The 36th Chamber of Shaolin: Liu Chia-liang and Gordon Liu’s blockbuster and their other collaborations
After completing Challenges of The Masters and Executioners from Shaolin, Liu’s third film was The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. He became the first lead actor ever to appear with his head shaved. In Challenges of The Masters, Chan Koon Tai helped pave the way for La Ka Fai to rise. To return the favour, Liu Chia-liang let Chan be the sole lead actor in Executioners from Shaolin, while arranging Gordon Liu to play the less important role of Tung Tien Chin. The 36th Chamber of Shaolin became a smashing hit upon its release, and was screened at major cinemas like Jade, Pearl, Golden Harvest, Hollywood and Rex. Gordon Liu was well-received among the audience. According to Gordon Liu’s analysis, the storylines of Liu Chia-liang’s films were designed to showcase martial art films, unlike the other films out there which were normally based on historical narratives. Gordon Liu officially joined Shaw Brother after making The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, and had followed Liu Chia-liang ever since. He appeared in other films of Liu Chia-liang such as Mad Monkey Kung Fu and Heroes of the East, and also made a guest appearance in Shaolin Mantis.There were 12 studios in Shaw Brothers Studio. Eminent directors like Li Han Hsieng had priority in booking the studios and building his own backdrops inside. Owning to weaker financial strength and influence, less prominent directors would typically waited for their turn to move into the studio and they would slightly refurnish the backdrops for their own films. Cantonese films, like Killer Constable and The Flying Guillotine, accounted for the majority of action films in those days. One could divide action films into two categories: wuxia films and martial art films. The former was more exaggerated and imaginative, focusing on chivalry and gracefulness. Examples were Ho Meng Hwa’s Killer Constable and Chor Yuen’s Clans of Intrigue. Sun Chung was one of those who made wuxia films, but he also worked with Tong Gai on martial art films. Martial art films depend on the martial arts prowess of the actors themselves. Liu Chia-liang was the only one in the Hong Kong film industry that emphasized on authentic martial art skills. No wires were used when Gordon Liu made The 36th Chamber of Shaolin.
Gordon Liu did not know much about the size of the filming budgets that Liu Chia-liang operated on. He only remembered that 80 teams worked together at one point during the filming of The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. The actors put on their make-ups every day at 9am. The call time for work was 10am, according to the notice. However, Liu Chia-liang did not usually start working until after he had finished breakfast at around 11am. While waiting for the director, the actors and stuntmen would practice their martial art skills. Gordon Liu received HK$15,000 in payment and a bonus of HK$5,000 for The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. Later, he learnt that the film had become a box office hit, earning HK$40 million for Shaw Brothers. During the making of The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, Shaw Brothers gave him the English name “Gordon Liu”, which he still uses today. When he later travelled to India for filming, he found that everyone there knew him by the name of Gordon Liu.
Liu’s most favourite Shaw film was Eight Diagram Pole Fighter. He especially loved the tragic story told in the film, which is about the return of only six out of the seven sons of the Yang family after a military expedition. In that film, Gordon Liu portrayed the fifth son in the Yang family who rescued the sixth son played by Alexander Fu. As Fu died before the film was completed, the story was changed such that the fifth son had to rescue his younger sister, the eighth child of the family (played by Kara Hui). Gordon Liu belonged to Liu Chia-liang’s crew, while Alexander Fu belonged to Chang Cheh’s. Both film crews were very prestigious. It was a significant thing for the two crews to work together. The boss of Shaw Brothers probably facilitated their cooperation for the benefit of the box office. Unfortunately, Fu died prematurely before the filming process ended. Not only that the script must be changed, the crew members all suffered a blow emotionally.
The other film that Liu liked was Heroes of The East. Born in the 1950s, Liu always heard people taking negatively about the Japanese. However, after completing Heroes of The East, he changed the way he saw the Japanese. Heroes of The East was written by Liu Chia-liang and Chua Lam. It allowed Gordon Liu to play various characters. He had to fight with Japanese artist in the film. Yasuaki Kurata fought Liu with kendo. Kurata was a Japanese martial art masters recruited by Chang Cheh from the early days when he filmed The Water Margin. Liu admired the professionalism of Kurata because Kurata did not mind seeing Japanese martial arts getting beaten by Chinese martial arts in the film. This Japanese master possessed the spirit of a fighter for he respected his filming work without letting face or prestige get in the way. Real knifes and spears were used in Liu Chia-liang’s films. Gordon Liu was worried about getting injured in the beginning, but he became sure of his own skills after getting encouragement from Liu Chia-liang. Kurata used Japanese kendo in the dual against Liu, acting quickly and aggressively without holding back. Moreover, kendo was highly esteemed among Japanese martial art styles. That is why it was unforgettable to Liu until today. As a martial art master, Kurata expressed disagreement on the design of certain moves during rehearsal. However, Liu Chia-liang instantly demonstrated the underlying principle of the design to him, which convinced everyone including Kurata himself.
Gordon Liu thought that Liu Chia-liang had learnt to derive different new styles out of Hung Kuen, which gave his films diversity and richness in terms of content. He thought Ching Siu Tung and Liu Chia-liang were different from each other. Ching was a martial arts designer, and created fanciful artistic effects in his film shots. This diverged from what a martial arts master would do. With a foundation in Hung Kuen as well as references from other styles, Liu Chia-liang invented new moves such the “monkey fist” in Mad Monkey Kung Fu and “mantis fist” in Shaolin Mantis. What The 36th Chamber of Shaolin displayed was not real Hung Kuen, but was somehow that shadowed it.
Date | 2009-11-11 |
Duration | 23m54s |
Material Type | Audio |
Collection | Shaw Brothers´ Movies |
Source | Hong Kong Memory Project Oral History Interview |
Repository | Hong Kong Memory Project |
Note to Copyright | Copyright owned by Hong Kong Memory Project |
Accession No. | CC-LCH-SEG-005 |
A deviant boy in a wealthy family and his school life
Gordon Liu’s birth name is Xian Jinxi. His family’s hometown was in Gaoming County, Guangdong. Liu was born in 1951 and raised in Hong Kong, where he received education in eastern and western styles. His father was a businessman who ran a business that exported suanzhi (mahogany) crafts and antiquities. His father escaped to Hong Kong from Mainland China with the family as refugees. Only four of the eight children survived, and Liu was the youngest. As the Liu family was quite wealth then, Liu recalled that he lived the life of a rich man’s son who behaved in an arrogant, overbearing and disobedient way. His elder brother succeeded his father’s business, which Liu was not interested. Liu had ten maids who took care of him when he was small. They all left eventually because Liu used to scold and beat them often. His eldest sister thought that he was misbehaving, and therefore sent him to Salesian School, a boarding school in Shau Kei Wan. Liu began his boarding school life from the second form. Shau Kei Wan was a remote place, and the prose “a hero traps in Shau Kei Wan, wondering when he can be back in Central” circulated among students can describe of the .
Liu recalled that he lived a young master’s life in his childhood, and was used to being attended by servants. He compared the environment in his boarding school to a “chaotic prison”. Every day, he looked outside the window and sighed, thinking when he could leave and whether his parents sent him there out of hate. Between the third and the fifth forms, he was indignant at his own family. Salesian School is a Catholic English School. Liu understood that his sister wanted him to go there to learn English so that he could find a job more easily. Liu loved playing football, basketball and roller-skating at school, yet he did not concentrate on schoolwork much. Sometimes he would go to the priest to share his heart’s secrets and receive the holy icon. That was how he passed his childhood. The school was far away from the city area, so he was not disconnected with major events, trends and cultures out there. This, however, gave him the chance to become familiar with the Ten Commandments in the Bible.
The priest focused on imparting religious doctrines to students. Under the priest’s instruction, Liu used to work as an altar server and helped the priest dress up and carry out the communion right during the Mass. Such was a duty well respected by everyone. The Mass would be carried out in Latin in those days, so he had to learn the language from the priest. On the day of the Mass, he would wake up at six o’clock and arrived at the chapel by seven after washing, in order to get ready to serve at the altar. In the 1960s, Pope Paul VI once visited Hong Kong and hosted a Feast of Christ the King at the Hong Kong Stadium. A hundred altar servers were chosen to take part in it, and Liu was proud to be one of them.
Inspired his interests in Chinese martial arts by films and became student of Liu Chia-liang
Liu would go home during school holidays, and his brother would take him to the cinema. He discovered his interest in martial arts after seeing films about Wong Fei Hung, and was particular fascinated by the Chinese cultural elements that the master embodied. In the 1950s, various styles of fist techniques were popular in Hong Kong, including Karate, Judo, and boxing. However, Liu only loved Chinese martial arts because he had a mind to pass on the Chinese culture. Liu recalled that the term wushu (martial arts) was not widely used in those days yet. Martial arts training places was called “guoshu institute” or “guoshu gymnastics academy” The training place managed by Liu was called Liu Jaam Gymnastics Academy. The change of regime in China in 1949 prompted a lot of mainland Chinese masters to leave the country for places like Singapore and Malaysia. A good number of them came to Hong Kong and opened their training places where they taught students.
Liu’s father was reluctant to let Liu learn martial arts, based on the impression that those who knew martial arts were mostly hooligans. Instead, he wanted Liu to study well and take over his business. If Liu’s English ability was good enough, he could at least become a policeman. However, Liu thought that he had to learn martial arts well in order to be a proper Chinese person. Although Liu studied in an English school and was highly interested in western music, he loved Chinese culture at the same time, especially the “culture of motion”. He hoped to emulate Wong Fei Hung and decided to learn Hung Kuen, so he applied to Liu Chia-liang to become his student. Liu Jaam Gymnastics Academy was in Sheung Wan at that time, only a block away from the company of Liu’s father. Since his father was determined to stop Liu from learning martial arts, Liu stopped boarding during secondary school. He would go out after dinner with his books, and pretended that he was going to see a tutor. In reality, he was secretly going to the training place to practise martial arts. For many years, he trained daily from 8pm to 11pm.
As the youngest among all students, Gordon Liu had a gentle deposition and was helpful with miscellaneous chores at the training place. This earned him the favour of Liu Chia-liang’s mother. Gordon Liu thought that he was respectful towards his master, as he believed in the saying that “a master for a day is a father for life”. A student should not disobey his/ her master’s orders. This is what Liu believes even until today. A master does not only teach martial art skills, but also shows students the way to be good people by setting examples. A master may scold the students, but he always does so for a reason. The students should figure out the reason and reflect on what they have done wrong.
The third day of the third month on the Lunar Calendar is the birthday of Tin Hau. Liu insisted on taking part in the celebration at the training place, even if it meant that he had to skip school. One year, a birthday celebration took place on the island of Tsing Yi. Liu, who was already 16 to 17 years ago then, represented his training place in a race for the fireworks. In the midst of the event, two lion dance teams got into a fight. Liu’s team was caught in the middle of the mayhem. The fight got onto the newspaper and Liu’s father found Liu’s photos on it. It was not until then did he realize Liu was part of a martial arts training place. Liu successfully persuaded his father to let him continue with his training by arguing that 1) learning martial arts did not affect his schoolwork at all; 2) it rendered benefits on his constitution and his conduct; and 3) Liu Chia-liang absolute forbade his students to create trouble by misusing their martial art skills.
