Tom Cruise: A divisive figure adored and despised in equal measures by cinema-goers

Unquestionably one of the world’s biggest box office draws, movies starring Tom Cruise have grossed more than US$3.7 billion in North America alone, with total global takings topping US$9 billion worldwide. Despite being touted as the actor with Hollywood’s most bankable grin, he remains a divisive figure, adored and despised by equally vocal contingents of cinema-goers.

Tom Cruise

Whichever side of the fence you fall on, however, Tom Cruise does deserve some credit for overcoming much of the adversity that made his early life something of a nightmare. Not only was he dyslexic, he was also routinely abused by his father. In his adult life, however, many of his problems have been of his own making. Willingly co-opted as the public face of Scientology – a quasi-religion with cult-like trappings – his reputation later barely survived a series of bizarre TV appearances, with the most infamous of these seeing him bounding around Oprah Winfrey’s sofa back in 2005 as he, somewhat unconvincingly, confessed his undying love for actress Katie Holmes, his third wife-to-be. He later went on to duly divorce Holmes in 2012.

Tom Cruise

To be fair, though, crazy-behaving, much-married, cult-loving Tom is a soft target, and it is all too easy to overlook his undoubted status as one of the all-time Hollywood greats.

From the moment he burst onto the scene in his breakout role as Joel Goodson, a doubt-ridden teen in the 1983 coming-of-age comedy Risky Business (1983), he has been unswervingly on course for A-lister superstardom. As proof of his abiding success, he’s currently ranked eighth on the list of all-time Hollywood high earners. With more blockbusters in the pipeline – most notably a sequel to Top Gun, his smash-hit 1986 romantic drama – he will, almost definitely, feature higher still in any future rankings.

Thanks to his boyish and enduring good looks, few probably realise that as of 3 July this year, Cruise is now 56. Born Thomas Cruise Mapother IV in 1962 in New York, he was the only boy of the four children born to Thomas Cruise Mapother III, an electrical engineer, and Mary Lee Mapother (née Pfeiffer), a special education teacher.

Tom Cruise

After a troubled childhood and adolescence, he briefly flirted with the idea of becoming a priest, before finally settling on acting as his chosen career. By his own admission, it’s not been a profession that has always come wholly naturally to him. Airing his own uncertainties, he says: “Every single time I start work on a picture, I always feel as if I don’t really know what I’m doing.”

This particular demon, though, seems to have hardly hampered his career. He first hit the big screen playing a minor role in Endless Love, a 1981 romantic drama co-starring Brooke Shields. Despite getting his first big break in Risky Business two years later, it wasn’t until 1986 that his starring role as Maverick in Top Gun – one of the highest grossing films of the year – suggested how bankable a performer he was destined to become.

While that reputation is now firmly set in stone, fame – and box office bankability – has not always sat easily with the star. Clearly not relishing all its trappings, he says: “I am forever being chased by the paparazzi. They run lights, they chase you and they harass you the whole time. And it is only getting worse.”

Tom Cruise

In truth, though, it’s Cruise’s antics off-screen that have kept scandal-minded journos on his trail for so long. After all, aside from the three official Mrs Cruises, there have been any number of high-profile, non-solemnised liaisons, as well as those lingering rumours that girls aren’t really his thing at all. And then of course, there’s Cruise’s self-confessed obsession with Scientology, the California-headquartered cult.

Notwithstanding such controversies, award-winning movies – and wives – have followed. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, he was nominated for awards for his performances in the Vietnam war drama The Fourth of July (1989) and the legal drama A Few Good Men (1992). This was also the time he became Mr Nicole Kidman for a comparatively lengthy 11 years after meeting the Australian actress on the sets of Days of Thunder (1990).

Although his love life may have been punctuated by special guest stars and one-off appearances, his celluloid career has remained stable and stellar. Most notably, his continuing role as Ethan Hunt in the Mission Impossible spy-thriller franchise has confirmed he has lost little of his bankability, even with his 60th birthday now firmly on the horizon.

So, will his boyish looks, Hollywood reign and penchant for middling bouts of matrimony see Tom Cruise cruise through another decade? While it’s certainly Risky Business, it’s no Mission Impossible.

