Nevertheless, Ning Choi-san falls for the ghost and protects her from dangers in turn, Siu-sin defends him from other flesh-eating ghosts. Little does he know that Siu-sin is a ghost who lures travelers with her body so that the Tree Demoness (Lau Siu-ming), a 1000-year-old monster, can eat men inside out. There, he encounters an enchantingly beautiful woman called Nip Siu-sin ( Joey Wong). As a result, he spends a night in a haunted temple outside of town. Unfortunately, he is also plagued by misfortune as his account book is destroyed, so he has no money to pay for shelter. The first film tells the story of Ning Choi-san (played by Leslie Cheung), a debt collector who travels through China and visits local towns. Never being a huge fan of the fantasy/ghost genre, I was not really keen on checking it out initially, but the more I read about the film, the more I wanted to discover the phenomenon behind it. When I was at the beginning of my adventure with the Hong Kong cinema, this one title, A Chinese Ghost Story, kept popping up on many movie recommendation lists and various message boards. Inspired by the Shaw Brothers 1960 production The Enchanting Shadow and Pu Songling’s short story collection Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio, the original movie can be best described as an all-time supernatural classic. Swordsman, ridiculous! I don’t want to be a man, yet Nip Siu-sin wishes to reincarnate. I pretended to be a ghost in front of a man and a human in front of a ghost, and now I don’t know if I’m a man or a ghost. A Chinese Ghost Story (1987) I retired, because I hate dealing with mean people.
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