When Liu was learning martial arts at his training place, Liu Jaam, the master of Liu Chia-liang, had already passed away. At that time, Liu Chia-liang was already in the film business and seldom taught at the training place. Gordon Liu only saw him three to four times a year during worship, Tin Hau’s birthday, and the birthday of the deceased master Liu Jaam. Liu Chia-liang wished to uphold the reputation of Liu Jaam, therefore he set up the Liu Jaam Gymnastics Alumni Association, where fellow students could hold gathering and make themselves at home.
Gordon Liu chose to learn Hung Kuen because Kwan Tak Hing practiced it too. Moreover, he specifically chose it because he believed it is the toughest kind of fist technique. It takes 15 minutes to perform a full set of Hung Kuen. Every fist strike requires force and energy. One must jump and run over a large area. Wing Chun is less physically demanding and requires a smaller range of movement. A training place that taught Wing Chun could accommodate more students than one that taught Hung Kuen. It was also easier for the former to recruit students than the latter. Liu did not fear the hardship of learning Hung Kuen in those years because he really hoped to excel in it. He believed Hung Kuen is part of Chinese culture, and he had to learn it in order to become a proper Chinese person. Liu opined that his style of Hung Kuen was different from that of his master, Liu Chia-liang. He did not want just to become a clone of his master. The differences can be seen in the films, in which he intentionally infused artistic effects into his performance to align with the film characters he was portraying. Gordon Liu thought Liu Chia-liang’s Hung Kuen was educational because it showed the audience how to make offensive and defensive moves. Gordon Liu thought the films today are too commercialized, in the sense that they only focus on artistic effects but not on actual moves. While he agreed that a society must move forward economically, he held that society’s traditions must at the same time be retained. This is because traditions are the roots and basis of society. A society cannot innovate if it becomes rootless.Liu started his acting career starring Sha Chu Chong Wei and began to use his stage name Gordon Liu
After graduating from secondary school, Liu started working for a Japanese firm at Prince Building. Since he did not how to type, he was asked to work as a messenger with a monthly salary of HK$280. A year later, he changed his job to work for the accounting department of Lane Crawford through a friend’s introduction. He had to wear a suit and a tie to work. With a monthly salary of HK500, he was responsible for operating a credit card issuing machine, dispatching credit cards and collecting credit card debts every month. At night, he would return to his training place to practice as well as to teach younger students. His girlfriend also went to the training place often.
Gordon Liu did not think of going into filming at first. He liked watching films during his free time, especially martial art films featuring John Chiang, Ti Lung, Chan Chung Tai and Men Ching. His favourite was Bruce Lee. Yet, he never imaged he would become a film star himself. Early martial art films were simply action films, notably Jimmy Wang and John Chiang’s The Range of Wind, and Ng See Yuen’s Death Beach (set in the Early Republican period). These films gave rise to a number of action film actors such as Kam Chun Tat and Tan Tao Liang. Bruce Lee’s films signified that birth of Modern Kung Fu. After Lee’s death, the film industry sank into recession. In 1973, Liu Chia-liang served as the martial art coordinator of Sha Chu Chong Wei and he invited Gordon Liu to be the lead actor. Gordon Liu accepted his master’s invitation and went to Macau for two months to complete the filming. Despite a strong cast that consisted of film starts like Maggie Li, Dean Shek, and Paul Chun, the film was not met with great popularity. Lu Kar Leung’s mother liked Gordon Liu very much, and gave him the stage name of “Gordon Liu” that he has used since his first film, Sha Chu Chong Wei. As such, Gordon Liu was often mistaken as Liu Chia-liang’s own brother in the beginning. His father was quite understanding and did not object to Liu giving up his family name. Gordon Liu later went on to work as a stuntman, earning a daily wage of HK$70. The pay was not high, but Liu himself was able to cope financially. Although Liu heard a lot of mocking remarks from other people, he believed he should start from a low position and work his way up because, as a martial artist, he did not know much about film production.
The 36th Chamber of Shaolin: Liu Chia-liang and Gordon Liu’s blockbuster and their other collaborations
After completing Challenges of The Masters and Executioners from Shaolin, Liu’s third film was The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. He became the first lead actor ever to appear with his head shaved. In Challenges of The Masters, Chan Koon Tai helped pave the way for La Ka Fai to rise. To return the favour, Liu Chia-liang let Chan be the sole lead actor in Executioners from Shaolin, while arranging Gordon Liu to play the less important role of Tung Tien Chin. The 36th Chamber of Shaolin became a smashing hit upon its release, and was screened at major cinemas like Jade, Pearl, Golden Harvest, Hollywood and Rex. Gordon Liu was well-received among the audience. According to Gordon Liu’s analysis, the storylines of Liu Chia-liang’s films were designed to showcase martial art films, unlike the other films out there which were normally based on historical narratives. Gordon Liu officially joined Shaw Brother after making The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, and had followed Liu Chia-liang ever since. He appeared in other films of Liu Chia-liang such as Mad Monkey Kung Fu and Heroes of the East, and also made a guest appearance in Shaolin Mantis.There were 12 studios in Shaw Brothers Studio. Eminent directors like Li Han Hsieng had priority in booking the studios and building his own backdrops inside. Owning to weaker financial strength and influence, less prominent directors would typically waited for their turn to move into the studio and they would slightly refurnish the backdrops for their own films. Cantonese films, like Killer Constable and The Flying Guillotine, accounted for the majority of action films in those days. One could divide action films into two categories: wuxia films and martial art films. The former was more exaggerated and imaginative, focusing on chivalry and gracefulness. Examples were Ho Meng Hwa’s Killer Constable and Chor Yuen’s Clans of Intrigue. Sun Chung was one of those who made wuxia films, but he also worked with Tong Gai on martial art films. Martial art films depend on the martial arts prowess of the actors themselves. Liu Chia-liang was the only one in the Hong Kong film industry that emphasized on authentic martial art skills. No wires were used when Gordon Liu made The 36th Chamber of Shaolin.
Gordon Liu did not know much about the size of the filming budgets that Liu Chia-liang operated on. He only remembered that 80 teams worked together at one point during the filming of The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. The actors put on their make-ups every day at 9am. The call time for work was 10am, according to the notice. However, Liu Chia-liang did not usually start working until after he had finished breakfast at around 11am. While waiting for the director, the actors and stuntmen would practice their martial art skills. Gordon Liu received HK$15,000 in payment and a bonus of HK$5,000 for The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. Later, he learnt that the film had become a box office hit, earning HK$40 million for Shaw Brothers. During the making of The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, Shaw Brothers gave him the English name “Gordon Liu”, which he still uses today. When he later travelled to India for filming, he found that everyone there knew him by the name of Gordon Liu.
Liu’s most favourite Shaw film was Eight Diagram Pole Fighter. He especially loved the tragic story told in the film, which is about the return of only six out of the seven sons of the Yang family after a military expedition. In that film, Gordon Liu portrayed the fifth son in the Yang family who rescued the sixth son played by Alexander Fu. As Fu died before the film was completed, the story was changed such that the fifth son had to rescue his younger sister, the eighth child of the family (played by Kara Hui). Gordon Liu belonged to Liu Chia-liang’s crew, while Alexander Fu belonged to Chang Cheh’s. Both film crews were very prestigious. It was a significant thing for the two crews to work together. The boss of Shaw Brothers probably facilitated their cooperation for the benefit of the box office. Unfortunately, Fu died prematurely before the filming process ended. Not only that the script must be changed, the crew members all suffered a blow emotionally.
The other film that Liu liked was Heroes of The East. Born in the 1950s, Liu always heard people taking negatively about the Japanese. However, after completing Heroes of The East, he changed the way he saw the Japanese. Heroes of The East was written by Liu Chia-liang and Chua Lam. It allowed Gordon Liu to play various characters. He had to fight with Japanese artist in the film. Yasuaki Kurata fought Liu with kendo. Kurata was a Japanese martial art masters recruited by Chang Cheh from the early days when he filmed The Water Margin. Liu admired the professionalism of Kurata because Kurata did not mind seeing Japanese martial arts getting beaten by Chinese martial arts in the film. This Japanese master possessed the spirit of a fighter for he respected his filming work without letting face or prestige get in the way. Real knifes and spears were used in Liu Chia-liang’s films. Gordon Liu was worried about getting injured in the beginning, but he became sure of his own skills after getting encouragement from Liu Chia-liang. Kurata used Japanese kendo in the dual against Liu, acting quickly and aggressively without holding back. Moreover, kendo was highly esteemed among Japanese martial art styles. That is why it was unforgettable to Liu until today. As a martial art master, Kurata expressed disagreement on the design of certain moves during rehearsal. However, Liu Chia-liang instantly demonstrated the underlying principle of the design to him, which convinced everyone including Kurata himself.
Gordon Liu thought that Liu Chia-liang had learnt to derive different new styles out of Hung Kuen, which gave his films diversity and richness in terms of content. He thought Ching Siu Tung and Liu Chia-liang were different from each other. Ching was a martial arts designer, and created fanciful artistic effects in his film shots. This diverged from what a martial arts master would do. With a foundation in Hung Kuen as well as references from other styles, Liu Chia-liang invented new moves such the “monkey fist” in Mad Monkey Kung Fu and “mantis fist” in Shaolin Mantis. What The 36th Chamber of Shaolin displayed was not real Hung Kuen, but was somehow that shadowed it.
Date | 2009-11-11 |
Material Type | Audio |
Collection | Shaw Brothers´ Movies |
Source | Hong Kong Memory Project Oral History Interview |
Repository | Hong Kong Memory Project |
Note to Copyright | Copyright owned by Hong Kong Memory Project |
Accession No. | CC-LCH-SEG-005 |
A deviant boy in a wealthy family and his school life
Gordon Liu’s birth name is Xian Jinxi. His family’s hometown was in Gaoming County, Guangdong. Liu was born in 1951 and raised in Hong Kong, where he received education in eastern and western styles. His father was a businessman who ran a business that exported suanzhi (mahogany) crafts and antiquities. His father escaped to Hong Kong from Mainland China with the family as refugees. Only four of the eight children survived, and Liu was the youngest. As the Liu family was quite wealth then, Liu recalled that he lived the life of a rich man’s son who behaved in an arrogant, overbearing and disobedient way. His elder brother succeeded his father’s business, which Liu was not interested. Liu had ten maids who took care of him when he was small. They all left eventually because Liu used to scold and beat them often. His eldest sister thought that he was misbehaving, and therefore sent him to Salesian School, a boarding school in Shau Kei Wan. Liu began his boarding school life from the second form. Shau Kei Wan was a remote place, and the prose “a hero traps in Shau Kei Wan, wondering when he can be back in Central” circulated among students can describe of the .
Liu recalled that he lived a young master’s life in his childhood, and was used to being attended by servants. He compared the environment in his boarding school to a “chaotic prison”. Every day, he looked outside the window and sighed, thinking when he could leave and whether his parents sent him there out of hate. Between the third and the fifth forms, he was indignant at his own family. Salesian School is a Catholic English School. Liu understood that his sister wanted him to go there to learn English so that he could find a job more easily. Liu loved playing football, basketball and roller-skating at school, yet he did not concentrate on schoolwork much. Sometimes he would go to the priest to share his heart’s secrets and receive the holy icon. That was how he passed his childhood. The school was far away from the city area, so he was not disconnected with major events, trends and cultures out there. This, however, gave him the chance to become familiar with the Ten Commandments in the Bible.