Text: Robert Blain; Images: AFP

Celebrating the Life and Works of Raymond Chow

Raymond Chow, the co-founder of Hong Kong’s film production and distribution company Golden Harvest, passed away on Friday. He was 91.

Chow was a crucial figure in the golden era of Hong Kong cinema, as he paved the way to success not only domestically but internationally for the island’s films. His productions were the first to garner global attention, thanks to his ability to strike up international partnerships and negotiate distribution abroad.

Raymond Chow

Formerly an executive for the Shaw Brothers, Chow, and Leonard Ho left the studio in 1970 to start their own production house Golden Harvest. Approaching the business with a more laidback and flexible attitude, the pair were able to land contracts with rising young performers whose fresh ideas were allowed to flourish under the creatives at Golden Harvest. These future stars included Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan.

Spanning from the 1980s to 1990s, Chow’s works would dominate Hong Kong screens, lending Cantonese films a superpower status in East Asia’s market and ensuring the attention of the West’s attention to Hong Kong’s productions. To this day, two of his films remain Hong Kong’s highest-grossing domestic Chinese language films.

Raymond Chow

After the death of his partner, burdened by financial losses, Chow’s partner Leonard Cho went on to sell Golden Harvest to Chinese businessman Wu Kebo, who renamed the company Orange Sky Golden Harvest.

In life and even in death, Raymond Chow has been a true legend in Hong Kong cinema, and his memory as a lover of Kung-Fu and Cantonese will live on in the memories of movie lovers across the city.

To celebrate the man and legend of Hong Kong pictures, we are listing Raymond Chow’s top 5 box-office hits.

Enter the Dragon (1973)

Raymond Chow

The film would be Bruce Lee’s last role, as he tragically passed away after a stunt on the set went wrong. The film grossed $90 million dollars worldwide and would ensure that Lee’s memory as a kung-fu master was cemented.

The Cannonball Run (1981)

Raymond Chow

Teaming up with film studio 20th Century Fox, and big Hollywood stars such as Burt Reynold and Roger Moore, the American-Hong Kong production earned $72.2 million worldwide, one of Raymond Chow’s first international successes.

Police Story (1985) Police Story 2 (1988) & Police Story 4: First Strike (1996)

Raymond Chow

The Police Story franchise features six installments, with Raymond Chow producing three films in the series: Police Story, Police Story 2 and Police Story 4: First Strike. The first feature grossed HK$26.6 million, the second HK$34 million and the last HK$57 million and an additional US$15 million. Police Story 4: First Strike remains the fifth highest-grossing domestic Chinese film ever in Hong Kong.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1993)

Raymond Chow

The American martial arts superhero comedy film grossed over US$202 million.

Rumble in the Bronx (1996)

Raymond Chow

Rumble in the Bronx catapulted Jackie Chan into the American mainstream consciousness, with the film fetching US$39 million at the box office.

Text: Bailey Atkinson

Top Hat: Indiana Jones’ iconic fedora fetches big bucks at auction

Both Marty McFly’s hoverboard from Back to the Future II (1989) and Anakin Skywalker’s light sabre from Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith (2005) were on offer to movie-minded auction-goers last month as part of the latest Entertainment Memorabilia Live sale organised by Prop Store, the London and Los Angeles-based purveyor of fine movie mementos.

Iconic Indiana Jones fedora sold for a heroic £320,000
Iconic Indiana Jones fedora sold for a heroic £320,000 at auction

Even the abiding appeal of time-travelling teenagers and Jedi weaponry, however, was not enough to steal the top spot at the sale, with that accolade undoubtedly going to the iconic fedora worn by Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) in Raiders of the Lost Ark, the franchise’s 1981 debut, which went for a heroic £320,000.

The fedora was a trademark wardrobe accessory throughout the Indiana Jones movies

Mind you, even Indiana Jones might have been topped had another of the auction’s most illustrious lots – the jacket worn by Han Solo (Ford again) in The Empire Strikes Back (1980), the second tranche of the original Star Wars saga – gone for anything like the initial estimate of £500,000 to £1 million. Sadly, it failed to meet its reserve price, with the highest bid clocking in at just £450,000 – not enough to Force the sale through.

