Ip Chun plays Leung Pik, one of Ip Man's principal masters, who teaches the young dude a different form of wing chun.

    In the prequel, the senior citizen defeats the lad in a Chinese medicine shop with moves that look like they'd give anyone a hernia.

    The irony of playing his father's shifu (master) is not lost on Ip Chun, who is a wing chun master in Hong Kong.

    However, he views it as a generational connection.

    "The producer (of the movie), Checkley Sin, is my disciple. Dennis is his disciple. So, there are three generations of wing chun practitioners in the movie," he said with a laugh.

    The octogenarian, who knew Bruce Lee briefly in the early 1970s (Lee, famously, was Ip Man's student), is anything but a shy, withdrawn retiree.

    Seizing the opportunity to talk, he upstaged his younger co-stars - To, as well as Hong Kong actors Fan Siu Wong and Rose Chan - when he hogged the microphone during his recent press conference here.

    "This is the first and last time I'm acting in a film," he announced heartily.

    "Learning martial arts is not that difficult, but acting is tougher because you have to redo your scenes so many times," he said with a mock sigh.

    However, he understands that films are fantasy-making endeavours, which are far from the purity of his disciplined craft.

    There are inaccuracies in the first two Ip Man movies, where Ip Chun is portrayed as a young boy - to the best of his recollection, Ip Chun was not with his father at the time.

    But he doesn't mind. After all, he helped Donnie Yen with little details when the actor turned to him, asking to chat with him about his father.

    Asked what his father was like, he said: "My father was a very humorous person. He influenced his children's upbringing gradually through his actions. I still miss him."

    Ip Man - who started teaching Ip Chun wing chun when he was seven - died in 1972 of throat cancer. But he's getting a second life on celluloid, with Wong Kar Wai biopic The Grand Master in the works.

    Ip Chun is encouraged by this enthusiasm and encourages it in turn.

    "There might be other Ip Mans because the wave is not over yet," he said.
    Just what we need...more Ip Mans.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  11. #11
    Was quite entertaining, especially if you compare it to the mess Ip Man 2 was. Was very light hearted for the most part, except the climax. Once again, the moral is that only evil **** comes out of Japan >_>

    There was also quite a good, if not futile message from Ip Chun to stop the wing chun lineage bickering bull****.

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