The priest focused on imparting religious doctrines to students. Under the priest’s instruction, Liu used to work as an altar server and helped the priest dress up and carry out the communion right during the Mass. Such was a duty well respected by everyone. The Mass would be carried out in Latin in those days, so he had to learn the language from the priest. On the day of the Mass, he would wake up at six o’clock and arrived at the chapel by seven after washing, in order to get ready to serve at the altar. In the 1960s, Pope Paul VI once visited Hong Kong and hosted a Feast of Christ the King at the Hong Kong Stadium. A hundred altar servers were chosen to take part in it, and Liu was proud to be one of them.
Inspired his interests in Chinese martial arts by films and became student of Liu Chia-liang
Liu would go home during school holidays, and his brother would take him to the cinema. He discovered his interest in martial arts after seeing films about Wong Fei Hung, and was particular fascinated by the Chinese cultural elements that the master embodied. In the 1950s, various styles of fist techniques were popular in Hong Kong, including Karate, Judo, and boxing. However, Liu only loved Chinese martial arts because he had a mind to pass on the Chinese culture. Liu recalled that the term wushu (martial arts) was not widely used in those days yet. Martial arts training places was called “guoshu institute” or “guoshu gymnastics academy” The training place managed by Liu was called Liu Jaam Gymnastics Academy. The change of regime in China in 1949 prompted a lot of mainland Chinese masters to leave the country for places like Singapore and Malaysia. A good number of them came to Hong Kong and opened their training places where they taught students.
Liu’s father was reluctant to let Liu learn martial arts, based on the impression that those who knew martial arts were mostly hooligans. Instead, he wanted Liu to study well and take over his business. If Liu’s English ability was good enough, he could at least become a policeman. However, Liu thought that he had to learn martial arts well in order to be a proper Chinese person. Although Liu studied in an English school and was highly interested in western music, he loved Chinese culture at the same time, especially the “culture of motion”. He hoped to emulate Wong Fei Hung and decided to learn Hung Kuen, so he applied to Liu Chia-liang to become his student. Liu Jaam Gymnastics Academy was in Sheung Wan at that time, only a block away from the company of Liu’s father. Since his father was determined to stop Liu from learning martial arts, Liu stopped boarding during secondary school. He would go out after dinner with his books, and pretended that he was going to see a tutor. In reality, he was secretly going to the training place to practise martial arts. For many years, he trained daily from 8pm to 11pm.
As the youngest among all students, Gordon Liu had a gentle deposition and was helpful with miscellaneous chores at the training place. This earned him the favour of Liu Chia-liang’s mother. Gordon Liu thought that he was respectful towards his master, as he believed in the saying that “a master for a day is a father for life”. A student should not disobey his/ her master’s orders. This is what Liu believes even until today. A master does not only teach martial art skills, but also shows students the way to be good people by setting examples. A master may scold the students, but he always does so for a reason. The students should figure out the reason and reflect on what they have done wrong.
The third day of the third month on the Lunar Calendar is the birthday of Tin Hau. Liu insisted on taking part in the celebration at the training place, even if it meant that he had to skip school. One year, a birthday celebration took place on the island of Tsing Yi. Liu, who was already 16 to 17 years ago then, represented his training place in a race for the fireworks. In the midst of the event, two lion dance teams got into a fight. Liu’s team was caught in the middle of the mayhem. The fight got onto the newspaper and Liu’s father found Liu’s photos on it. It was not until then did he realize Liu was part of a martial arts training place. Liu successfully persuaded his father to let him continue with his training by arguing that 1) learning martial arts did not affect his schoolwork at all; 2) it rendered benefits on his constitution and his conduct; and 3) Liu Chia-liang absolute forbade his students to create trouble by misusing their martial art skills.
When Liu was learning martial arts at his training place, Liu Jaam, the master of Liu Chia-liang, had already passed away. At that time, Liu Chia-liang was already in the film business and seldom taught at the training place. Gordon Liu only saw him three to four times a year during worship, Tin Hau’s birthday, and the birthday of the deceased master Liu Jaam. Liu Chia-liang wished to uphold the reputation of Liu Jaam, therefore he set up the Liu Jaam Gymnastics Alumni Association, where fellow students could hold gathering and make themselves at home.
Gordon Liu chose to learn Hung Kuen because Kwan Tak Hing practiced it too. Moreover, he specifically chose it because he believed it is the toughest kind of fist technique. It takes 15 minutes to perform a full set of Hung Kuen. Every fist strike requires force and energy. One must jump and run over a large area. Wing Chun is less physically demanding and requires a smaller range of movement. A training place that taught Wing Chun could accommodate more students than one that taught Hung Kuen. It was also easier for the former to recruit students than the latter. Liu did not fear the hardship of learning Hung Kuen in those years because he really hoped to excel in it. He believed Hung Kuen is part of Chinese culture, and he had to learn it in order to become a proper Chinese person. Liu opined that his style of Hung Kuen was different from that of his master, Liu Chia-liang. He did not want just to become a clone of his master. The differences can be seen in the films, in which he intentionally infused artistic effects into his performance to align with the film characters he was portraying. Gordon Liu thought Liu Chia-liang’s Hung Kuen was educational because it showed the audience how to make offensive and defensive moves. Gordon Liu thought the films today are too commercialized, in the sense that they only focus on artistic effects but not on actual moves. While he agreed that a society must move forward economically, he held that society’s traditions must at the same time be retained. This is because traditions are the roots and basis of society. A society cannot innovate if it becomes rootless.Liu started his acting career starring Sha Chu Chong Wei and began to use his stage name Gordon Liu
After graduating from secondary school, Liu started working for a Japanese firm at Prince Building. Since he did not how to type, he was asked to work as a messenger with a monthly salary of HK$280. A year later, he changed his job to work for the accounting department of Lane Crawford through a friend’s introduction. He had to wear a suit and a tie to work. With a monthly salary of HK500, he was responsible for operating a credit card issuing machine, dispatching credit cards and collecting credit card debts every month. At night, he would return to his training place to practice as well as to teach younger students. His girlfriend also went to the training place often.
Gordon Liu did not think of going into filming at first. He liked watching films during his free time, especially martial art films featuring John Chiang, Ti Lung, Chan Chung Tai and Men Ching. His favourite was Bruce Lee. Yet, he never imaged he would become a film star himself. Early martial art films were simply action films, notably Jimmy Wang and John Chiang’s The Range of Wind, and Ng See Yuen’s Death Beach (set in the Early Republican period). These films gave rise to a number of action film actors such as Kam Chun Tat and Tan Tao Liang. Bruce Lee’s films signified that birth of Modern Kung Fu. After Lee’s death, the film industry sank into recession. In 1973, Liu Chia-liang served as the martial art coordinator of Sha Chu Chong Wei and he invited Gordon Liu to be the lead actor. Gordon Liu accepted his master’s invitation and went to Macau for two months to complete the filming. Despite a strong cast that consisted of film starts like Maggie Li, Dean Shek, and Paul Chun, the film was not met with great popularity. Lu Kar Leung’s mother liked Gordon Liu very much, and gave him the stage name of “Gordon Liu” that he has used since his first film, Sha Chu Chong Wei. As such, Gordon Liu was often mistaken as Liu Chia-liang’s own brother in the beginning. His father was quite understanding and did not object to Liu giving up his family name. Gordon Liu later went on to work as a stuntman, earning a daily wage of HK$70. The pay was not high, but Liu himself was able to cope financially. Although Liu heard a lot of mocking remarks from other people, he believed he should start from a low position and work his way up because, as a martial artist, he did not know much about film production.
The 36th Chamber of Shaolin: Liu Chia-liang and Gordon Liu’s blockbuster and their other collaborations
After completing Challenges of The Masters and Executioners from Shaolin, Liu’s third film was The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. He became the first lead actor ever to appear with his head shaved. In Challenges of The Masters, Chan Koon Tai helped pave the way for La Ka Fai to rise. To return the favour, Liu Chia-liang let Chan be the sole lead actor in Executioners from Shaolin, while arranging Gordon Liu to play the less important role of Tung Tien Chin. The 36th Chamber of Shaolin became a smashing hit upon its release, and was screened at major cinemas like Jade, Pearl, Golden Harvest, Hollywood and Rex. Gordon Liu was well-received among the audience. According to Gordon Liu’s analysis, the storylines of Liu Chia-liang’s films were designed to showcase martial art films, unlike the other films out there which were normally based on historical narratives. Gordon Liu officially joined Shaw Brother after making The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, and had followed Liu Chia-liang ever since. He appeared in other films of Liu Chia-liang such as Mad Monkey Kung Fu and Heroes of the East, and also made a guest appearance in Shaolin Mantis.There were 12 studios in Shaw Brothers Studio. Eminent directors like Li Han Hsieng had priority in booking the studios and building his own backdrops inside. Owning to weaker financial strength and influence, less prominent directors would typically waited for their turn to move into the studio and they would slightly refurnish the backdrops for their own films. Cantonese films, like Killer Constable and The Flying Guillotine, accounted for the majority of action films in those days. One could divide action films into two categories: wuxia films and martial art films. The former was more exaggerated and imaginative, focusing on chivalry and gracefulness. Examples were Ho Meng Hwa’s Killer Constable and Chor Yuen’s Clans of Intrigue. Sun Chung was one of those who made wuxia films, but he also worked with Tong Gai on martial art films. Martial art films depend on the martial arts prowess of the actors themselves. Liu Chia-liang was the only one in the Hong Kong film industry that emphasized on authentic martial art skills. No wires were used when Gordon Liu made The 36th Chamber of Shaolin.
Gordon Liu did not know much about the size of the filming budgets that Liu Chia-liang operated on. He only remembered that 80 teams worked together at one point during the filming of The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. The actors put on their make-ups every day at 9am. The call time for work was 10am, according to the notice. However, Liu Chia-liang did not usually start working until after he had finished breakfast at around 11am. While waiting for the director, the actors and stuntmen would practice their martial art skills. Gordon Liu received HK$15,000 in payment and a bonus of HK$5,000 for The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. Later, he learnt that the film had become a box office hit, earning HK$40 million for Shaw Brothers. During the making of The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, Shaw Brothers gave him the English name “Gordon Liu”, which he still uses today. When he later travelled to India for filming, he found that everyone there knew him by the name of Gordon Liu.
Liu’s most favourite Shaw film was Eight Diagram Pole Fighter. He especially loved the tragic story told in the film, which is about the return of only six out of the seven sons of the Yang family after a military expedition. In that film, Gordon Liu portrayed the fifth son in the Yang family who rescued the sixth son played by Alexander Fu. As Fu died before the film was completed, the story was changed such that the fifth son had to rescue his younger sister, the eighth child of the family (played by Kara Hui). Gordon Liu belonged to Liu Chia-liang’s crew, while Alexander Fu belonged to Chang Cheh’s. Both film crews were very prestigious. It was a significant thing for the two crews to work together. The boss of Shaw Brothers probably facilitated their cooperation for the benefit of the box office. Unfortunately, Fu died prematurely before the filming process ended. Not only that the script must be changed, the crew members all suffered a blow emotionally.