November Movies: What to watch in theatres this month

The penultimate month of 2018 brings with it a healthy dose of fantasy, fiction, adventure and magic in the theatres. Of them, here’s our top pick of the best November movies that should definitely be watched on big screens.

Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald

The second installment of the “Fantastic Beasts” series set in J.K. Rowling’s Wizarding World features the adventures of magizoologist Newt Scamander, as he, along with much-loved professor Albus Dumbledore, tries to thwart Grindelwald’s plans of raising pure-blood wizards to rule over all the world.

The Nutcracker and the Four Realms

 

A silver-screen retelling of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s ballet The Nutcracker, here Young Clara needs to travel across parallel worlds, strike strange friendships with soldiers and mice to retrieve a key that will unlock a box containing a priceless gift.

Robin Hood

Robin of Loxley, a war-hardened Crusader, and his Moorish commander revolt against the corrupt practices of the English monarchy in an action-adventure packed with gritty battlefield exploits, mind-blowing fight scenes and a timeless romance.

The Girl in the Spider’s Web

A sequel to The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, it follows the story of young computer hacker Lisbeth Salander as she continues in her crusade against sexual abusers and finds herself caught in a web of spies, cyber-criminals and corrupt government officials.

Text: Suchetana Mukhopadhyay

October Movies: What to watch in theatres in Hong Kong this month

With two public holidays and Halloween festivities around the corner, Hongkongers have more reason now to troop to theatres to catch the latest October movies, which cover everything from thrilling to action-packed to downright scary. Here are our top picks for October movies you just can’t miss.  

Venom

Marvel Studios is back with Venom, a superhero movie about reporter Eddie Brock (played by Tom Hardy) who acquires the powers of a symbiote, giving rise to an alter-ego “Venom”. A spin-off from the Spiderman franchisee, expect the movie to be packed with CGI effects and larger-than-life action sequences. A must-see for Marvel fans!

Destination Wedding

With a name like ‘Destination Wedding‘, this could only be a rom-com, and romantic it is from the word go, building on the tried and tested formula of two people who start off by disliking each other before eventually falling in love. With veterans like Keanu Reeves and Winona Ryder playing leads, the chemistry should be crackling though.

A Star is Born

Bradley Cooper’s directorial debut charts the journey of an ageing musician who helps a young singer find fame and fortune even while his own career goes on a downward spiral as he copes with alcoholism. Starring Lady Gaga in a leading role, the movie has already achieved critical acclaim for its plot and music.

Halloween

Coinciding perfectly with Halloween, this is a typical October movie full of jumps and scares, perfect for anyone looking to be spooked out on Halloween. The 11th film in the Halloween franchise, it marks Laurie Strode’s final confrontation with Michael Myers, the masked figure who has haunted her since she escaped his killing spree four decades ago.

Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween

Another Halloween special for thrill-seekers, this is a film based on R.L. Stine’s widely popular Goosebumps stories – a series of children’s books that has sold 400 million copies worldwide. The plot revolves around two children Sonny and Sam who must thwart an evil plan to create a Halloween Apocalypse.

 

Text: Suchetana Mukhopadhyay

Reel Deal: Hottest September movies landing in HK next month

Summer’s slew of blockbuster film releases may be depleted, but the upcoming month still boasts plenty of silver screen outings to keep you entertained. From the revival of The Predator and the return of Rowan Atkinson’s Johnny English to a Gone Girl-esque mystery, here are the hottest September movies to keep an eye out for. 

These September movies are sure to keep you entertained

The House with a Clock in Its Walls

Based on the ’70s gothic horror children’s novel by Edward Gorey, this film adaptation takes audiences back to 1953, when the newly-orphaned Lewis Barnavelt goes to live with his eccentric uncle Jonathan (Jack Black). Instead of a life of suburban normalcy, Lewis finds himself caught up in a magical battle to save the world, alongside his uncle and the good witch next door (Cate Blanchett). Though it’s technically a ‘children’s film’, perhaps you’d best leave your littler ones at home.

