Although when watching the film, there were always people in the barrage who were brushing human flesh pork buns and Huang Sir fighting Han Chen, but Huang Qiusheng's acting skills just didn't let me play. This is an old Ye Wen. He doesn't look strong, and he doesn't have the over-excited mental state of someone who can punch and kick. Instead, he looks a little thin and old. He is light, doesn't talk much, and is restrained and reserved. people.
If he is just taciturn, it is not necessarily a charm. What is rare is that Ye Wen can always see through without saying anything. This is true for his apprentice, the singer, and other sects, and he always has a kind of stubbornness towards himself. Persistence, no matter how unwilling to ask for help, there is always a nuanced understanding of others, even if you can't see it anymore, it's just a light shake of your head.
With the apprentice: Always inspire, never interfere, the sentence about the unity of his own people, the metaphor about swimming, the bowl of unsweetened tortoise paste for Deng Sheng, he always knows that the path of life is the apprentice If you go on your own, the master can only give some advice. Whether you can realize it or not, it is up to the apprentice to choose which way to go. PS Bruce Lee's paragraph is so exaggerated, and it seems that the real situation is not the case. The director or screenwriter probably had a holiday with Bruce Lee?
With the singer: there is always a kind of tolerance. The singer's illiterate, the oranges and even the rice he handed over were lies. He didn't break it, nor did he pretend to cater. He was always tolerant and light. , but sincere. Much of the film describes the emotional affair of the elderly Ye Wen. At first, I didn't quite understand why Ye Wen liked that singer, because no matter how I looked at the illiterate singer, I couldn't match it, but maybe it was the loneliness and loneliness in his later years and the life that had gone through the ups and downs, so that he only longed for a simple Yes, warmth and love that doesn't take much effort. The singer's sincere admiration should be a kind of comfort to the old Ye Wen who has gone through the vicissitudes of life.
With Wu Zhong of the White Crane School: It should be because he is really happy. His humble attitude has made him feel comfortable with his opponents. He also understands the difficulty and hardship of accepting apprentices and opening a library. You can see that his particularly happy smile is the one with Wu Zhong. Conversation.
Martial arts always give people a strong and mighty sense of oppression, and although literati are elegant, they inevitably feel weak. However, Ye Wen combines the chivalry of the master and the elegance of the literati. This free-flowing style of action and quiet and restrained temperament is the charm of the ancient and old-fashioned characters.
Both "The Grandmaster" and "The Ultimate Battle" are about Ip Man. Huang Qiusheng and Tony Leung's Ip Man have their own merits. Although two people acted separately, they both caught Ye Wen's chivalrous and refined temperament. They also performed different characteristics, Huang Qiusheng performed aging, and Tony Leung performed depression. In addition, the angle of the story is also different. Huang Qiusheng's version is more realistic and personal, while Tony Leung's version is more romantic and has a grander background. The acting skills of the two are excellent, Liang Chaowei can make you forget his electric eye, Huang Qiusheng can make you forget the human flesh pork buns, and only the elegant and literate man who knows martial arts - Ye Wen.
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