The other film that Liu liked was Heroes of The East. Born in the 1950s, Liu always heard people taking negatively about the Japanese. However, after completing Heroes of The East, he changed the way he saw the Japanese. Heroes of The East was written by Liu Chia-liang and Chua Lam. It allowed Gordon Liu to play various characters. He had to fight with Japanese artist in the film. Yasuaki Kurata fought Liu with kendo. Kurata was a Japanese martial art masters recruited by Chang Cheh from the early days when he filmed The Water Margin. Liu admired the professionalism of Kurata because Kurata did not mind seeing Japanese martial arts getting beaten by Chinese martial arts in the film. This Japanese master possessed the spirit of a fighter for he respected his filming work without letting face or prestige get in the way. Real knifes and spears were used in Liu Chia-liang’s films. Gordon Liu was worried about getting injured in the beginning, but he became sure of his own skills after getting encouragement from Liu Chia-liang. Kurata used Japanese kendo in the dual against Liu, acting quickly and aggressively without holding back. Moreover, kendo was highly esteemed among Japanese martial art styles. That is why it was unforgettable to Liu until today. As a martial art master, Kurata expressed disagreement on the design of certain moves during rehearsal. However, Liu Chia-liang instantly demonstrated the underlying principle of the design to him, which convinced everyone including Kurata himself.
Gordon Liu thought that Liu Chia-liang had learnt to derive different new styles out of Hung Kuen, which gave his films diversity and richness in terms of content. He thought Ching Siu Tung and Liu Chia-liang were different from each other. Ching was a martial arts designer, and created fanciful artistic effects in his film shots. This diverged from what a martial arts master would do. With a foundation in Hung Kuen as well as references from other styles, Liu Chia-liang invented new moves such the “monkey fist” in Mad Monkey Kung Fu and “mantis fist” in Shaolin Mantis. What The 36th Chamber of Shaolin displayed was not real Hung Kuen, but was somehow that shadowed it.
Date | 2009-11-11 |
Material Type | Audio |
Collection | Shaw Brothers´ Movies |
Source | Hong Kong Memory Project Oral History Interview |
Repository | Hong Kong Memory Project |
Note to Copyright | Copyright owned by Hong Kong Memory Project |
Accession No. | CC-LCH-SEG-005 |
A deviant boy in a wealthy family and his school life
Gordon Liu’s birth name is Xian Jinxi. His family’s hometown was in Gaoming County, Guangdong. Liu was born in 1951 and raised in Hong Kong, where he received education in eastern and western styles. His father was a businessman who ran a business that exported suanzhi (mahogany) crafts and antiquities. His father escaped to Hong Kong from Mainland China with the family as refugees. Only four of the eight children survived, and Liu was the youngest. As the Liu family was quite wealth then, Liu recalled that he lived the life of a rich man’s son who behaved in an arrogant, overbearing and disobedient way. His elder brother succeeded his father’s business, which Liu was not interested. Liu had ten maids who took care of him when he was small. They all left eventually because Liu used to scold and beat them often. His eldest sister thought that he was misbehaving, and therefore sent him to Salesian School, a boarding school in Shau Kei Wan. Liu began his boarding school life from the second form. Shau Kei Wan was a remote place, and the prose “a hero traps in Shau Kei Wan, wondering when he can be back in Central” circulated among students can describe of the .
Liu recalled that he lived a young master’s life in his childhood, and was used to being attended by servants. He compared the environment in his boarding school to a “chaotic prison”. Every day, he looked outside the window and sighed, thinking when he could leave and whether his parents sent him there out of hate. Between the third and the fifth forms, he was indignant at his own family. Salesian School is a Catholic English School. Liu understood that his sister wanted him to go there to learn English so that he could find a job more easily. Liu loved playing football, basketball and roller-skating at school, yet he did not concentrate on schoolwork much. Sometimes he would go to the priest to share his heart’s secrets and receive the holy icon. That was how he passed his childhood. The school was far away from the city area, so he was not disconnected with major events, trends and cultures out there. This, however, gave him the chance to become familiar with the Ten Commandments in the Bible.
The priest focused on imparting religious doctrines to students. Under the priest’s instruction, Liu used to work as an altar server and helped the priest dress up and carry out the communion right during the Mass. Such was a duty well respected by everyone. The Mass would be carried out in Latin in those days, so he had to learn the language from the priest. On the day of the Mass, he would wake up at six o’clock and arrived at the chapel by seven after washing, in order to get ready to serve at the altar. In the 1960s, Pope Paul VI once visited Hong Kong and hosted a Feast of Christ the King at the Hong Kong Stadium. A hundred altar servers were chosen to take part in it, and Liu was proud to be one of them.
Inspired his interests in Chinese martial arts by films and became student of Liu Chia-liang
Liu would go home during school holidays, and his brother would take him to the cinema. He discovered his interest in martial arts after seeing films about Wong Fei Hung, and was particular fascinated by the Chinese cultural elements that the master embodied. In the 1950s, various styles of fist techniques were popular in Hong Kong, including Karate, Judo, and boxing. However, Liu only loved Chinese martial arts because he had a mind to pass on the Chinese culture. Liu recalled that the term wushu (martial arts) was not widely used in those days yet. Martial arts training places was called “guoshu institute” or “guoshu gymnastics academy” The training place managed by Liu was called Liu Jaam Gymnastics Academy. The change of regime in China in 1949 prompted a lot of mainland Chinese masters to leave the country for places like Singapore and Malaysia. A good number of them came to Hong Kong and opened their training places where they taught students.
Liu’s father was reluctant to let Liu learn martial arts, based on the impression that those who knew martial arts were mostly hooligans. Instead, he wanted Liu to study well and take over his business. If Liu’s English ability was good enough, he could at least become a policeman. However, Liu thought that he had to learn martial arts well in order to be a proper Chinese person. Although Liu studied in an English school and was highly interested in western music, he loved Chinese culture at the same time, especially the “culture of motion”. He hoped to emulate Wong Fei Hung and decided to learn Hung Kuen, so he applied to Liu Chia-liang to become his student. Liu Jaam Gymnastics Academy was in Sheung Wan at that time, only a block away from the company of Liu’s father. Since his father was determined to stop Liu from learning martial arts, Liu stopped boarding during secondary school. He would go out after dinner with his books, and pretended that he was going to see a tutor. In reality, he was secretly going to the training place to practise martial arts. For many years, he trained daily from 8pm to 11pm.
As the youngest among all students, Gordon Liu had a gentle deposition and was helpful with miscellaneous chores at the training place. This earned him the favour of Liu Chia-liang’s mother. Gordon Liu thought that he was respectful towards his master, as he believed in the saying that “a master for a day is a father for life”. A student should not disobey his/ her master’s orders. This is what Liu believes even until today. A master does not only teach martial art skills, but also shows students the way to be good people by setting examples. A master may scold the students, but he always does so for a reason. The students should figure out the reason and reflect on what they have done wrong.
The third day of the third month on the Lunar Calendar is the birthday of Tin Hau. Liu insisted on taking part in the celebration at the training place, even if it meant that he had to skip school. One year, a birthday celebration took place on the island of Tsing Yi. Liu, who was already 16 to 17 years ago then, represented his training place in a race for the fireworks. In the midst of the event, two lion dance teams got into a fight. Liu’s team was caught in the middle of the mayhem. The fight got onto the newspaper and Liu’s father found Liu’s photos on it. It was not until then did he realize Liu was part of a martial arts training place. Liu successfully persuaded his father to let him continue with his training by arguing that 1) learning martial arts did not affect his schoolwork at all; 2) it rendered benefits on his constitution and his conduct; and 3) Liu Chia-liang absolute forbade his students to create trouble by misusing their martial art skills.
When Liu was learning martial arts at his training place, Liu Jaam, the master of Liu Chia-liang, had already passed away. At that time, Liu Chia-liang was already in the film business and seldom taught at the training place. Gordon Liu only saw him three to four times a year during worship, Tin Hau’s birthday, and the birthday of the deceased master Liu Jaam. Liu Chia-liang wished to uphold the reputation of Liu Jaam, therefore he set up the Liu Jaam Gymnastics Alumni Association, where fellow students could hold gathering and make themselves at home.
Gordon Liu chose to learn Hung Kuen because Kwan Tak Hing practiced it too. Moreover, he specifically chose it because he believed it is the toughest kind of fist technique. It takes 15 minutes to perform a full set of Hung Kuen. Every fist strike requires force and energy. One must jump and run over a large area. Wing Chun is less physically demanding and requires a smaller range of movement. A training place that taught Wing Chun could accommodate more students than one that taught Hung Kuen. It was also easier for the former to recruit students than the latter. Liu did not fear the hardship of learning Hung Kuen in those years because he really hoped to excel in it. He believed Hung Kuen is part of Chinese culture, and he had to learn it in order to become a proper Chinese person. Liu opined that his style of Hung Kuen was different from that of his master, Liu Chia-liang. He did not want just to become a clone of his master. The differences can be seen in the films, in which he intentionally infused artistic effects into his performance to align with the film characters he was portraying. Gordon Liu thought Liu Chia-liang’s Hung Kuen was educational because it showed the audience how to make offensive and defensive moves. Gordon Liu thought the films today are too commercialized, in the sense that they only focus on artistic effects but not on actual moves. While he agreed that a society must move forward economically, he held that society’s traditions must at the same time be retained. This is because traditions are the roots and basis of society. A society cannot innovate if it becomes rootless.Liu started his acting career starring Sha Chu Chong Wei and began to use his stage name Gordon Liu
After graduating from secondary school, Liu started working for a Japanese firm at Prince Building. Since he did not how to type, he was asked to work as a messenger with a monthly salary of HK$280. A year later, he changed his job to work for the accounting department of Lane Crawford through a friend’s introduction. He had to wear a suit and a tie to work. With a monthly salary of HK500, he was responsible for operating a credit card issuing machine, dispatching credit cards and collecting credit card debts every month. At night, he would return to his training place to practice as well as to teach younger students. His girlfriend also went to the training place often.
Gordon Liu did not think of going into filming at first. He liked watching films during his free time, especially martial art films featuring John Chiang, Ti Lung, Chan Chung Tai and Men Ching. His favourite was Bruce Lee. Yet, he never imaged he would become a film star himself. Early martial art films were simply action films, notably Jimmy Wang and John Chiang’s The Range of Wind, and Ng See Yuen’s Death Beach (set in the Early Republican period). These films gave rise to a number of action film actors such as Kam Chun Tat and Tan Tao Liang. Bruce Lee’s films signified that birth of Modern Kung Fu. After Lee’s death, the film industry sank into recession. In 1973, Liu Chia-liang served as the martial art coordinator of Sha Chu Chong Wei and he invited Gordon Liu to be the lead actor. Gordon Liu accepted his master’s invitation and went to Macau for two months to complete the filming. Despite a strong cast that consisted of film starts like Maggie Li, Dean Shek, and Paul Chun, the film was not met with great popularity. Lu Kar Leung’s mother liked Gordon Liu very much, and gave him the stage name of “Gordon Liu” that he has used since his first film, Sha Chu Chong Wei. As such, Gordon Liu was often mistaken as Liu Chia-liang’s own brother in the beginning. His father was quite understanding and did not object to Liu giving up his family name. Gordon Liu later went on to work as a stuntman, earning a daily wage of HK$70. The pay was not high, but Liu himself was able to cope financially. Although Liu heard a lot of mocking remarks from other people, he believed he should start from a low position and work his way up because, as a martial artist, he did not know much about film production.
