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January 10th, 2007
 

Lost in Hong Kong Part 7:
More Angst, Less Action
or
No More Life, No More Kozo

Change is good...or at least, that's what they tell me. As we enter 2007, LoveHKFilm.com has been online nearly five years, which means many things, among them the fact that I've been doing this far too long. Truthfully, I complain about my updates and lack of time too much, resulting in emails telling me to "stop whining" or "take it easy" or, in one memorable instance, "shut the f**k up!" It's been barrels of fun.

So, I'm going to do something to stop all of that. In 2007, LoveHKFilm.com will cease its bi-weekly updates. What that means is I'll update when I feel like it, and not simply because I have a deadline to meet. The reasons for this are many, and I'll probably tackle them in one of the long-delayed Life with Kozo articles very soon. The short answer is simply that Kozo/the Webmaster/Me would like to take things easier. The longer, more complex answer involves things like other website contributors slowing down, the website forum growing more quiet, and the increasing proliferation and comprehensiveness of Asian Cinema sites and blogs that are far more successful and/or highly regarded than this one. Basically, LoveHKFilm.com is just another Hong Kong Cinema site. One more or one less won't really make much difference.

With that in mind, I hope that LoveHKFilm.com can return to being the site it was always supposed to be, that is a website that was created to chronicle one person's love of Hong Kong Cinema, and not a site meant to push products, cater to the whims of unrelated individuals, or punch a bi-weekly clock simply to meet amorphous expectations created by the Internet. The above does not mean that I'll stop updating the site. In fact, I hope to update it even more, though the frequency won't be on a fixed timeline, nor will it necessarily involve every Hong Kong movie that just came out in the theater. Deadlines and restrictions are meant for work, and this website is my hobby.

I hope all the site's visitors still take the time to drop by, and that they still enjoy their time here. If you don't then I understand, though I could be lying. You can never tell.

By the way, I also reserve the right to completely change my mind and return to bi-weekly updates and the continuing obsession with reviewing everything that comes out, even Half-Twin. Happy Holidays!


     Two years ago when I first started to work at YesAsia.com, I got an email from Mark Morrison, former webmaster of Austrailian Asian Cinema supersite Heroic Cinema. At the time Mark was not yet the former webmaster, having spent years making Heroic Cinema into the leading Asian Cinema site down under. However, Mark was on the verge of burnout, juggling the site, his job, and his family. He decided to hang it up, passing Heroic Cinema on to some of his team. At the same time, however, he gave me some advice which I sometimes reflect upon.
     The advice: Quit your website, right now. You'll thank yourself for it later.
      I'm definitely paraphrasing his words, but the intent is the same. Basically, he was telling me that one day I'd run myself ragged trying to manage my website, my life, and my job. Let's cover them in reverse order:
     My job has taken on increasing importance lately. Not necessarily because of the hours I pour into the job --actually, those haven't changed much, and if anything, I try to knock off work at an earlier time than I used to. The problem is the level of responsiblitity and

 

ma. At the time Mark was not yet the former webmaster, having spent years making Heroic Cinema into the leading Asian Cinema site down under. However, Mark was on the verge of burnout, juggling the site, his job, and his family. He decided to hang it up, passing Heroic Cinema on to some of his team. At the same time, however, he gave me some advice which I sometimes reflect upon.
     The advice: Quit your website, right now. You'll thank yourself for it later.
      I'm definitely paraphrasing his words, but the intent is the same. Basically, he was telling me that one day I'd run myself ragged trying to manage my website, my life, and my job. Let's cover them in reverse order:
     My job has taken on increasing importance lately. Not necessarily because of the hours I pour into the job -actually, those haven't changed much, and if anything, I try to knock off work at an earlier time than I used to. The problem is the level of responsiblitity and

     Truthfully, the value of this site is hard to ascertain. Recently I did a Google search on the site name and found a few instances where people basically said this site is another word for excrement. I've even been referred to as a bastard by quite a few people. Truthfully, I'm not the type of guy who likes to gain attention. I prefer to stay quiet and unobtrusive, and I detest getting involved in other lives. That's why doing things like managing people, hiring them, firing them, or simply meeting them gets on my nerves. Sometimes I just want to wither up and disappear. What enjoyment is there in being hurt or hurting other people? I would ask why we all can't just get along, but I think it's been said before.
      Something happened the other day in my job. I discovered a file on my computer left over from some time before I arrived there. The f




