(I discovered, that I only saved this post, and hadn't sent it yet.)
So, honestly, exactly due to SUCH cases,
ALL MEN ARE BROTHERS, I don't like the theatrical
release-rule.
The assumption for a layperson, seeing a year in the entry's
brackets, is: "made in ...", not "released in".
But there would be a simple solution to this,
which would do justice to both – making movie history
transparent (sorry, my key word!):
"Theatrical run" is "theatrical run". Leave it where it is.
But directly behind the movie in brackets you would
have the year of the beginning of shooting (proven by
magazins).
e.g. –> THE CONCRETE JUNGLE (1973; March in a mag) / Theatrical Run: 03/14/1974 - 03/18/1974
–> ALL MEN ARE BROTHERS (1973) / Release Date: 05/10/1975
Uups, with the latter, as I just saw, it is perfectly alright with me.
It is already in the database like this.
The editor who did this entry was totally aware of it.
What is to say against that modification of the rule?
(I would like to have the point here – not just a referrence
to a rule. Thanks!)
A year behind a title in brackets simply prompts
to most people, I am convinced: "from/shot in".
With a modification about the rule, we could make a more efficient use
of the option "theatrical run/release date" on one hand, and the year
in brackets on the other hand. It is still all there.
Unfinished movies are likewise: They were shot or begun by the time
they appeared in a mag.
Finally, how would we handle the "hybrid" TEN TIGERS OF KWANGTUNG
by Chang Cheh? Production stopped for two or three years, I would have
to re-check it exactly. But only this explains why there is (still) a Wei Pai
in the movie. You cannot reveal that to people with just a release date
much later. (The whole frame plot with flashbacks was not the original
plan of the movie.)
I feel obliged to movie history, its backgrounds and coherencies.
Even the filmography books from the archive give the same
(wrong) impression ... (naming a release date of CONCRETE JUNGLE
in 1977, due to some Taiwan release. I do not exactly know if it was
this movie, but a simlar case. – In Germany, due to release dates,
we would have to put "1974" in backets regarding ONE-ARMED
SWORDSMAN!)
A release date for me is a refining info, something additional,
some adjunct.
In my opinion we have the chance to do better here.
________
I have researched the case of ALL MEN ARE BROTHERS today:
The movie was begun in November 1971, then it was first
covered in "Southern Screen". Together with DELIGHTFUL FOREST
and WATER MARGIN, of course.
Production stopped, as Shaws big hit BOXER FROM SHANTUNG
was begun. ALL MEN ARE BROTHERS was finished at the beginning
of 1973, finally. Then it became its Shaw production number in their
catalogue.
I have a copy of that list. There you can see the order of
finished movies and when finally.
The movie was shown in November 1974 in Singapore (? I do not know
exactly which market these posters with printed numbers on it were for ...),
as you can see here:
http://hkmdb.com/db/movies/image_detail ... ay_set=eng