The 36th Chamber of Shaolin: Liu Chia-liang and Gordon Liu’s blockbuster and their other collaborations
There were 12 studios in Shaw Brothers Studio. Eminent directors like Li Han Hsieng had priority in booking the studios and building his own backdrops inside. Owning to weaker financial strength and influence, less prominent directors would typically waited for their turn to move into the studio and they would slightly refurnish the backdrops for their own films. Cantonese films, like Killer Constable and The Flying Guillotine, accounted for the majority of action films in those days. One could divide action films into two categories: wuxia films and martial art films. The former was more exaggerated and imaginative, focusing on chivalry and gracefulness. Examples were Ho Meng Hwa’s Killer Constable and Chor Yuen’s Clans of Intrigue. Sun Chung was one of those who made wuxia films, but he also worked with Tong Gai on martial art films. Martial art films depend on the martial arts prowess of the actors themselves. Liu Chia-liang was the only one in the Hong Kong film industry that emphasized on authentic martial art skills. No wires were used when Gordon Liu made The 36th Chamber of Shaolin.
Gordon Liu did not know much about the size of the filming budgets that Liu Chia-liang operated on. He only remembered that 80 teams worked together at one point during the filming of The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. The actors put on their make-ups every day at 9am. The call time for work was 10am, according to the notice. However, Liu Chia-liang did not usually start working until after he had finished breakfast at around 11am. While waiting for the director, the actors and stuntmen would practice their martial art skills. Gordon Liu received HK$15,000 in payment and a bonus of HK$5,000 for The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. Later, he learnt that the film had become a box office hit, earning HK$40 million for Shaw Brothers. During the making of The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, Shaw Brothers gave him the English name “Gordon Liu”, which he still uses today. When he later travelled to India for filming, he found that everyone there knew him by the name of Gordon Liu.
Liu’s most favourite Shaw film was Eight Diagram Pole Fighter. He especially loved the tragic story told in the film, which is about the return of only six out of the seven sons of the Yang family after a military expedition. In that film, Gordon Liu portrayed the fifth son in the Yang family who rescued the sixth son played by Alexander Fu. As Fu died before the film was completed, the story was changed such that the fifth son had to rescue his younger sister, the eighth child of the family (played by Kara Hui). Gordon Liu belonged to Liu Chia-liang’s crew, while Alexander Fu belonged to Chang Cheh’s. Both film crews were very prestigious. It was a significant thing for the two crews to work together. The boss of Shaw Brothers probably facilitated their cooperation for the benefit of the box office. Unfortunately, Fu died prematurely before the filming process ended. Not only that the script must be changed, the crew members all suffered a blow emotionally.
The other film that Liu liked was Heroes of The East. Born in the 1950s, Liu always heard people taking negatively about the Japanese. However, after completing Heroes of The East, he changed the way he saw the Japanese. Heroes of The East was written by Liu Chia-liang and Chua Lam. It allowed Gordon Liu to play various characters. He had to fight with Japanese artist in the film. Yasuaki Kurata fought Liu with kendo. Kurata was a Japanese martial art masters recruited by Chang Cheh from the early days when he filmed The Water Margin. Liu admired the professionalism of Kurata because Kurata did not mind seeing Japanese martial arts getting beaten by Chinese martial arts in the film. This Japanese master possessed the spirit of a fighter for he respected his filming work without letting face or prestige get in the way. Real knifes and spears were used in Liu Chia-liang’s films. Gordon Liu was worried about getting injured in the beginning, but he became sure of his own skills after getting encouragement from Liu Chia-liang. Kurata used Japanese kendo in the dual against Liu, acting quickly and aggressively without holding back. Moreover, kendo was highly esteemed among Japanese martial art styles. That is why it was unforgettable to Liu until today. As a martial art master, Kurata expressed disagreement on the design of certain moves during rehearsal. However, Liu Chia-liang instantly demonstrated the underlying principle of the design to him, which convinced everyone including Kurata himself.
Gordon Liu thought that Liu Chia-liang had learnt to derive different new styles out of Hung Kuen, which gave his films diversity and richness in terms of content. He thought Ching Siu Tung and Liu Chia-liang were different from each other. Ching was a martial arts designer, and created fanciful artistic effects in his film shots. This diverged from what a martial arts master would do. With a foundation in Hung Kuen as well as references from other styles, Liu Chia-liang invented new moves such the “monkey fist” in Mad Monkey Kung Fu and “mantis fist” in Shaolin Mantis. What The 36th Chamber of Shaolin displayed was not real Hung Kuen, but was somehow that shadowed it.
Interview Date | Date | 2009-11-11 |
Duration | 23m54s | |
Material Type | Audio | |
Language / Dialect | Cantonese | |
Collection | Shaw Brothers´ Movies | |
Source | Hong Kong Memory Project Oral History Interview | |
Repository | Hong Kong Memory Project | |
Note to Copyright | Copyright owned by Hong Kong Memory Project | |
Accession No. | CC-LCH-SEG-005 |
A deviant boy in a wealthy family and his school life
Gordon Liu’s birth name is Xian Jinxi. His family’s hometown was in Gaoming County, Guangdong. Liu was born in 1951 and raised in Hong Kong, where he received education in eastern and western styles. His father was a businessman who ran a business that exported suanzhi (mahogany) crafts and antiquities. His father escaped to Hong Kong from Mainland China with the family as refugees. Only four of the eight children survived, and Liu was the youngest. As the Liu family was quite wealth then, Liu recalled that he lived the life of a rich man’s son who behaved in an arrogant, overbearing and disobedient way. His elder brother succeeded his father’s business, which Liu was not interested. Liu had ten maids who took care of him when he was small. They all left eventually because Liu used to scold and beat them often. His eldest sister thought that he was misbehaving, and therefore sent him to Salesian School, a boarding school in Shau Kei Wan. Liu began his boarding school life from the second form. Shau Kei Wan was a remote place, and the prose “a hero traps in Shau Kei Wan, wondering when he can be back in Central” circulated among students can describe of the .
Liu recalled that he lived a young master’s life in his childhood, and was used to being attended by servants. He compared the environment in his boarding school to a “chaotic prison”. Every day, he looked outside the window and sighed, thinking when he could leave and whether his parents sent him there out of hate. Between the third and the fifth forms, he was indignant at his own family. Salesian School is a Catholic English School. Liu understood that his sister wanted him to go there to learn English so that he could find a job more easily. Liu loved playing football, basketball and roller-skating at school, yet he did not concentrate on schoolwork much. Sometimes he would go to the priest to share his heart’s secrets and receive the holy icon. That was how he passed his childhood. The school was far away from the city area, so he was not disconnected with major events, trends and cultures out there. This, however, gave him the chance to become familiar with the Ten Commandments in the Bible.
The priest focused on imparting religious doctrines to students. Under the priest’s instruction, Liu used to work as an altar server and helped the priest dress up and carry out the communion right during the Mass. Such was a duty well respected by everyone. The Mass would be carried out in Latin in those days, so he had to learn the language from the priest. On the day of the Mass, he would wake up at six o’clock and arrived at the chapel by seven after washing, in order to get ready to serve at the altar. In the 1960s, Pope Paul VI once visited Hong Kong and hosted a Feast of Christ the King at the Hong Kong Stadium. A hundred altar servers were chosen to take part in it, and Liu was proud to be one of them.
Inspired his interests in Chinese martial arts by films and became student of Liu Chia-liang
Liu would go home during school holidays, and his brother would take him to the cinema. He discovered his interest in martial arts after seeing films about Wong Fei Hung, and was particular fascinated by the Chinese cultural elements that the master embodied. In the 1950s, various styles of fist techniques were popular in Hong Kong, including Karate, Judo, and boxing. However, Liu only loved Chinese martial arts because he had a mind to pass on the Chinese culture. Liu recalled that the term wushu (martial arts) was not widely used in those days yet. Martial arts training places was called “guoshu institute” or “guoshu gymnastics academy” The training place managed by Liu was called Liu Jaam Gymnastics Academy. The change of regime in China in 1949 prompted a lot of mainland Chinese masters to leave the country for places like Singapore and Malaysia. A good number of them came to Hong Kong and opened their training places where they taught students.
Liu’s father was reluctant to let Liu learn martial arts, based on the impression that those who knew martial arts were mostly hooligans. Instead, he wanted Liu to study well and take over his business. If Liu’s English ability was good enough, he could at least become a policeman. However, Liu thought that he had to learn martial arts well in order to be a proper Chinese person. Although Liu studied in an English school and was highly interested in western music, he loved Chinese culture at the same time, especially the “culture of motion”. He hoped to emulate Wong Fei Hung and decided to learn Hung Kuen, so he applied to Liu Chia-liang to become his student. Liu Jaam Gymnastics Academy was in Sheung Wan at that time, only a block away from the company of Liu’s father. Since his father was determined to stop Liu from learning martial arts, Liu stopped boarding during secondary school. He would go out after dinner with his books, and pretended that he was going to see a tutor. In reality, he was secretly going to the training place to practise martial arts. For many years, he trained daily from 8pm to 11pm.
As the youngest among all students, Gordon Liu had a gentle deposition and was helpful with miscellaneous chores at the training place. This earned him the favour of Liu Chia-liang’s mother. Gordon Liu thought that he was respectful towards his master, as he believed in the saying that “a master for a day is a father for life”. A student should not disobey his/ her master’s orders. This is what Liu believes even until today. A master does not only teach martial art skills, but also shows students the way to be good people by setting examples. A master may scold the students, but he always does so for a reason. The students should figure out the reason and reflect on what they have done wrong.
The third day of the third month on the Lunar Calendar is the birthday of Tin Hau. Liu insisted on taking part in the celebration at the training place, even if it meant that he had to skip school. One year, a birthday celebration took place on the island of Tsing Yi. Liu, who was already 16 to 17 years ago then, represented his training place in a race for the fireworks. In the midst of the event, two lion dance teams got into a fight. Liu’s team was caught in the middle of the mayhem. The fight got onto the newspaper and Liu’s father found Liu’s photos on it. It was not until then did he realize Liu was part of a martial arts training place. Liu successfully persuaded his father to let him continue with his training by arguing that 1) learning martial arts did not affect his schoolwork at all; 2) it rendered benefits on his constitution and his conduct; and 3) Liu Chia-liang absolute forbade his students to create trouble by misusing their martial art skills.
When Liu was learning martial arts at his training place, Liu Jaam, the master of Liu Chia-liang, had already passed away. At that time, Liu Chia-liang was already in the film business and seldom taught at the training place. Gordon Liu only saw him three to four times a year during worship, Tin Hau’s birthday, and the birthday of the deceased master Liu Jaam. Liu Chia-liang wished to uphold the reputation of Liu Jaam, therefore he set up the Liu Jaam Gymnastics Alumni Association, where fellow students could hold gathering and make themselves at home.