A full five years ago, I lost my job. I used to work at a home theater store in Northern California, where I ran their computer systems and worked on their now-defunct website. That store is now closed, having gone out of business a few years after I left. My leaving had no impact on their closing; if anything, it was just a sign of the inevitable. What wasn't inevitable was that I had to go sometime. I simply chose the wrong time to do it. The actual details are probably not worth going into, but back then I was exceptionally angry with my job, my boss, and some of my co-workers. I wasn't happy doing what I was doing, and I continued to stay there unhappily. I had my friends and supporters at the company, but in the end, my attitude was not something to be celebrated or condoned. No, I needed to get the ax.
     Which I did, on September 12th, 2001. If anything, the actual timing of my dismissal really put my personal issues into perspective. If I was going to get angry over my crappy job just one day after something of such global magnitude as 9-11 occurred, then I was seriously twisted. I could have used a break -- and I got it, in the form of a forced vacation without pay. It was really a good thing, and even though I was filled with bile and bitternerness back then, I too knew it was a good thing. Sometimes a divorce is necessary, and if you can't do it yourself, hopefully someone has the guts to do it for you. This may not apply to everyone out there who gets terminated from their job, but it definitely applied to me. I simply should not have worked at that place any longer than I had. Hell, I should have left a full year earlier.
     But thanks to getting the ax, I had time to think about what I wanted to do with my life. Running systems at a small store wasn't going to cut it, especially since the bursting of the IT bubble meant marginally skilled people like myself would never find a job. To make a long story short, I screwed around, took some writing courses, founded this site, developed it, and ended up coming to Hong Kong a little over 3 years later to work at YesAsia.com. Blah blah blah...you can get the full lowdown if you read previous Life With Kozo columns. I swear I could just copy and paste old columns, reorder them, and then pass them off as new work. It would probably amount to what I usually do when I write a column, which is basically talk about the same old stuff in a new form. I think my standard topics are A) should I quit this website, B) I'm a lucky guy, C) downloading sucks, and D) some NBA basketball references. I figure I'll definitely cover A in this column. I'll try to avoid B through D, though B usually sneaks in anyway. It's hard to talk about ending up in Hong Kong without talking about how lucky I am.
     Hell, let's just go straight to B. I know I'm lucky, because I was hired to be an English Editor at YesAsia.com despite having no formal experience or training as an Editor. Basically, I was hired because I wrote a wacky website about Hong Kong movies, the rationale being that if I could string all these words together, publish them, and keep the mistakes to an acceptable minimum, then I could probably do the same for YesAsia.com. I assume I was able to do that, because since then I've received two promotions. In practical terms, that means I now have absolute power over a 1 inch space on every YesAsia.com product page -- the English pages, anyway. But merit isn't the main reason for my success, if you could call it that. Both times I got promoted, someone above me either left the company or opted to transfer.
     What's that called again? Oh yeah, luck.
     So yes, I'm a lucky guy. There's really not another word for it. But having made it to where I am (if one could even call this "making it"), I've found myself in a very strange position. Basically, my entire reason for ending up where I am right now has all but disappeared. I no longer do much writing about Asian Cinema, and instead concern myself with new initiatives, management tasks and personnel issues. That last responsiblity has its own pitfalls, because sometimes you end up having to say or do things that you simply do not want to do. You also have to make judgements that you don't want to make, and essentially put larger issues in front of the standard afterschool special stuff, like feelings, fairness, and friendship.
     Once upon a time, I thought I just wanted to be everyone's buddy. Of course, that's impossible. Hell, having this website has taught me that. I still get e-mails blasting me for my opinions, and of course saying what I say probably earns me no friends in the Hong Kong Entertainment circle. Sometimes I wonder if it does me any good at all. Recently, I've been looking at a lot of other websites, and what I've discovered is that my writing has not improved in the last 1-2 years. New Asian Cinema sites are cropping up all the time, and this one is stalled because I spend only a fraction of the time that others do working on it. Since working at YesAsia.com, I've discovered that there are actually webmasters out there who make their living running their websites. It's a full time job for them, from licensing out their content to earning affiliate dollars and advertising revenue. Given LoveHKFilm.com's traffic, I could probably do the same thing, meaning I could load up the site with ads, and apply to every affiliate program known to man, from YesAsia.com to [insert competitor site here] and [insert other competitor site here]. I could make this my fulltime job.
     Except it brings me back to the original problem: I'm not sure what my writing skills really are. I don't have much experience writing features, nor am I exceptionally good at writing news. Even my review skills are a bit suspect, as I'm not an academic, and instead choose to approach stuff from a fan point of view. In many ways, I consider myself an amateur. I never planned on being a writer or film reviewer, and instead choose to do it because at the time, I didn't have anything better to do. I'm now five years older, and I live in the country that spawned this whole mess in the first place. Sadly, the cinema is rapidly dying here in Hong Kong, and new releases are few and far between. The reason for this is the usual: reduced profits, illegal downloading (Editor note: I just referenced Standard Topic C), no new talent, etc. Hong Kong Cinema is a shadow of its former self, though I still watch whatever comes down the pipeline, even if those films include Dating a Vampire and Half Twin. I'm not sure if I'm dedicated or just stupid. Surely there must be better things to do with my time.
     But there aren't, actually. In many ways, I would consider this website the only thing I've ever achieved because really, I'm not sure I've achieved much of anything else. I have been exceptionally lucky, because I got to this point with absolutely no planning or forethought -- which is actually scary if you think about it. Back when I got terminated from my previous job, I also had no plan, and simply existed day to day, earning my paycheck and grousing over how things at my company were not being done in the way I thought they should. After a while, thoughts like that will make it to the top, and when they do, there will be consequences. If I had thought about my plans, about my future, maybe I wouldn't have acted so short-sightedly. Maybe I could have planned for a career in systems adminstration, or simply left the job earlier because I realized that there was nothing left for me there. At that job, my luck ran out, and when it was over, all I had were my savings, some hard lessons, and the raw skills to put together this website.
     I guess it's turned out okay, but if I've learned anything all, I should think about what the next step is. Should I continue to do things the way that I've done them: take my job as it comes, accept whatever new responsiblities arise, and run this questionably relevant website on the side? Or, should I reformat my thinking, find a goal, develop whatever skills I think I have, and try to achieve more? Does that goal even involve LoveHKFilm.com? After all, it's no longer the #1 Asian Film Site on Alexa, and has lost relevance because it doggedly covers a cinema that is considered a joke in many parts. I actively ignore the obviously superior quality of current Korean and Japanese cinema for films like Lethal Ninja, We Are Family, and -- coming to a review page near you -- Midnight Running, Without Words, and maybe even A Wondrous Bet. None of those films is going to be playing a festival anytime soon, and if I actually love one of them, I'll be the most surprised person in the room.
     But I'll probably still review them. Basically, that's what I do: watch everything even though quality and actual enjoyment is a fool's dream. Even the worst movies that come out Korea look like gold thanks to the beautiful production values and polished technique. Here in Hong Kong, we have Kung Fu Mahjong 2, which features an apartment set that looks worse than the apartment I currently live in. If that's not a warning sign, then I don't know what is.
     But for now, I guess this is where I am. I'm not holding my breath that these movies will be that great, but at the very least I want to be there when they actually do get better. It's not what I want to be doing 10 years from now, but it's good enough for the next six to eight months. Until I think of something better, holding out hope for Hong Kong is as good a goal as any.

