The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Hong Kong director Ringo Lam of ‘City of Fire' fame dies at 63

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong film director and screenwrit­er Ringo Lam passed away at his Hong Kong home on Saturday, according to local media outlets. He was 63.

Lam came to prominence in the 1980s as a member of the emerging generation of filmmakers collective­ly known as the Hong Kong New Wave, which nurtured directors including Tsui Hark and Ann Hui and establishe­d the Hong Kong cinematic landscape in its 1980s golden age. Originally having studied to be an actor, Lam was in the TVB acting class the same year as Chow Yun-fat, who later starred in some of Lam's most renowned directoria­l work.

After a stint as a TV scriptwrit­er and director in the 1970s, Lam went to study film at the York University in Canada. He returned to Hong Kong and made his directoria­l debut with ‘Espirit d'amour' in 1983, and helmed the fourth instalment of the enormously popular ‘Aces Goes Places' franchise. With the success of that film, he got carte blanche at Cinema City, one of the biggest Hong Kong studios at the time, and created the ‘On Fire' trilogy — ‘City of Fire' (1987), ‘Prison on Fire' (1987), and ‘School on Fire' (1988). ‘City on Fire', now considered a classic, gained Lam the best director award and the film's leading man Chow Yunfat the best actor gong at the Hong Kong Film Awards, and was extensivel­y referenced in Quentin Tarantino's ‘Reservoir Dogs'.

Hollywood beckoned in the 1990s. With his proven track record in action films, Lam made a trio of actioners in the US starring Jean-Claude van Damme — ‘Maximum Risk' (1996), ‘Replicant' (2001), and ‘In Hell' (2003). Lam interspers­ed his time in Hollywood with Hong Kong production­s, and in 1997, he made ‘Full Alert', which earned five nomination­s at the Hong Kong Film Awards, including Lam's second best director nomination.

A long-time friend of director Tsui Hark, who co-directed with Lam the Jackie Chan-

Lam and Chow had a friendship spanning over 30 years and were like brothers. Chow always said Lam is a good and highly demanding director, making a film with him might kill you if you didn’t pay enough attention. He loved and hated Lam in equal measure! Jasmine, Chow Yun-fat’s wife

starrer ‘Twin Dragons' in 1992, Lam collaborat­ed with Tsui and Johnnie To in 2007 in the portmantea­u film ‘Triangle'.

Lam cited box office pressure as one of the reasons he took a seven-year break after ‘Triangle', as well as his desire to pursue other interests and to watch his son grow up. In 2015, he returned to the film industry with ‘Wild City', the first full-length feature he had directed in over a decade. The film, starring Louis Koo and Shawn Yue, was a hit in China and took over US$22 million. He followed that up in 2016 with ‘Sky on Fire', marking his first attempt in sci-fi and using CGI, for which he had previously mentioned his distrust in his pursuit of realism — which he demonstrat­ed in asking Yue to use a real knife in a fight scene for ‘Wild City'.

Lam's final work before his passing was the much anticipate­d ‘Octet: the Story of Hong Kong' for Media Asia, for which he contribute­d a segment with fellow Hong Kong cinema greats including Johnnie To, John Woo, Tsui Hark, Ann Hui, Patrick Tam, Sammo Hung, and Yuen Woo-Ping. The film is set for a 2019 release.

Luminaries in the Hong Kong film industry including Yue, director Wong Jing, and one of the stars of Lam's ‘On Fire' trilogy Roy Cheung expressed their grief for Lam's passing. “It is too sudden to feel sad and I am overwhelme­d by the memories. We will meet again,” wrote Wong Jing on social media. Chow Yunfat's wife Jasmine told Hong Kong's Apple Daily, “Lam and Chow had a friendship spanning over 30 years and were like brothers. Chow always said Lam is a good and highly demanding director, making a film with him might kill you if you didn't pay enough attention. He loved and hated Lam in equal measure!”

According to reports in the Hong Kong media, Lam was resting with a cold when his wife found him unresponsi­ve in bed on Saturday. He was pronounced dead when paramedics arrived.

 ??  ?? Jolin Tsai: "I had no energy. I felt empty. I was passive. I felt empty because I had no idea what I was doing.”
Jolin Tsai: "I had no energy. I felt empty. I was passive. I felt empty because I had no idea what I was doing.”
 ?? — AFP photo ?? (Left) In this file photo Chinese director Ringo Lam poses during a photocall for his film ‘Triangle’ at the Festival Palace in Cannes, southern France, during the 60th edition of the Cannes Film Festival, 17 May 2007. • (Right ) Ringo Lam now.
— AFP photo (Left) In this file photo Chinese director Ringo Lam poses during a photocall for his film ‘Triangle’ at the Festival Palace in Cannes, southern France, during the 60th edition of the Cannes Film Festival, 17 May 2007. • (Right ) Ringo Lam now.
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