_FILMOTECA HAWKMENBLUES Weibang Ma-Xu.mht
-
Alex Nicolaou (1) -
Anne Charlotte Robertson (1) -
Benjamin Rocher (1) -
Blaine Cade (1) -
Brett Pierce (1) -
Burr Steers (1) -
Carl Bessai (1) -
Casey Walker (1) -
Claude Barras (1) -
Corbin Bernsen (1) -
Dan O'Bannon (1) -
David Gebroe (1) -
David Irving (1) -
Glasgow Phillips (1) -
Gregg Bishop (1) -
Henry Hobson (1) -
Howard McCain (1) -
James Glenn Dudelson (1) -
Jason Lei Howden (1) -
Jesse T. Cook (1) -
John Geddes (1) -
Jordan Rubin (1) -
Julián Lara (1) -
Justin Benson (1) -
Ken Wiederhorn (1) -
Kevin Gates (1) -
Kiah Roache-Turner (1) -
Lee Su-jin (1) -
Logan McMillan (1) -
Mark Goldblatt (1) -
Murat Emir Eren (1) -
Naoyuki Tomomatsu (1) -
Neill Blomkamp (1) -
Nikolai Pigarev (1) -
Pablo Parés (1) -
Ramón Luque (1) -
Richard Kletter (1) -
Robbie Pickering (1) -
Rodrigo Aragão (1) -
Rolf Peter Kahl (1) -
Sakichi Sato (1) -
Steven C. Miller (1) -
Tamara Kotevska (1) -
Tatjana Turanskyj (1) -
Tobias Nölle (1) -
Tor Ramsey (1) -
Wolf Wolff (1) -
Yared Zeleke (1) -
Yorgos Noussias (1) -
Zachary Ramelan (1)
Weibang Ma-Xu (simplified Chinese: 马徐维邦; traditional Chinese: 馬徐維邦; pinyin: Mǎ-Xú Wéibāng; 1905–1961) was a Chinese film director active in mainland China from the 1920s to 1940s, and later in Hong Kong, perhaps best known for his work in the horror genre, the most important unarguably being the The Phantom of the Opera-inspired, Song at Midnight. Ma-Xu was also known for a few acting roles early in his career, as well as for being a screenwriter. The director of 33 known films, much of Ma-Xu's early work has been lost.
Ma-Xu was born Xu Weibang in 1905 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang. Little is known of this early period except that his parents died while Ma-Xu was still a child, which was said to influence his decision to incorporate his wife's surname, "Ma".
Career in film:
Ma-Xu studied at the Shanghai Institute of Fine Arts in the early 1920s. Following his graduation, he began working as an actor for the Mingxing Film Company, his first film being Zhang Shichuan's The Marriage Trap in 1924. Following a brief stint in the short-lived Langhua Film Company where he directed his first film in 1926, Ma-Xu returned to Mingxing where he began serving as assistant directors for some of the more established talent. His thriller, The Cry of Apes in a Deserted Valley is the only one of these directorial efforts to have survived.
Ma-Xu's first real success, however, did not come until 1937 with Song at Midnight, often referred to as China's first horror film. Based on Gaston Leroux's classic novel The Phantom of the Opera, the film is now seen as part of the canon of early Chinese cinema, and was also remade as The Phantom Lover by Ronny Yu in 1996. Ma-Xu followed up Song with two additional horror films, Walking Corpse in an Old House (1938) and The Lonely Soul (1938). In 1941, he made a lackluster sequel to Song at Midnight (during the height of the Second Sino-Japanese War), and also co-directed with Bu Wancang the controversial Japanese propaganda film Eternity (also known as The Opium War).
Like Bu, Ma-Xu suffered for his work on The Opium War after the Japanese were defeated and was eventually forced to move to Hong Kong where he continued to work in the film business until 1961, when he was killed in a road accident. wiki
Director (33 credits)
1961 Du mang qing yuan
1959 Hong fu si ben
1959 Liu yue xue (uncredited)
1958 Liu lang er
1957 Gou xiong shou
1957 Jiu se cai qi
1957 Fu huo de mei gui
1956 Wu ye jing hun
1956 Wo xin chang dan
1956 Yi dai mo shuai.
1955 Xin yu guang qu
1954 Bi xue huang hua
1949 Mei yan qin wang
1949 Qiong lou hen
1947 Chun can meng duan
1947 Tian luo di wang
1944 Wan shi liu fang
1943 Qiu Haitang
1942 Yuan yang lei
1941 Xian dai qing nian
1941 Ye ban ge sheng xu ji
1940 Diao Liu shi
1939 Ma feng nu
1938 Gu wu xing shi ji
1938 Leng yue shi hun
1937 Ye ban ge sheng
1935 Han jiang luo yan
1934 Ai yu
1934 Bao yu li hua
1930 Kong gu yuan sheng
1929 Hun shi mo wang
1928 Hei ye guai ren
1926 Qing chang guai ren
IMDB
Enlaces completados:
OK Ye ban ge sheng (Weibang Ma-Xu, 1937)