Gordon Liu chose to learn Hung Kuen because Kwan Tak Hing practiced it too. Moreover, he specifically chose it because he believed it is the toughest kind of fist technique. It takes 15 minutes to perform a full set of Hung Kuen. Every fist strike requires force and energy. One must jump and run over a large area. Wing Chun is less physically demanding and requires a smaller range of movement. A training place that taught Wing Chun could accommodate more students than one that taught Hung Kuen. It was also easier for the former to recruit students than the latter. Liu did not fear the hardship of learning Hung Kuen in those years because he really hoped to excel in it. He believed Hung Kuen is part of Chinese culture, and he had to learn it in order to become a proper Chinese person. Liu opined that his style of Hung Kuen was different from that of his master, Liu Chia-liang. He did not want just to become a clone of his master. The differences can be seen in the films, in which he intentionally infused artistic effects into his performance to align with the film characters he was portraying. Gordon Liu thought Liu Chia-liang’s Hung Kuen was educational because it showed the audience how to make offensive and defensive moves. Gordon Liu thought the films today are too commercialized, in the sense that they only focus on artistic effects but not on actual moves. While he agreed that a society must move forward economically, he held that society’s traditions must at the same time be retained. This is because traditions are the roots and basis of society. A society cannot innovate if it becomes rootless.Liu started his acting career starring Sha Chu Chong Wei and began to use his stage name Gordon Liu
After graduating from secondary school, Liu started working for a Japanese firm at Prince Building. Since he did not how to type, he was asked to work as a messenger with a monthly salary of HK$280. A year later, he changed his job to work for the accounting department of Lane Crawford through a friend’s introduction. He had to wear a suit and a tie to work. With a monthly salary of HK500, he was responsible for operating a credit card issuing machine, dispatching credit cards and collecting credit card debts every month. At night, he would return to his training place to practice as well as to teach younger students. His girlfriend also went to the training place often.
Gordon Liu did not think of going into filming at first. He liked watching films during his free time, especially martial art films featuring John Chiang, Ti Lung, Chan Chung Tai and Men Ching. His favourite was Bruce Lee. Yet, he never imaged he would become a film star himself. Early martial art films were simply action films, notably Jimmy Wang and John Chiang’s The Range of Wind, and Ng See Yuen’s Death Beach (set in the Early Republican period). These films gave rise to a number of action film actors such as Kam Chun Tat and Tan Tao Liang. Bruce Lee’s films signified that birth of Modern Kung Fu. After Lee’s death, the film industry sank into recession. In 1973, Liu Chia-liang served as the martial art coordinator of Sha Chu Chong Wei and he invited Gordon Liu to be the lead actor. Gordon Liu accepted his master’s invitation and went to Macau for two months to complete the filming. Despite a strong cast that consisted of film starts like Maggie Li, Dean Shek, and Paul Chun, the film was not met with great popularity. Lu Kar Leung’s mother liked Gordon Liu very much, and gave him the stage name of “Gordon Liu” that he has used since his first film, Sha Chu Chong Wei. As such, Gordon Liu was often mistaken as Liu Chia-liang’s own brother in the beginning. His father was quite understanding and did not object to Liu giving up his family name. Gordon Liu later went on to work as a stuntman, earning a daily wage of HK$70. The pay was not high, but Liu himself was able to cope financially. Although Liu heard a lot of mocking remarks from other people, he believed he should start from a low position and work his way up because, as a martial artist, he did not know much about film production.
The 36th Chamber of Shaolin: Liu Chia-liang and Gordon Liu’s blockbuster and their other collaborations
After completing Challenges of The Masters and Executioners from Shaolin, Liu’s third film was The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. He became the first lead actor ever to appear with his head shaved. In Challenges of The Masters, Chan Koon Tai helped pave the way for La Ka Fai to rise. To return the favour, Liu Chia-liang let Chan be the sole lead actor in Executioners from Shaolin, while arranging Gordon Liu to play the less important role of Tung Tien Chin. The 36th Chamber of Shaolin became a smashing hit upon its release, and was screened at major cinemas like Jade, Pearl, Golden Harvest, Hollywood and Rex. Gordon Liu was well-received among the audience. According to Gordon Liu’s analysis, the storylines of Liu Chia-liang’s films were designed to showcase martial art films, unlike the other films out there which were normally based on historical narratives. Gordon Liu officially joined Shaw Brother after making The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, and had followed Liu Chia-liang ever since. He appeared in other films of Liu Chia-liang such as Mad Monkey Kung Fu and Heroes of the East, and also made a guest appearance in Shaolin Mantis.There were 12 studios in Shaw Brothers Studio. Eminent directors like Li Han Hsieng had priority in booking the studios and building his own backdrops inside. Owning to weaker financial strength and influence, less prominent directors would typically waited for their turn to move into the studio and they would slightly refurnish the backdrops for their own films. Cantonese films, like Killer Constable and The Flying Guillotine, accounted for the majority of action films in those days. One could divide action films into two categories: wuxia films and martial art films. The former was more exaggerated and imaginative, focusing on chivalry and gracefulness. Examples were Ho Meng Hwa’s Killer Constable and Chor Yuen’s Clans of Intrigue. Sun Chung was one of those who made wuxia films, but he also worked with Tong Gai on martial art films. Martial art films depend on the martial arts prowess of the actors themselves. Liu Chia-liang was the only one in the Hong Kong film industry that emphasized on authentic martial art skills. No wires were used when Gordon Liu made The 36th Chamber of Shaolin.
Gordon Liu did not know much about the size of the filming budgets that Liu Chia-liang operated on. He only remembered that 80 teams worked together at one point during the filming of The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. The actors put on their make-ups every day at 9am. The call time for work was 10am, according to the notice. However, Liu Chia-liang did not usually start working until after he had finished breakfast at around 11am. While waiting for the director, the actors and stuntmen would practice their martial art skills. Gordon Liu received HK$15,000 in payment and a bonus of HK$5,000 for The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. Later, he learnt that the film had become a box office hit, earning HK$40 million for Shaw Brothers. During the making of The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, Shaw Brothers gave him the English name “Gordon Liu”, which he still uses today. When he later travelled to India for filming, he found that everyone there knew him by the name of Gordon Liu.
Liu’s most favourite Shaw film was Eight Diagram Pole Fighter. He especially loved the tragic story told in the film, which is about the return of only six out of the seven sons of the Yang family after a military expedition. In that film, Gordon Liu portrayed the fifth son in the Yang family who rescued the sixth son played by Alexander Fu. As Fu died before the film was completed, the story was changed such that the fifth son had to rescue his younger sister, the eighth child of the family (played by Kara Hui). Gordon Liu belonged to Liu Chia-liang’s crew, while Alexander Fu belonged to Chang Cheh’s. Both film crews were very prestigious. It was a significant thing for the two crews to work together. The boss of Shaw Brothers probably facilitated their cooperation for the benefit of the box office. Unfortunately, Fu died prematurely before the filming process ended. Not only that the script must be changed, the crew members all suffered a blow emotionally.
The other film that Liu liked was Heroes of The East. Born in the 1950s, Liu always heard people taking negatively about the Japanese. However, after completing Heroes of The East, he changed the way he saw the Japanese. Heroes of The East was written by Liu Chia-liang and Chua Lam. It allowed Gordon Liu to play various characters. He had to fight with Japanese artist in the film. Yasuaki Kurata fought Liu with kendo. Kurata was a Japanese martial art masters recruited by Chang Cheh from the early days when he filmed The Water Margin. Liu admired the professionalism of Kurata because Kurata did not mind seeing Japanese martial arts getting beaten by Chinese martial arts in the film. This Japanese master possessed the spirit of a fighter for he respected his filming work without letting face or prestige get in the way. Real knifes and spears were used in Liu Chia-liang’s films. Gordon Liu was worried about getting injured in the beginning, but he became sure of his own skills after getting encouragement from Liu Chia-liang. Kurata used Japanese kendo in the dual against Liu, acting quickly and aggressively without holding back. Moreover, kendo was highly esteemed among Japanese martial art styles. That is why it was unforgettable to Liu until today. As a martial art master, Kurata expressed disagreement on the design of certain moves during rehearsal. However, Liu Chia-liang instantly demonstrated the underlying principle of the design to him, which convinced everyone including Kurata himself.
Gordon Liu thought that Liu Chia-liang had learnt to derive different new styles out of Hung Kuen, which gave his films diversity and richness in terms of content. He thought Ching Siu Tung and Liu Chia-liang were different from each other. Ching was a martial arts designer, and created fanciful artistic effects in his film shots. This diverged from what a martial arts master would do. With a foundation in Hung Kuen as well as references from other styles, Liu Chia-liang invented new moves such the “monkey fist” in Mad Monkey Kung Fu and “mantis fist” in Shaolin Mantis. What The 36th Chamber of Shaolin displayed was not real Hung Kuen, but was somehow that shadowed it.
Date | 2009-11-11 |
Duration | 23m54s |
Material Type | Audio |
Collection | Shaw Brothers´ Movies |
Source | Hong Kong Memory Project Oral History Interview |
Repository | Hong Kong Memory Project |
Note to Copyright | Copyright owned by Hong Kong Memory Project |
Accession No. | CC-LCH-SEG-005 |
A deviant boy in a wealthy family and his school life
Gordon Liu’s birth name is Xian Jinxi. His family’s hometown was in Gaoming County, Guangdong. Liu was born in 1951 and raised in Hong Kong, where he received education in eastern and western styles. His father was a businessman who ran a business that exported suanzhi (mahogany) crafts and antiquities. His father escaped to Hong Kong from Mainland China with the family as refugees. Only four of the eight children survived, and Liu was the youngest. As the Liu family was quite wealth then, Liu recalled that he lived the life of a rich man’s son who behaved in an arrogant, overbearing and disobedient way. His elder brother succeeded his father’s business, which Liu was not interested. Liu had ten maids who took care of him when he was small. They all left eventually because Liu used to scold and beat them often. His eldest sister thought that he was misbehaving, and therefore sent him to Salesian School, a boarding school in Shau Kei Wan. Liu began his boarding school life from the second form. Shau Kei Wan was a remote place, and the prose “a hero traps in Shau Kei Wan, wondering when he can be back in Central” circulated among students can describe of the .
Liu recalled that he lived a young master’s life in his childhood, and was used to being attended by servants. He compared the environment in his boarding school to a “chaotic prison”. Every day, he looked outside the window and sighed, thinking when he could leave and whether his parents sent him there out of hate. Between the third and the fifth forms, he was indignant at his own family. Salesian School is a Catholic English School. Liu understood that his sister wanted him to go there to learn English so that he could find a job more easily. Liu loved playing football, basketball and roller-skating at school, yet he did not concentrate on schoolwork much. Sometimes he would go to the priest to share his heart’s secrets and receive the holy icon. That was how he passed his childhood. The school was far away from the city area, so he was not disconnected with major events, trends and cultures out there. This, however, gave him the chance to become familiar with the Ten Commandments in the Bible.
