Page 1 of 1

'Supreme Swordsman' & taboo characters sharp as a knife

PostPosted: Mon Jan 15, 2007 10:28 am
by kenichiku
To Whom It May Concern,

I was just learning the folks over at IMDB with my own materials/records & saw that they have no entry for this title so I did the honors. In doing so, I crossed referenced your entry to keep those folks (& myself) honest. Here I saw that the first character for the final Chinese title of this entry:

http://hkmdb.com/db/movies/view.mhtml?id=9497&display_set=eng

and found that it needs some clarification. I belieive 'Wang Zhuan Yi Jian' is incorrect. I had originally thought the 'hat' over the 'wang' to be 'chuan' (as in 'chuan shi' i.e. 'all of the world') instead but the top horizontal stroke over the 'hat' made me wrong as well. It's actually 'zhi' instead. I think the saying is commonly used together with 'zhi' preceding 'zhuan' (btw, you'll usually find this character 'zhuan' as a prominent symbol at Chinese funerals so it carries some powerful negative cultural baggage-connotations if you rookie linguists use it carelessly); whereby with 'zhi' the term correlates more with the concept of 'supreme' to become the adjective meaning something like 'the pinnacle' i.e. 'the highest' so if one combines with the rest of it, translates to something like 'Finally, One Sword'.

Since I'm unfamiliar with Chinese character coding software, I can only refer you to another entry as an example to illustrate what I'm gabbing about:

http://hkmdb.com/db/movies/view.mhtml?id=7464&display_set=eng

So you catch my drift? Geez, the original 'Lao Ying De Jian' was much more elementary. Shaws did a retitle after that film sat for 5 years. Actually, with such a serious grandoise title, it's odd that the script shifted gears & the film took a turn into kung fu comedy territory IMO, for the worse. Anyway, you guys can take it from here...thanks in advance.

PostPosted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 10:24 pm
by calros
You are right. Changed.

PostPosted: Mon Jan 22, 2007 11:38 am
by kenichiku
You are the man.

Re: 'Supreme Swordsman' & taboo characters sharp as a knife

PostPosted: Sat Sep 21, 2019 6:57 am
by Teddy Wong
The year of the movie is 1984, not 1979.

Image
Image


Please change

Re: 'Supreme Swordsman' & taboo characters sharp as a knife

PostPosted: Sat Sep 21, 2019 7:41 am
by calros
If nobody stops me in 15 days i will change it.

Re: 'Supreme Swordsman' & taboo characters sharp as a knife

PostPosted: Sat Sep 21, 2019 8:18 am
by Teddy Wong
There's no reason to wait for 15 days. 1979 is an obvious mistake.
Margaret Lee, who's one of the leading actors in this movie, entered movie industry only in 1982.

Re: 'Supreme Swordsman' & taboo characters sharp as a knife

PostPosted: Sat Sep 21, 2019 3:19 pm
by calros
There is a rule that says we have to wait a reasonable time before making a change in the DB.
It's a matter of etiquette nothing more.
If we have waited 13 years, we can wait 13 more days.