88 Films: An Amorous Woman of Tang Dynasty (1984) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of 88 Films

The debut film of Cherry Blossoms director Eddie Fong known as An Amorous Woman of Tang Dynasty from 1984 represents one of the last films made in Hong Kong’s legendary Shaw Brothers studio grounds and maybe one of the best examples of the erotica subgenre of films.  While the Shaw Brothers empire has seen their fair share of historically grounded sumptuous examples of the erotic drama ala Facets of Love and The Golden Lotus, this was one of the premier iterations of the subgenre featuring fully fledged, complicated characters navigating their way through a repressive society poised against modern women’s roles.  Distinctly feminist in nature and approach with a bit of a Tinto Brass edge to it regarding a free-thinking woman making her own sexual choices whether people get hurt in the process or not, An Amorous Woman of Tang Dynasty comes to blu-ray for the first time via 88 Films in a new deluxe special limited edition.  While featuring ample sex, nudity and graphic violence including but not limited to beheadings, this turned out to be one of the most engaging and surprising offerings from the Shaw Brothers totem.

 
Set during the Tang Dynasty, this period erotica follows Yu Yuan-gi (Patricia Ha), an intelligent well-read young poet and scholar who makes a conscious decision to become a Taoist priestess to freely evade the social expectations of women.  From a scene where she freely swims naked, climbs aboard the boat of a wandering swordsman Tsui Po-hou (Alex Man) and promptly seduces him to later scenes where she begins making sexual moves on her female maid Lu Chiao (Monica Lam), Yu is a troublemaker aimed at overturning societal norms while her own lusting for her maid.  Eventually, through thick and thin including a brothel of geishas besieged by murderous bandits, Yu’s obsession with her maid grows more intense and dangerous echoing the autoerotic asphyxiation threads of Nagisa Oshima’s In the Realm of the Senses.  Despite having many sex scenes and graphic nudity, this is ultimately a character study of a woman ahead of her time whose desires tragically become all encompassing.

 
With breathtaking cinematography and blocking by Once Upon a Time in China cameraman Ardy Lam, a rousing score by Farewell China composer Jim Shum and committed performances from principal actors Patricia Ha and Monica Lam who go the full distance with respect to baring all vulnerabilities onscreen, An Amorous Woman of Tang Dynasty is perhaps the most rewarding and boldly daring example of Shaw Brothers produced period erotica whose free thinking heroine over the course of the movie evolves into something of a deadly succubus.  Set in the past but urgently grounded in present thinking, the film represents the tale end of the Shaw Brothers studio empire as a classy and stylish feminist picture.  For everything that unfolds onscreen, it never tips over into exploitation or sleaze and instead remains a trained actresses’ picture with occasional swordplay but mostly complex sexual relationships playing out across the silver screen.

 
88 Films’ deluxe edition blu-ray, like many other standalone Shaw Brothers releases they’ve handled in the past, comes housed with original reversible sleeve art as well as a limited slipcover and double-sided poster.  Included in the extras is an audio commentary by journalist David West and there’s a video essay regarding Alex Man’s involvement in the film.  While the Shaw Brothers and eventual emergence of the Category III rating pushed ahead with transgressive or bumpier than usual erotica, this was one of the few times where the cast and crew got every element precisely right all the way through its final, haunted closing shot.  88 Films’ disc release is great and those who think they know the more sensual weathers of the Shaw Scope giant are in for quite a surprise with An Amorous Woman of Tang Dynasty, a film that speaks to the feminine impulse even as its heroine crosses an irredeemable rubicon.  Sensual period erotic dramas rarely ever get this deeply emotionally involved.

--Andrew Kotwicki