The priest focused on imparting religious doctrines to students. Under the priest’s instruction, Liu used to work as an altar server and helped the priest dress up and carry out the communion right during the Mass. Such was a duty well respected by everyone. The Mass would be carried out in Latin in those days, so he had to learn the language from the priest. On the day of the Mass, he would wake up at six o’clock and arrived at the chapel by seven after washing, in order to get ready to serve at the altar. In the 1960s, Pope Paul VI once visited Hong Kong and hosted a Feast of Christ the King at the Hong Kong Stadium. A hundred altar servers were chosen to take part in it, and Liu was proud to be one of them.
Inspired his interests in Chinese martial arts by films and became student of Liu Chia-liang
Liu would go home during school holidays, and his brother would take him to the cinema. He discovered his interest in martial arts after seeing films about Wong Fei Hung, and was particular fascinated by the Chinese cultural elements that the master embodied. In the 1950s, various styles of fist techniques were popular in Hong Kong, including Karate, Judo, and boxing. However, Liu only loved Chinese martial arts because he had a mind to pass on the Chinese culture. Liu recalled that the term wushu (martial arts) was not widely used in those days yet. Martial arts training places was called “guoshu institute” or “guoshu gymnastics academy” The training place managed by Liu was called Liu Jaam Gymnastics Academy. The change of regime in China in 1949 prompted a lot of mainland Chinese masters to leave the country for places like Singapore and Malaysia. A good number of them came to Hong Kong and opened their training places where they taught students.
Liu’s father was reluctant to let Liu learn martial arts, based on the impression that those who knew martial arts were mostly hooligans. Instead, he wanted Liu to study well and take over his business. If Liu’s English ability was good enough, he could at least become a policeman. However, Liu thought that he had to learn martial arts well in order to be a proper Chinese person. Although Liu studied in an English school and was highly interested in western music, he loved Chinese culture at the same time, especially the “culture of motion”. He hoped to emulate Wong Fei Hung and decided to learn Hung Kuen, so he applied to Liu Chia-liang to become his student. Liu Jaam Gymnastics Academy was in Sheung Wan at that time, only a block away from the company of Liu’s father. Since his father was determined to stop Liu from learning martial arts, Liu stopped boarding during secondary school. He would go out after dinner with his books, and pretended that he was going to see a tutor. In reality, he was secretly going to the training place to practise martial arts. For many years, he trained daily from 8pm to 11pm.
As the youngest among all students, Gordon Liu had a gentle deposition and was helpful with miscellaneous chores at the training place. This earned him the favour of Liu Chia-liang’s mother. Gordon Liu thought that he was respectful towards his master, as he believed in the saying that “a master for a day is a father for life”. A student should not disobey his/ her master’s orders. This is what Liu believes even until today. A master does not only teach martial art skills, but also shows students the way to be good people by setting examples. A master may scold the students, but he always does so for a reason. The students should figure out the reason and reflect on what they have done wrong.
The third day of the third month on the Lunar Calendar is the birthday of Tin Hau. Liu insisted on taking part in the celebration at the training place, even if it meant that he had to skip school. One year, a birthday celebration took place on the island of Tsing Yi. Liu, who was already 16 to 17 years ago then, represented his training place in a race for the fireworks. In the midst of the event, two lion dance teams got into a fight. Liu’s team was caught in the middle of the mayhem. The fight got onto the newspaper and Liu’s father found Liu’s photos on it. It was not until then did he realize Liu was part of a martial arts training place. Liu successfully persuaded his father to let him continue with his training by arguing that 1) learning martial arts did not affect his schoolwork at all; 2) it rendered benefits on his constitution and his conduct; and 3) Liu Chia-liang absolute forbade his students to create trouble by misusing their martial art skills.
When Liu was learning martial arts at his training place, Liu Jaam, the master of Liu Chia-liang, had already passed away. At that time, Liu Chia-liang was already in the film business and seldom taught at the training place. Gordon Liu only saw him three to four times a year during worship, Tin Hau’s birthday, and the birthday of the deceased master Liu Jaam. Liu Chia-liang wished to uphold the reputation of Liu Jaam, therefore he set up the Liu Jaam Gymnastics Alumni Association, where fellow students could hold gathering and make themselves at home.
Gordon Liu chose to learn Hung Kuen because Kwan Tak Hing practiced it too. Moreover, he specifically chose it because he believed it is the toughest kind of fist technique. It takes 15 minutes to perform a full set of Hung Kuen. Every fist strike requires force and energy. One must jump and run over a large area. Wing Chun is less physically demanding and requires a smaller range of movement. A training place that taught Wing Chun could accommodate more students than one that taught Hung Kuen. It was also easier for the former to recruit students than the latter. Liu did not fear the hardship of learning Hung Kuen in those years because he really hoped to excel in it. He believed Hung Kuen is part of Chinese culture, and he had to learn it in order to become a proper Chinese person. Liu opined that his style of Hung Kuen was different from that of his master, Liu Chia-liang. He did not want just to become a clone of his master. The differences can be seen in the films, in which he intentionally infused artistic effects into his performance to align with the film characters he was portraying. Gordon Liu thought Liu Chia-liang’s Hung Kuen was educational because it showed the audience how to make offensive and defensive moves. Gordon Liu thought the films today are too commercialized, in the sense that they only focus on artistic effects but not on actual moves. While he agreed that a society must move forward economically, he held that society’s traditions must at the same time be retained. This is because traditions are the roots and basis of society. A society cannot innovate if it becomes rootless.Liu started his acting career starring Sha Chu Chong Wei and began to use his stage name Gordon Liu
After graduating from secondary school, Liu started working for a Japanese firm at Prince Building. Since he did not how to type, he was asked to work as a messenger with a monthly salary of HK$280. A year later, he changed his job to work for the accounting department of Lane Crawford through a friend’s introduction. He had to wear a suit and a tie to work. With a monthly salary of HK500, he was responsible for operating a credit card issuing machine, dispatching credit cards and collecting credit card debts every month. At night, he would return to his training place to practice as well as to teach younger students. His girlfriend also went to the training place often.
Gordon Liu did not think of going into filming at first. He liked watching films during his free time, especially martial art films featuring John Chiang, Ti Lung, Chan Chung Tai and Men Ching. His favourite was Bruce Lee. Yet, he never imaged he would become a film star himself. Early martial art films were simply action films, notably Jimmy Wang and John Chiang’s The Range of Wind, and Ng See Yuen’s Death Beach (set in the Early Republican period). These films gave rise to a number of action film actors such as Kam Chun Tat and Tan Tao Liang. Bruce Lee’s films signified that birth of Modern Kung Fu. After Lee’s death, the film industry sank into recession. In 1973, Liu Chia-liang served as the martial art coordinator of Sha Chu Chong Wei and he invited Gordon Liu to be the lead actor. Gordon Liu accepted his master’s invitation and went to Macau for two months to complete the filming. Despite a strong cast that consisted of film starts like Maggie Li, Dean Shek, and Paul Chun, the film was not met with great popularity. Lu Kar Leung’s mother liked Gordon Liu very much, and gave him the stage name of “Gordon Liu” that he has used since his first film, Sha Chu Chong Wei. As such, Gordon Liu was often mistaken as Liu Chia-liang’s own brother in the beginning. His father was quite understanding and did not object to Liu giving up his family name. Gordon Liu later went on to work as a stuntman, earning a daily wage of HK$70. The pay was not high, but Liu himself was able to cope financially. Although Liu heard a lot of mocking remarks from other people, he believed he should start from a low position and work his way up because, as a martial artist, he did not know much about film production.
The 36th Chamber of Shaolin: Liu Chia-liang and Gordon Liu’s blockbuster and their other collaborations
After completing Challenges of The Masters and Executioners from Shaolin, Liu’s third film was The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. He became the first lead actor ever to appear with his head shaved. In Challenges of The Masters, Chan Koon Tai helped pave the way for La Ka Fai to rise. To return the favour, Liu Chia-liang let Chan be the sole lead actor in Executioners from Shaolin, while arranging Gordon Liu to play the less important role of Tung Tien Chin. The 36th Chamber of Shaolin became a smashing hit upon its release, and was screened at major cinemas like Jade, Pearl, Golden Harvest, Hollywood and Rex. Gordon Liu was well-received among the audience. According to Gordon Liu’s analysis, the storylines of Liu Chia-liang’s films were designed to showcase martial art films, unlike the other films out there which were normally based on historical narratives. Gordon Liu officially joined Shaw Brother after making The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, and had followed Liu Chia-liang ever since. He appeared in other films of Liu Chia-liang such as Mad Monkey Kung Fu and Heroes of the East, and also made a guest appearance in Shaolin Mantis.There were 12 studios in Shaw Brothers Studio. Eminent directors like Li Han Hsieng had priority in booking the studios and building his own backdrops inside. Owning to weaker financial strength and influence, less prominent directors would typically waited for their turn to move into the studio and they would slightly refurnish the backdrops for their own films. Cantonese films, like Killer Constable and The Flying Guillotine, accounted for the majority of action films in those days. One could divide action films into two categories: wuxia films and martial art films. The former was more exaggerated and imaginative, focusing on chivalry and gracefulness. Examples were Ho Meng Hwa’s Killer Constable and Chor Yuen’s Clans of Intrigue. Sun Chung was one of those who made wuxia films, but he also worked with Tong Gai on martial art films. Martial art films depend on the martial arts prowess of the actors themselves. Liu Chia-liang was the only one in the Hong Kong film industry that emphasized on authentic martial art skills. No wires were used when Gordon Liu made The 36th Chamber of Shaolin.
Gordon Liu did not know much about the size of the filming budgets that Liu Chia-liang operated on. He only remembered that 80 teams worked together at one point during the filming of The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. The actors put on their make-ups every day at 9am. The call time for work was 10am, according to the notice. However, Liu Chia-liang did not usually start working until after he had finished breakfast at around 11am. While waiting for the director, the actors and stuntmen would practice their martial art skills. Gordon Liu received HK$15,000 in payment and a bonus of HK$5,000 for The 36th Chamber of Shaolin. Later, he learnt that the film had become a box office hit, earning HK$40 million for Shaw Brothers. During the making of The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, Shaw Brothers gave him the English name “Gordon Liu”, which he still uses today. When he later travelled to India for filming, he found that everyone there knew him by the name of Gordon Liu.
Liu’s most favourite Shaw film was Eight Diagram Pole Fighter. He especially loved the tragic story told in the film, which is about the return of only six out of the seven sons of the Yang family after a military expedition. In that film, Gordon Liu portrayed the fifth son in the Yang family who rescued the sixth son played by Alexander Fu. As Fu died before the film was completed, the story was changed such that the fifth son had to rescue his younger sister, the eighth child of the family (played by Kara Hui). Gordon Liu belonged to Liu Chia-liang’s crew, while Alexander Fu belonged to Chang Cheh’s. Both film crews were very prestigious. It was a significant thing for the two crews to work together. The boss of Shaw Brothers probably facilitated their cooperation for the benefit of the box office. Unfortunately, Fu died prematurely before the filming process ended. Not only that the script must be changed, the crew members all suffered a blow emotionally.