Johnny English Strikes Again

British acting legend Rowan Atkinson returns to the silver screen as Johnny English, UK’s most-loved accidental government spy. After a cyber attack reveals the identity of all secret agents in Great Britain, English is pulled out of retirement to combat the crisis and capture the mastermind hacker behind this heinous crime. With plenty of physical comedy and goofball antics, this is sure to have the entire family in stitches.

The Predator

In the upcoming revival of the wildly successful Predator sci-fi action series, the aliens are back, and they’re bigger and badder than ever. After a suburban kid unwittingly mistakes alien tech for a toy and sends out an alert to the extraterrestrials, it’s up to humankind to once again rebuff the invaders. With fast-paced action and a plethora of special effects, The Predator will have you glued to your seat.

A Simple Favour

In this film adaptation of the eponymous novel by Darcey Bell, Stephanie Ward (Anna Kendrick) is a small town blogger mum whose best friend (Blake Lively) completely vanishes after asking her for ‘a small favour’ – to pick up her son after school. With a plotline reminiscent of 2014’s blockbuster Gone Girl, Stephanie goes to great lengths to uncover the truth behind her friend’s disappearance. Was it a kidnapping, a murder, or something more sinister…? You’ll have to watch to find out.

3 reasons to visit Hong Kong Arts Centre this month

3 reasons to visit Hong Kong Arts Centre this month

Dedicated to cultivating the audience and development of Hong Kong movies, the Hong Kong Arts Centre (HKAC), provides a selection of movies that celebrates Hong Kong filmmakers.

Featuring the works of emerging Hong Kong filmmakers and paying tribute to legendary film masters, we round up the top three movies not to miss at Hong Kong Arts Centre this month.

Throw Down (Digitally restored) 

10/8 (Fri) 7:30pm | 13/8 (Mon) 8pm | 30/8 (Thur) 7:30pm*
*Screenwriter Yau Nai-hoi and guest director Jack Lai will attend after-screening talk. 

This month’s ‘Great Hong Kong Movies’ series will showcase Throw Down, released in 2004 as a tribute to the legendary film master Akira Kurosawa. This visually arresting action drama from acclaimed director Johnnie To (Running On, Karma, Breaking News) follows legendary Judo fighter, Sze-To as he unexpectedly gives up his beloved sport and lives life as an alcoholic gambler who runs a pub. After a brash Judo champion newcomer challenges him to duel, Sze-To is encouraged to finish the match that never took place. Soon, Sze-To’s pub becomes the ultimate arena where the greatest Judo fighters show off their skills. Filled with brutality, Throw Down is an emotional tale of one man’s determination to win at all costs.

 

Hong Kong | 2004 | 95 minutes |
In Cantonese with Chinese and English subtitles | DCP | Colour

 

Taxi Stories

11/8 (Sat) 7:45pm*
*Post-screening Q&A Session with Director Doris Yeung via Skype

As a celebration of Hong Kong indie movies, ‘Independantly Yours’  makes a comeback as a recurrent screening programme, 20 years after its initial presentation by the HKAC.

First up in this month’s programme is Taxi Stories, a myriad of three stories based in three different Asian cities, where the paths of the rich and poor cross one another in and around taxis. A closeted Beijing taxi driver, a pregnant Hong Kong trophy wife and a Jakarta slum orphan. All three characters are eager to connect on a basic human level but are their own worst obstacles. Showcasing a new world, where social mobility is linked to increasing wealth, this movie explores how money divides and separates each of them, making it tough to for them to be who they really are, not what they appear to be.

 

Hong Kong, Indonesia, China, Netherlands|2017|98 min
In Cantonese, English, Indonesian & Putonghua with Chinese & English subtitles|DCP|Colour

 

Small Talk

 31/8 (Fri) 7:45pm*
*Post-screening Q&A Session with Director Huang Hui-chen via Skype

The second pick from Hong Kong Art Centre’s  ‘Independantly Yours’  programme showcases Small Talk, released in 2016. This movie explores the relationship between a mother and daughter from the young girls eyes. Her mother wakes up well before her, prepares her lunch and takes off. Every evening after eating out, she comes home, washes up and closes her bedroom door, ensuring she is fast sleep by 9pm. While they haved lived in the same house for decades, they live life like they are strangers to each other. Explore the journey as a daughter finally gets the courage to talk to her mother. But will she be ready to hear what she has to say?

