High Road To China

For discussions about the cast & crew, including guest stars

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Turkey
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Re: High Road To China

#31 Post by Turkey »

ConchRepublican wrote:
Doc Ibold wrote:
terryfromkerry wrote:Hi Turkey,

If you have not seen Quigley Down Under previously you are in for a real treat. Enjoy ! :)
Quigley's good stuff! You won't be disappointed.
What they said.

One of my fave Selleck movies.
Really looking forward it, Conch - hopefully this weekend I'll be able to watch it :)
Make it two weeks.

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Turkey
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Re: High Road To China

#32 Post by Turkey »

Turkey wrote:
Really looking forward it, Conch - hopefully this weekend I'll be able to watch it :)
Finally watched Quigley, great stuff! Over to post on the Quig thread :)
Make it two weeks.

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Luther's nephew Dobie
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Re: High Road To China

#33 Post by Luther's nephew Dobie »

I haven't seen High Road to China(1983) but the cast looks great! Tom Selleck, Bess Armstrong, Wilfred Brimley, Robert Morely, Brian Blessed and Jack Weston, how can you go wrong?
Plus Cassandra Gava, the incredibly alluring witch in Conan the Barbarian. And Bess wan't exactly chopped liver in The Four Seasons.
I also note that the legendary director John Huston was originally attached to this project and was involved with the pre-production.
I may be 38 years late to this party but I have high hopes once it comes around again on one of my cable channels.

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ZelenskyTheValiant (Ivan)
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Re: High Road To China

#34 Post by ZelenskyTheValiant (Ivan) »

I recall very little of this movie but have listened to its soundtrack by John Barry (my favorite film composer) many times. I'm sure the score is the best thing about it. Barry, like Goldsmith, could write some fantastic scores to even the biggest of clunkers. Such was their genius!

An interesting side note is that the director of the film was Brian G. Hutton, who directed one of my absolute favorite films of all time - the snowy WWII adventure epic WHERE EAGLES DARE! Every winter when it begins to snow outside I get out my DVD of this timeless classic and it never gets old. The score by Ron Goodwin is pure exhilaration!! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dh7S7V-y500
Hutton also directed KELLY'S HEROES, which was also good but nowhere near the excitement of EAGLES.

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Re: High Road To China

#35 Post by Kevster »

Finally watching this...

What an unfortunate waste of talent and material!

With the benefit of hindsight and decades of moviemaking since.... It was a flawed production in some key areas. It was stylistically dated when it came out!

The directorial choices were pretty bad. Close ups were too tight, pacing was off, action was not well done, SD version's lighting seems way too dreary, and there was nothing to create any empathy for the characters (at least in the first half of the film). Also, not really any chemistry to speak of.

I haven't looked to see who produced and directed, but it was clearly the wrong team. MPI had far better production talent and storytelling. I see the potential in this ptoject, but it was an awkward and lilted attempt.

It was a waste to put TS in the role. He had depth and it was not used. Shame.

Watched it until the end, but it didn't feel like I'd watched a 1980+ feature film.... More of a 1970's alt. production for TV.

6/10 is a fair assessment. TS did well with what he could influence.
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ZelenskyTheValiant (Ivan)
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Re: High Road To China

#36 Post by ZelenskyTheValiant (Ivan) »

Kevster wrote: Thu Sep 22, 2022 1:52 pm Finally watching this...

What an unfortunate waste of talent and material!

With the benefit of hindsight and decades of moviemaking since.... It was a flawed production in some key areas. It was stylistically dated when it came out!

The directorial choices were pretty bad. Close ups were too tight, pacing was off, action was not well done, SD version's lighting seems way too dreary, and there was nothing to create any empathy for the characters (at least in the first half of the film). Also, not really any chemistry to speak of.

I haven't looked to see who produced and directed, but it was clearly the wrong team. MPI had far better production talent and storytelling. I see the potential in this ptoject, but it was an awkward and lilted attempt.

It was a waste to put TS in the role. He had depth and it was not used. Shame.

Watched it until the end, but it didn't feel like I'd watched a 1980+ feature film.... More of a 1970's alt. production for TV.

6/10 is a fair assessment. TS did well with what he could influence.
I've seen portions of the film, not the whole thing. I'm sure the best thing about it is the magnificent John Barry score. Also the director of it was Brian G. Hutton. Not a household name but he did direct 2 WWII classics - WHERE EAGLES DARE and KELLY'S HEROES! EAGLES is actually one of my all-time favorite films. The Alpine snowy scenery is some of the best I've ever seen in any film, the plot is intricate and twisty but really interesting, and the Ron Goodwin score is sublime! Every winter I'm drawn to rewatching this beautiful snowy film! I encourage anyone who hasn't seen it to check it out. Richard Burton and Clint Eastwood. What an unlikely team - but it works!!

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