The other film that Liu liked was Heroes of The East. Born in the 1950s, Liu always heard people taking negatively about the Japanese. However, after completing Heroes of The East, he changed the way he saw the Japanese. Heroes of The East was written by Liu Chia-liang and Chua Lam. It allowed Gordon Liu to play various characters. He had to fight with Japanese artist in the film. Yasuaki Kurata fought Liu with kendo. Kurata was a Japanese martial art masters recruited by Chang Cheh from the early days when he filmed The Water Margin. Liu admired the professionalism of Kurata because Kurata did not mind seeing Japanese martial arts getting beaten by Chinese martial arts in the film. This Japanese master possessed the spirit of a fighter for he respected his filming work without letting face or prestige get in the way. Real knifes and spears were used in Liu Chia-liang’s films. Gordon Liu was worried about getting injured in the beginning, but he became sure of his own skills after getting encouragement from Liu Chia-liang. Kurata used Japanese kendo in the dual against Liu, acting quickly and aggressively without holding back. Moreover, kendo was highly esteemed among Japanese martial art styles. That is why it was unforgettable to Liu until today. As a martial art master, Kurata expressed disagreement on the design of certain moves during rehearsal. However, Liu Chia-liang instantly demonstrated the underlying principle of the design to him, which convinced everyone including Kurata himself.
Gordon Liu thought that Liu Chia-liang had learnt to derive different new styles out of Hung Kuen, which gave his films diversity and richness in terms of content. He thought Ching Siu Tung and Liu Chia-liang were different from each other. Ching was a martial arts designer, and created fanciful artistic effects in his film shots. This diverged from what a martial arts master would do. With a foundation in Hung Kuen as well as references from other styles, Liu Chia-liang invented new moves such the “monkey fist” in Mad Monkey Kung Fu and “mantis fist” in Shaolin Mantis. What The 36th Chamber of Shaolin displayed was not real Hung Kuen, but was somehow that shadowed it.
Date | 2009-11-11 |
Cast | Gordon Liu |
Language | Cantonese |
Duration | 23m54s |
Material Type | Audio |
Source | Hong Kong Memory Project Oral History Interview |
Repository | Hong Kong Memory Project |
Note to Copyright | Copyright owned by Hong Kong Memory Project |
Accession No. | CC-LCH-SEG-005 |
A deviant boy in a wealthy family and his school life
Gordon Liu’s birth name is Xian Jinxi. His family’s hometown was in Gaoming County, Guangdong. Liu was born in 1951 and raised in Hong Kong, where he received education in eastern and western styles. His father was a businessman who ran a business that exported suanzhi (mahogany) crafts and antiquities. His father escaped to Hong Kong from Mainland China with the family as refugees. Only four of the eight children survived, and Liu was the youngest. As the Liu family was quite wealth then, Liu recalled that he lived the life of a rich man’s son who behaved in an arrogant, overbearing and disobedient way. His elder brother succeeded his father’s business, which Liu was not interested. Liu had ten maids who took care of him when he was small. They all left eventually because Liu used to scold and beat them often. His eldest sister thought that he was misbehaving, and therefore sent him to Salesian School, a boarding school in Shau Kei Wan. Liu began his boarding school life from the second form. Shau Kei Wan was a remote place, and the prose “a hero traps in Shau Kei Wan, wondering when he can be back in Central” circulated among students can describe of the .
Liu recalled that he lived a young master’s life in his childhood, and was used to being attended by servants. He compared the environment in his boarding school to a “chaotic prison”. Every day, he looked outside the window and sighed, thinking when he could leave and whether his parents sent him there out of hate. Between the third and the fifth forms, he was indignant at his own family. Salesian School is a Catholic English School. Liu understood that his sister wanted him to go there to learn English so that he could find a job more easily. Liu loved playing football, basketball and roller-skating at school, yet he did not concentrate on schoolwork much. Sometimes he would go to the priest to share his heart’s secrets and receive the holy icon. That was how he passed his childhood. The school was far away from the city area, so he was not disconnected with major events, trends and cultures out there. This, however, gave him the chance to become familiar with the Ten Commandments in the Bible.
The priest focused on imparting religious doctrines to students. Under the priest’s instruction, Liu used to work as an altar server and helped the priest dress up and carry out the communion right during the Mass. Such was a duty well respected by everyone. The Mass would be carried out in Latin in those days, so he had to learn the language from the priest. On the day of the Mass, he would wake up at six o’clock and arrived at the chapel by seven after washing, in order to get ready to serve at the altar. In the 1960s, Pope Paul VI once visited Hong Kong and hosted a Feast of Christ the King at the Hong Kong Stadium. A hundred altar servers were chosen to take part in it, and Liu was proud to be one of them.
Inspired his interests in Chinese martial arts by films and became student of Liu Chia-liang
Liu would go home during school holidays, and his brother would take him to the cinema. He discovered his interest in martial arts after seeing films about Wong Fei Hung, and was particular fascinated by the Chinese cultural elements that the master embodied. In the 1950s, various styles of fist techniques were popular in Hong Kong, including Karate, Judo, and boxing. However, Liu only loved Chinese martial arts because he had a mind to pass on the Chinese culture. Liu recalled that the term wushu (martial arts) was not widely used in those days yet. Martial arts training places was called “guoshu institute” or “guoshu gymnastics academy” The training place managed by Liu was called Liu Jaam Gymnastics Academy. The change of regime in China in 1949 prompted a lot of mainland Chinese masters to leave the country for places like Singapore and Malaysia. A good number of them came to Hong Kong and opened their training places where they taught students.
Liu’s father was reluctant to let Liu learn martial arts, based on the impression that those who knew martial arts were mostly hooligans. Instead, he wanted Liu to study well and take over his business. If Liu’s English ability was good enough, he could at least become a policeman. However, Liu thought that he had to learn martial arts well in order to be a proper Chinese person. Although Liu studied in an English school and was highly interested in western music, he loved Chinese culture at the same time, especially the “culture of motion”. He hoped to emulate Wong Fei Hung and decided to learn Hung Kuen, so he applied to Liu Chia-liang to become his student. Liu Jaam Gymnastics Academy was in Sheung Wan at that time, only a block away from the company of Liu’s father. Since his father was determined to stop Liu from learning martial arts, Liu stopped boarding during secondary school. He would go out after dinner with his books, and pretended that he was going to see a tutor. In reality, he was secretly going to the training place to practise martial arts. For many years, he trained daily from 8pm to 11pm.
As the youngest among all students, Gordon Liu had a gentle deposition and was helpful with miscellaneous chores at the training place. This earned him the favour of Liu Chia-liang’s mother. Gordon Liu thought that he was respectful towards his master, as he believed in the saying that “a master for a day is a father for life”. A student should not disobey his/ her master’s orders. This is what Liu believes even until today. A master does not only teach martial art skills, but also shows students the way to be good people by setting examples. A master may scold the students, but he always does so for a reason. The students should figure out the reason and reflect on what they have done wrong.
The third day of the third month on the Lunar Calendar is the birthday of Tin Hau. Liu insisted on taking part in the celebration at the training place, even if it meant that he had to skip school. One year, a birthday celebration took place on the island of Tsing Yi. Liu, who was already 16 to 17 years ago then, represented his training place in a race for the fireworks. In the midst of the event, two lion dance teams got into a fight. Liu’s team was caught in the middle of the mayhem. The fight got onto the newspaper and Liu’s father found Liu’s photos on it. It was not until then did he realize Liu was part of a martial arts training place. Liu successfully persuaded his father to let him continue with his training by arguing that 1) learning martial arts did not affect his schoolwork at all; 2) it rendered benefits on his constitution and his conduct; and 3) Liu Chia-liang absolute forbade his students to create trouble by misusing their martial art skills.
When Liu was learning martial arts at his training place, Liu Jaam, the master of Liu Chia-liang, had already passed away. At that time, Liu Chia-liang was already in the film business and seldom taught at the training place. Gordon Liu only saw him three to four times a year during worship, Tin Hau’s birthday, and the birthday of the deceased master Liu Jaam. Liu Chia-liang wished to uphold the reputation of Liu Jaam, therefore he set up the Liu Jaam Gymnastics Alumni Association, where fellow students could hold gathering and make themselves at home.
Gordon Liu chose to learn Hung Kuen because Kwan Tak Hing practiced it too. Moreover, he specifically chose it because he believed it is the toughest kind of fist technique. It takes 15 minutes to perform a full set of Hung Kuen. Every fist strike requires force and energy. One must jump and run over a large area. Wing Chun is less physically demanding and requires a smaller range of movement. A training place that taught Wing Chun could accommodate more students than one that taught Hung Kuen. It was also easier for the former to recruit students than the latter. Liu did not fear the hardship of learning Hung Kuen in those years because he really hoped to excel in it. He believed Hung Kuen is part of Chinese culture, and he had to learn it in order to become a proper Chinese person. Liu opined that his style of Hung Kuen was different from that of his master, Liu Chia-liang. He did not want just to become a clone of his master. The differences can be seen in the films, in which he intentionally infused artistic effects into his performance to align with the film characters he was portraying. Gordon Liu thought Liu Chia-liang’s Hung Kuen was educational because it showed the audience how to make offensive and defensive moves. Gordon Liu thought the films today are too commercialized, in the sense that they only focus on artistic effects but not on actual moves. While he agreed that a society must move forward economically, he held that society’s traditions must at the same time be retained. This is because traditions are the roots and basis of society. A society cannot innovate if it becomes rootless.Liu started his acting career starring Sha Chu Chong Wei and began to use his stage name Gordon Liu
After graduating from secondary school, Liu started working for a Japanese firm at Prince Building. Since he did not how to type, he was asked to work as a messenger with a monthly salary of HK$280. A year later, he changed his job to work for the accounting department of Lane Crawford through a friend’s introduction. He had to wear a suit and a tie to work. With a monthly salary of HK500, he was responsible for operating a credit card issuing machine, dispatching credit cards and collecting credit card debts every month. At night, he would return to his training place to practice as well as to teach younger students. His girlfriend also went to the training place often.
Gordon Liu did not think of going into filming at first. He liked watching films during his free time, especially martial art films featuring John Chiang, Ti Lung, Chan Chung Tai and Men Ching. His favourite was Bruce Lee. Yet, he never imaged he would become a film star himself. Early martial art films were simply action films, notably Jimmy Wang and John Chiang’s The Range of Wind, and Ng See Yuen’s Death Beach (set in the Early Republican period). These films gave rise to a number of action film actors such as Kam Chun Tat and Tan Tao Liang. Bruce Lee’s films signified that birth of Modern Kung Fu. After Lee’s death, the film industry sank into recession. In 1973, Liu Chia-liang served as the martial art coordinator of Sha Chu Chong Wei and he invited Gordon Liu to be the lead actor. Gordon Liu accepted his master’s invitation and went to Macau for two months to complete the filming. Despite a strong cast that consisted of film starts like Maggie Li, Dean Shek, and Paul Chun, the film was not met with great popularity. Lu Kar Leung’s mother liked Gordon Liu very much, and gave him the stage name of “Gordon Liu” that he has used since his first film, Sha Chu Chong Wei. As such, Gordon Liu was often mistaken as Liu Chia-liang’s own brother in the beginning. His father was quite understanding and did not object to Liu giving up his family name. Gordon Liu later went on to work as a stuntman, earning a daily wage of HK$70. The pay was not high, but Liu himself was able to cope financially. Although Liu heard a lot of mocking remarks from other people, he believed he should start from a low position and work his way up because, as a martial artist, he did not know much about film production.