 

Taiwan | 2016 | 88 minutes
In Taiwanese and Mandarin with English subtitles  | DCP | Colour

 

Venue: Louis Koo Cinema, Hong Kong Arts Centre, 2 Harbour Road, Wan Chai 

To book tickets: Urbix or call (852) 3761 6661 

For more information: www.hkac.org.hk

August Movies: Which films to see in HK theatres next month

After a relatively quiet start to the summer, the film industry has finally revved up its engines and looks all set to thrill theatre-goers with a slew of blockbuster releases. From a live-action outing for Disney’s beloved Winnie the Pooh to the much-awaited flick on those Crazy Rich Asians, here are some must-watch August movies.

Christopher Robin

 

 Winnie the Pooh, that perennial Disney classic, is getting its own live action big screen outing this August. Join the ursine and his friends as they help their own friend Christopher Robin, now entirely grown up and without even the slightest sense of imagination, rediscover the wonder, magic and pure, unadulterated fun side of life.

Release date: 2 August

 Hotel Transylvannia 3: Summer Vacation

Follow the hilarious adventures of Vlad the vampire (voiced by Adam Sandler) and his gang of lovable monster friends as they head for a summer vacation aboard a luxury monster cruise. A perfect blend of romantic intrigue, tongue-in-cheek humour and hidden intentions, this sequel is sure to provide fun and laughs for the whole family.

Release date: 16 August

Crazy Rich Asians

This big screen adaptation of Kelvin Kwan’s bestselling novel follows NYU economics professor Rachel Chu as she flies to Singapore to meet her fiancé’s family for the first time. Unbeknownst to her, he is actually the scion of one of Asia’s wealthiest families, and drama and chaos ensue as she is thrust into the lifestyle of the rich and the famous. 

Release date: 23 August

Mile 22

Mark Wahlberg plays James Silva, a covert operative for a shadowy unit of the CIA who becomes embroiled in a delicate extraction operation of a high-value asset. Expect fast-paced action, thrilling plot twists and no small amount of gunplay in this Peter Berg-directed action film.

Release date: 22 August

From Miss World to prime-time star, Priyanka Chopra wins the world every time

While most 18-year-olds are contending with exam nerves and driving lessons, Priyanka Chopra was already Miss World…

Priyanka Chopra

Being crowned the world’s most beautiful woman, however, only proved Chopra’s entry to wider society. Since then, she’s gone on to become a global style icon, a Bollywood legend, an award-winning Hollywood star and much more.

Though now it seems unlikely that anyone could ever deprive her of her many achievements, these would have been all but inconceivable back in 1982 when she was born into a military family in Jamshedpur, a small town in India. With the Miss World win tucked under her Gucci belt, it was only a matter of time, however, till Bollywood – India’s take on Hollywood – came calling.

Priyanka Chopra

Looking back on her first steps onto a sound stage, Priyanka Chopra says: “When I got a movie offer, I thought: ‘Ooh, let’s try this too’. While I hadn’t come from a film background and I hadn’t learnt anything about films or film-making, I found I had a thirst to know everything about it. I immersed myself in cinematography, editing, soundtracking, post-production…” 

Eventually, her hard work paid off, but it’s fair to say she was no overnight success. Initially hired as an eye-candy, it wasn’t until 2004 that she finally proved both a critical and commercial hit. This was the year when, playing against type, she stole every scene as Sonia Ray, a manipulative man-eater, in Aitraaz, a romantic thriller that stormed both the box office and India’s film awards.

After this, the floodgates truly opened. A string of box-office hits, nationwide recognition and awards – including the Padma Shri (one of India’s most prestigious civilian honours) –  quickly followed. It was almost inevitable then that Priyanka Chopra should set her sights higher still, aiming for musical and screen successes in the West.

Priyanka Chopra

But her foray into the former met with mixed success. Both her albums failed to create a buzz, pretty much marking the end of her musical ambitions. Fortunately, she had a more luck in the acting stakes, with small screen success hers for the taking.

