Bury Me High
Bury Me High
| 10 January 1991 (USA)
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In a mountainous region in an Asian backwater banana republic, it is said that the descendents of all those buried in its earth will be blessed with fantastic fortune and good health. However, if a special ceremony is not performed on the grounds, then the luck will only last for 24 years. A trio of Chinese Americans decide to venture into these mountains hoping to change their luck; Anna Wong (Moon Lee) is an executive facing a corporate meltdown, Wisely (Chin Ka-Lok) is dying of brain cancer, and UCLA Prof. Chang (Tsui Siu-Ming) is an expert in feng shui. Tin can potentate General Nguen (Yuen Wah) also has designs on the grounds -- hoping to turn his third world, fourth rate country into a superpower. Along the way, the three heroes fall in with a group of local rebels, including the high-kicking Nguen Van Vong (Sibelle Hu).

Reviews
david-sarkies

The best quote from this movie is Des Mangan's comment at the end and that is: just so you know, the best way to cure a brain tumor is not with a gun. I won't explain any more, so if you want to know what I am talking about then you best see the film. It is a pretty good film and is described as typical Hong Kong action. It contains slick action scenes, maniacal bad guys, and magic. When I watched this movie the first thought that entered my mind was a roleplaying game called Feng Shui. This movie has everything one would want to expect from a Hong Kong movie.There is a lot of background to this, but that is what makes the film even more entertaining. There are sites around the world called Feng Shui sites. If ones ancestors are buried at one of these sites then the generations to come will receive great fortune, whether is be wealth, power, or wisdom. An evil tyrant is buried in this sight, and the person who found the site, a magician known as a geomancer, is hunted down, but he manages to escape. Unfortunately the tyrant kills an innocent bystander so the geomancer has the man buried in this site and well as his father. Thus, there are three people who are blessed by the site. Unfortunately, because there is a tyrant buried at the site, it has been corrupted and the ancestors do experience fortune, but after 24 years, this begins to turn back on them. Thus they must go to the site and destroy the tomb of the tyrant.Another problem is that the country where the site is in the throws of a military coup. It is not a two way, but a three way battle. A military leader, the son of the tyrant, takes over from the president and there is another group of rebels trying to take over from the tyrant. This tyrant is also building a military base on the sight so that he might draw the power of the sight and become invincible.Bury me High is a pretty slick movie. The martial arts scenes are very good, though the best scene is there fight in the pool at night with the army surrounding them with torches. The direction, especially in this scene, is very smooth and spectacular. The director knew what he was doing when it came to making this movie.

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fertilecelluloid

The plot is confusing, the subject is geomancy. It is another entry in the loose "Wisely" series. Visually, it is stunning.Peter Pau, who photographed "Bride of Chucky", "The Bride With White Hair" and the awesomely beautiful "A Fishy Story" gives this exciting, Indiana Jones-style adventure a stunning surface on which to stage the busy action. And the action, to put it mildly, is mind-boggling and on the grandest of scales.This lavish Golden Harvest production, which tanked, marked the end of big budget, non-Jackie Chan action spectacles for the company. Despite the presence of Sibelle Hu and the terrific, ultra-sexy Moon Lee, audiences steered clear of this curious pastiche of adventure, mysticism, martial arts and romance. Siu Ming Tsui, who also plays a pivotal character, captains what must have been a very weighty ship on exotic, far-flung locations that are generously served by stunningly evocative production design and cinematography.The fight sequences are fast, brutal and bracing, and are enriched by a pounding, memorable soundtrack and a crisp menu of sound effects.A little discussed treasure.

