Starring the ethereal Joey Wong as the tragic ghost Nie Xiaoqian, the late, great Leslie Cheung as the hapless scholar Ling Choi-san (Ning Caichen), and Wu Ma as the thunderous Taoist swordsman Yin Chek-ha (Yan Chixia), these films are more than just "ghost stories." They are operatic tragedies painted in shades of rain, silk, and blood.
In the pantheon of world cinema, few film series manage to blend horror, romance, martial arts, and slapstick comedy into a cohesive, beautiful dream. Yet, between 1987 and 1991, the Hong Kong film industry—then at its creative and commercial zenith—produced exactly that. Directed by the legendary Ching Siu-tung and produced by Tsui Hark, the A Chinese Ghost Story trilogy ( Sinnui yauman in Cantonese) remains a benchmark of supernatural wuxia. A chinese ghost story I II III -1987-1990-1991-...
Let us journey back to the haunted realm of Lanruo Temple. The Plot The film opens with Ling Choi-san, a meek, debt-ridden tax collector, who is forced to spend the night at the infamous Lanruo Temple. Unbeknownst to him, the forest is ruled by a thousand-year-old Tree Demon (Lau Siu-ming) and its legion of beautiful, enslaved female ghosts. Starring the ethereal Joey Wong as the tragic