And take it she did, going on to secure the lead in Quantico, a peak-time terrorism drama that saw Priyanka Chopra take on the role of Alex Parrish, a newly-recruited FBI agent. The role made her a household name and won her the Best Actress award in the prestigious People’s Choice Awards. But before the celebrations were over, dark clouds were gathering around the Quantico lot.

Priyanka Chopra

With Quantico getting cancelled just weeks into its third season, the show hit a new low when one particular plotline saw it attract international condemnation, while many personally vilified Chopra for turning her on her own people. The plot – branded “ridiculous”, “stupid” and “implausible” by online critics – saw Parrish (Priyanka Chopra) set out to thwart a conspiracy by rogue Indian scientists to blow up New York, and then blame it on Pakistan.

With many alleging that she had betrayed India by acquiescing to such a grotesque plotline, pretty much all of the outrage occasioned by the episode in question focused on its leading lady.

With the series already cancelled, however, it is a storm that Chopra will surely weather. Indeed, the bandwagon seems to have already moved on. Right now, the media is more focused on her ‘am I / aren’t I?’ relationship with Nick Jonas, an Americna singer. Whether this is true love or a tactical diversion from her own goal on the Quantico front is of, course, highly debatable.

What is less debatable, however, is that even as her FBI procedural heads off to re-run heaven, Chopra’s own career remains very much on course. With two new Hollywood projects already in the pipeline, as well as an expected return to the Bollywood throne, her most intriguing new venture will see her branching out in a whole new direction, with Unfinished, the first volume of her memoirs, set for publication next year.

Text: Suchetana Mukhopadhyay

Reel Deal: Golden Scene Selection at HKAC CINEMA

Good news for cinephiles! Hong Kong Arts Centre and Golden Scene Company together bring a selection of films from across the world in an event titled ‘Golden Scene Selection’ that has started from 6 July 2018. These are the films we are eyeing…

I’ve Got the Blues

Director: Angie Chen
Hong Kong | 2017 | 91 minutes | In Cantonese, with English (in parts) with Chinese and English subtitles | DCP | Colour
6/7 (Fri) 8pm
9/7 (Mon) 8pm
11/7 (Wed) 8pm

*Post-screening discussion with director Angie Chen

In interaction with famous HK artist Wong Yan-kwai and director Angie, the film explores human complexities such as humility, love and betrayal, and how they shape an artist’s work.

What a Wonderful Family

Director: Yamada Yoji
Japan | 2017 | 114 mins | In Japanese with Chinese subtitles | DCP | Colour
7/7 (Sat) 2:30pm

Director Yamada Yoji traces the outwardly happy, humdrum life of Japanese family, who suddenly face a catastrophe. As grievances come out of the woodwork, the tightly-knit family faces the danger of being ripped apart. Yamada Yoji follows it up with two sequels – both screened at Golden Scene Selection as well – that follow the families’ journey.

On Happiness Road

Director: Sung Hsin-yin
Taiwan | 2017 | 111 minutes | In Mandarin with Chinese and English subtitles | DCP | Colour
8/7 (Sun) 4pm

Having earned her American Dream, Chi returns to her family home after her grandmother’s death. As she settles down with her family on Happiness Road, Chi muses on the meaning of ‘home’ and ‘happiness’.

Tickets for Golden Scene Selection are available at URBTIX now (https://bit.ly/2tj2gIj). Stay tuned!

Screening Schedule

6/7 (Fri) | 8pm | I’ve Got the Blues

7/7 (Sat) | 2:30pm | What A Wonderful Family!

 7/7 (Sat) | 4:45pm | What A Wonderful Family! 2

 7/7 (Sat) | 8:15pm | What A Wonderful Family! 3

8/7 (Sun) | 4pm | On Happiness Road

8/7 (Sun) | 7:45pm | Sakura Guardian in the North (Preview screening)

9/7 (Mon) | 8pm | I’ve Got the Blues

10/7 (Tue) | 8pm | Sakura Guardian in the North (Preview screening)

11/7 (Wed)| 8pm| I’ve Got the Blues

12/7 (Thu)| 8pm | What A Wonderful Family! 3: My Wife, My Life (Preview screening)