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Bogey Man

Hong Kong film maker Chui Siu Ming directed this film, BURY ME HIGH, on 1990. The director also acts as the professor in the film. The film has very interesting cast and extremely hard to follow plot and story, at least for Western viewer AND after just one viewing. This movie requires many viewings in order to fully understand the characters and plot turns in it. The film opens with a flashback of two brothers searching for some mysterious mountain. The film tells about some traditional Chinese beliefs and symbolics which look pretty weird and unfamiliar if the viewer doesn't know about Chinese culture and/or doesn't read carefully the very first lines which appear as the film starts. The lines tell in a nutshell what it's all going to be about so they are recommended to be read carefully. The brothers (the "good brother" played by veteran film maker Corey Yuen who has directed Savior of the Soul 1-2, Women on the Run, Fong Sai Yuk plus many other films) find what they're searching for and understand that once somebody gets buried there, their children will become rich, famous and wise, but it can also be used for bad deeds and thoughts.. Soon we're in present day settings where incredibly sexy and sweet Moon Lee plays a business woman whose career is going pretty bad for some reason. Chin Kar Lok plays a 200 IQ computer wizard who has a very severe brain tumor in his head. Does these sad things in these seemingly happy/wealthy characters' lives have something to do with the burial of their fathers in that mysterious place in which the film started?It may sound pretty simple but it is not. Many characters are introduced and plot turns take place. The film requires full attention which of course isn't any negative point; the viewer just has to be completely in peace and undisturbed while watching film like BURY ME HIGH. And after all, the complex and often hard to follow plot and story isn't the reason this film was made and the film's real merits are elsewhere, as usually in these Hong Kong fantasy films.The photography is simply incredible as are the images which cinematographer Peter Pau takes with the magic filled camera hand of his. Pau has shot also films like Bride With White Hair (Ronny Yu, 1992), Naked Killer (Clarence Fok, 1992) and To Be Number One (Poon Man-kit, 1991) and all these films have gorgeous and unique atmosphere and imagery created by the talent of Pau and of course the talented director. In BURY ME HIGH, there are many takes from very high places in the jungle which creates a nicely free and massive feeling to the film. The colors are stunning as are the camera angles and everything which deals with the photography. No matter how stupid or incoherent the plot may feel, this film is very impressive due to its imagery and visuals. I think this is nearly as great as they can get. Pau is a cinematographer worth keeping in mind.Then there is the action, which is equally stunning with the photography, but ten times wilder. Especially the last 10 minutes are among the most fierce over-the-top insane balls-to-the-walls bits of martial arts mayhem I've seen in any Hong Kong film. This is something that never (or extremely rarely) can be found in some Hollywood action film. The speed and kinetic power in these action scenes will leave the viewer pretty much breathless as it managed to surprise and amaze me like I had just seen my first Hong Kong film ever. This is the magic of Hong Kong cinema and which makes it so unique when compared to others. The film has also a huge amount of military tanks and other heavier weapons which are also used! When grenades hit the water, the splash is nearly 30 metre high to make the action even more explosive, literally. Even though the budget wasn't without a doubt too big, the result is like in a huge mainstream production with plenty of money used in it.BURY ME HIGH is a hyper fast and great looking fantasy kung fu action film with pretty secondary plot and only some brief slower moments which are not at all unnecessary and thus the film is very easy to sit through without becoming bored during its 96 minutes NTSC running time. Moon Lee is accompanied with Sibelle Hu in the female cast and they are as sweet and charming ladies here as females always are in Hong Kong / Asian movies. And Moon is very lethal and fast, too!I give this 7/10 after the first viewing and maybe I'll give more after repeated viewings. Highly recommended for the fans of insane, wild and wonderful Hong Kong cinema. Little similar film is Corey Yuen's and David Lai's Savior of the Soul (1991) starring sweetheart girls Anita Mui and Maggie Cheung, but that film has little too much stupid humor attempts for my taste, but is visually striking. Also Aman Chang's Body Weapon (1999) came to my mind while watching BURY ME HIGH but that film is far more sleazier and probably will alienate some viewers, but its action especially at the end is close to that of in BURY ME HIGH. Once again, Hong Kong cinema managed to amaze me.

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Brian Camp

BURY ME HIGH, a 1990 Hong Kong adventure with kung fu, shootouts and a vaguely mystical theme, is one of a handful of titles loosely constituting the `Wisely' series, so named because of its lead character, a young man drawn by destiny into various far-flung adventures (and played by different actors in each film, I believe). It's beautifully shot and edited and has lots of action and an intriguing and fairly complicated screenplay. The eclectic cast is led by five distinct Hong Kong stars, each playing an unusual role. They are: Moon Lee (KILLER ANGELS), Sibelle Hu (TOP SQUAD), Chin Kar Lok (OPERATION SCORPIO), Yuen Wah (SUPERCOP), and the film's director, Tsui Siu-Ming (who put on quite a few pounds after starring in THE BUDDHIST FIST).The plot is based on principles of geomancy and feng shui and has to do with three characters on a mission into a Communist Asian country (patterned after Vietnam) to shift the burial grounds of their fathers in order to change their own fates. The film assumes a certain amount of knowledge of Chinese lore on the part of the audience, so the central concepts on which the story hangs may prove a bit confusing to western viewers not well-versed in these subjects.For some reason, based on what I'd read about this film, I had anticipated some supernatural elements, but they never materialized. There was lots of action, very well-staged, but I would liked to have seen more kung fu, especially since the five main cast members are each veterans, in varying degrees, of kung fu movies. But I was never bored, and I found the twists and turns of the plot consistently intriguing, as it involves the careful diplomatic handling of a crazed General (Yuen Wah) who engineers a military coup before the main characters' eyes. (There's a scene deliberately recalling BULLET IN THE HEAD.)Both Moon Lee and Sibelle Hu, veteran female stars of numerous modern-day kung fu thrillers, play interesting characters of a sort I've never seen them do: Moon plays a computer tycoon, while Sibelle plays a Communist military officer (a la Michelle Yeoh in SUPERCOP, in which Yuen Wah was one of the bad guys). Chin Kar Lok plays Wisely, a young computer wizard tapped by fate to join the mission, and Tsui Siu Ming plays an expert on geomancy, who is introduced giving a lecture in English on ancient Chinese astronomy to students at a Southern Californian planetarium. This is an interesting film for HK fans looking for something out of the ordinary.

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