-- Kozo, 7/31/2006

 
 

Life with Kozo


   
  The Featured Photos
More photos from Hong Kong. At top, it's Kozo visiting some really rundown housing estates that might possibly have featured in the recent film On the Edge. Photo #2 is a shot of a sign seen along many hiking trails -- which may actually have some metaphorical connection to Kozo's recent decision concerning the fate of his website. Photo #3 is a glimpse of Eric Tsang who looks like he's about to eat a little girl. Alternately, it could be an advertisement for Kee Wah Bakeries. Photo #4 is an exterior shot of a daipaidong (or open air restaurant) in Lai Chi Kok. The location was seen in both House of Fury and Dog Bite Dog. Photo #5 is a creepy photo of a little girl in a pink dress hanging around in a presumably dangerous construction site. Future parents: this is a good example of what not to do. And finally Photo #6 is a shot of Kozo standing outside the famed Sheung Wan building that Anthony Wong got tossed from in Infernal Affairs. Yes, you too can visit these places. Just pay for your ticket and head over here to Hong Kong. I'll be glad to wave at you if I see you.
   

 
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The opinions expressed within are merely the musings of the Webmaster, and as such should be taken with the requisite grain of salt. If you disagree with an expressed opinion please feel free to contact him here. If you feel he has insulted your favorite popstar, you can still contact him. However, your chances of receiving a reply will be reduced by half.
   
     
       
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