Voyage (2013 film)
Voyage | |
---|---|
遊 | |
Directed by | Scud |
Written by | Scud |
Produced by | Annie Lau Leni Speidel |
Starring | Ryo van Kooten Sebastian Castro Adrian Ron Heung Leon Hill Haze Leung Byron Pang Koon Kei Jason Poon Debra Baker Susan Siu Linda So Leni Speidel |
Cinematography | Charlie Lam |
Edited by | Andrew Chan Matthew Hui |
Production company | ArtWalker Productions |
Distributed by | Golden Scene |
Release dates |
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Running time | 100 minutes |
Country | Hong Kong |
Languages | English and Cantonese |
Voyage (Chinese: 遊) is a 2013 film by the acclaimed Hong Kong film-maker Scud, the production-crediting name of Danny Cheng Wan-Cheung. It is described as "a tragic story about love, fate and the struggle of losing loved ones",[1] and received its world premiere on 20 October 2013 at the Chicago International Film Festival.[2] It was filmed in Hong Kong, Mongolia, Malaysia, Australia, Germany and the Netherlands, and is the director's first film partially made outside Asia, and also his first to be filmed mostly in the English language.[1] It explores several themes traditionally regarded as 'taboo' in Hong Kong society in an unusually open, convention-defying way, and features full-frontal male nudity in several scenes.[3] It is the fifth of seven publicly released films by Scud. The six other films are: City Without Baseball in 2008, Permanent Residence in 2009, Amphetamine in 2010, Love Actually... Sucks! in 2011, Utopians in 2015 and Thirty Years of Adonis in 2017. The eighth film, Apostles, was made in 2022, as was the ninth, Bodyshop, but neither have yet been released.[4] The tenth and final film, Naked Nations: Hong Kong Tribe, is currently in production.[4][5]
Plot
[edit]Voyage centres on a young psychiatrist (played by Ryo van Kooten) who leaves Hong Kong to embark on a long lone voyage from Hong Kong along the coast of South-East Asia to try to overcome the emotional turmoil he has experienced in his relationships with former clients. While travelling, he tries to come to terms with his experiences by making a detailed record of their stories, and decides to visit those places himself.
The film's director, Scud, explained that the idea for the film "originated from my own thoughts about suicide. One time, I had thought about walking into the central Australian desert until I am exhausted and die in a miserable way. These thoughts caused me to think about similar people in this situation." He continued that "All of the episodes are independent of each other and the stories are based on real experiences which some of the actors appearing in the film have gone through. Having an international cast and locations around the world is appropriate because depression and suicide are universal themes".[1][2]
Main cast
[edit]- Ryo van Kooten ... Ryo
- Sebastian Castro ... Sebastian
- Adrian Ron Heung ... Adrian
- Leon Hill ... Ryo's Father
- Haze Leung ... Ming
- Byron Pang ... Yuan
- Jason Poon ... Jip
- Debra Baker ... Suzanna Schwaering
- Siu Yam-yam ... Lady Red
- Linda So ... Linda So
- Leni Speidel ... Leni
Making of Voyage
[edit]Filming of Voyage began in September 2011 in the city of Hanover in Germany, and was Scud's first film set outside Asia. It stars the Peruvian-Japanese American actor, singer and visual artist Sebastian Castro, very popular in Asia, who was also commissioned to produce some original art for the film.
Voyage features many of Scud's colleagues from previous films, such as the actors Byron Pang, Haze Leung, Adrian "Ron" Heung, and Linda So, as well as several technical staff, such as the Director of Photography, Charlie Lam, who worked on Scud's 2010 film Amphetamine. During filming, Scud said, "I am really enjoying shooting in Europe because people are so film-friendly.. I can see myself coming back to film again in Europe". The German episode includes appearances by the UK actress Debra Baker (Junkhearts) and the German actress Leni Speidel, who was also the Production Manager for filming in Europe.[1]
DVD
[edit]A two-disc Sky Digi Entertainment (Taiwan) edition of Voyage was released internationally on DVD on 29 September 2014.
Films by the same director/producer
[edit]Name of film | Year released |
---|---|
City Without Baseball | 2008 |
Permanent Residence | 2009 |
Amphetamine | 2010 |
Love Actually... Sucks! | 2011 |
Utopians | 2015 |
Thirty Years of Adonis | 2017 |
Naked Nation | In production |
See also
[edit]- List of Hong Kong films of 2013
- List of lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender-related films
- List of lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender-related films by storyline
- Nudity in film (East Asian cinema since 1929)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Scud makes Voyage to Europe. Author: Martin Blaney. Publisher: Screen Daily. Published: 20 April 2012. Retrieved: 17 March 2014.
- ^ a b The Chicago International Film Festival - Voyage Publisher: Chicago International Film Festival. Retrieved: 17 March 2014.
- ^ Voyage (2013) www.imdb.com Retrieved: 17 March 2014.
- ^ a b Lo Hoi-ying (20 September 2022). "'We need to be hopeful': Hong Kong queer director Scud, renowned for his sexually explicit art-house movies, on leaving filmmaking". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
- ^ Gareth Johnson (11 January 2018). "Scud: "I'm reluctant to call Hong Kong home"". Archived from the original on 22 May 2018. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
External links
[edit]- 2013 films
- 2013 drama films
- 2013 LGBTQ-related films
- 2010s Cantonese-language films
- Chinese independent films
- Chinese LGBTQ-related films
- Films directed by Scud (filmmaker)
- Films set in Hong Kong
- Gay-related films
- English-language Hong Kong films
- Hong Kong independent films
- Hong Kong LGBTQ-related films
- 2010s LGBTQ-related drama films
- Films about male bisexuality
- 2010s Hong Kong films