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Stephen Chow Asia's top box office draw
If you were to ask Western fans of Hong Kong movies who the most popular star in Asia is, names such as Jackie Chan and Chow Yun-Fat would probably come up. However, it is Stephen Chow that is Asia's top box office draw.
After his time at the TVB school, the studio immediately signed him to a contract, and he enjoyed a successful run on the network in both comedies and dramas. By 1987, Chow had entered into the movie industry with a role in Final Justice, for which he won the prestigious Taiwanese Golden Horse award for best supporting actor. The award caused Chow to put his comedic talents on the back burner as he appeared in a series of action and dramatic roles, including John Woo's Just Heroes and Jet Li's Dragon Fight. However, after appearing with Jacky Cheung in the comedy Faithfully Yours, Chow's comedic nature returned to his film work. In 1990, Chow scored his first major box office hit with All for the Winner, which was a parody of the previous year's box office champ, Wong Jing's God of Gamblers. Wong is a producer/director who is never one to shy away from cheap publicity, so he hired Chow for the sequel to God of Gamblers. It was with Wong -- a director known for his schizophrenic style -- that Chow solidified his own comedic style, which would come to be known as "moy len tau." Moy len tau is a Cantonese term that roughly translates to "nine comes after eight, but eight has nothing to do with nine," but is more generally termed as "nonsense comedy."
After the success of the God of Gamblers movies, Chow's star continued to rise. 1991's Fight Back to School became Hong Kong's top-grossing film of all time, knocking John Woo's mega-hit A Better Tomorrow out of the top spot. The same year also saw Chow appearing in a comedic homage to one of his idols, with Fist of Fury '91, a parody of the classic Bruce Lee movie. Chow continued to spoof other popular movies, such as Swordsman with Royal Tramp, and also did somewhat more serious fare with movies based on folk tales and heroes, as with Flirting Scholar and King of Beggars. Though not was all wine and roses during this period -- Hong Kong audiences are notoriously fickle -- and Chow had his share of flops. But by the time he completed The God of Cookery in 1997, Chow had not only cemented himself as one of Asia's top stars, but a talented producer, writer and director as well.
Filmography: Actor Shaolin Soccer (2004) Gorgeous (1999) King of Comedy (1999) The Tricky Master (1999) Lawyer Lawyer (1997) God of Cookery (1996) A Chinese Odyssey Part One: Pandora's Box (1995) A Chinese Odyssey Part Two: Cinderella (1995) Out of the Dark (1995) Sixty Million Dollar Man (1995) From Beijing With Love (1994) Hail the Judge (1994) Love on Delivery (1994) All's Well, Ends Well (1992) Fight Back to School II (1992) Fight Back to School III (1992) Royal Tramp 2 (1992) Fight Back to School (1991) Legend of the Dragon (1991) The Magnificent Scoundrels (1991) Royal Tramp (1991) Tricky Brains (1991) All For the Winner (1990) Curry and Pepper (1990) Lung Fung Restaurant (1990) Triad Story (1990) God of Gamblers II (1989) Just Heroes (1989) Dragon Fight (1988) Faithfully Yours (1988) Final Justice (1988) He Who Chases After the Wind (1988) Cameo The Banquet (1991) Director Shaolin Soccer (2004) King of Comedy (1999) God of Cookery (1996) Screenwriter Shaolin Soccer (2004) |
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