Ronny Yu
Below is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in) for Ronny Yu. If you have any corrections or additions, please email us at corrections@meninmovies.com. We'd also be interested in any trivia or other information you have.

Movie Credits
Blood: The Last Vampire (2007)
Huo Yuan Jia (2006)
[ Jet Li ][ Nathan Jones ][ Collin Chou ]
Freddy vs. Jason (2003)
[ Lochlyn Munro ][ Robert Englund ][ Chris Marquette ][ Jason Ritter ][ Brendan Fletcher ]
The 51st State (2001)
[ Rhys Ifans ][ Samuel L. Jackson ][ Robert Carlyle ][ Sean Pertwee ]
Chasing Dragon (1999)
Bride of Chucky (1998)
[ Alexis Arquette ][ Brad Dourif ][ John Ritter ][ Rob Zombie ][ Willie Nelson ]
Warriors of Virtue (1997)
[ Angus MacFadyen ][ Doug Jones ][ Lee Arenberg ]
Ye ban ge sheng (1995)
Bai fa mo nu zhuan (1993)
Bai fa mo nu zhuan II (1993)
Huo tou fu xing (1992)
Wu Lin sheng dou shi (1992)
Qian wang 1991 (1991)
[ Tony Leung Chiu Wai ]
Gwang tin lung foo wooi (1989)
[ Billy Drago ][ Russell Wong ][ Andy Lau ]
Meng gui fo tiao qiang (1988)
Long zai jiang hu (1986)
[ Brandon Lee ][ Bolo Yeung ]
Si yan zi (1985)
Ling qi po ren (1984)
[ Yun-Fat Chow ]
Jui gwai chat hung (1981)
Xun cheng ma (1981)
[ Yun-Fat Chow ]
Jiu shi zhe (1980)
Cheung laap cheing ngoi (1979)

 

Although he ultimately produced scores of Asian martial arts classics - and broke the bank at the American box office with several visually decadent slasher pictures - Ronny Yu began life by confronting and surmounting difficult obstacles. Born Ronny Yan-Tai Yu in Hong Kong, China, c. 1950, Yu contracted polio as a small boy. Bedbound and largely immobile, Yu developed a rich, elegant, sensorial imaginative capacity, to which he credits much of his later success behind the camera. Saddled with a practical and conservative Chinese family, Yu followed his parents' wishes by earning an MBA from Ohio University, and later graduated, returning to mainland China. Meanwhile, Philip Chan, a police officer friend of Yu's who moonlighted as an aspiring actor and screenwriter, sensed Yu's inborn directorial ability and suggested that they co-helm a crime thriller script he had authored, The Servant; on set, Yu immediately grasped filmmaking basics and used the experience to hone his craft. The effort paid off; The Servant became the summer box office hit of 1979 in China, and gave Yu a permanent niche in the Chinese film industry.Project after project followed (1981's The Postman Always Fights Back, 1983's The Trail, 1984's The Occupant, 1986's Legacy of Rage), and Yu racked up one success after another. His most ambitious outing arrived in 1993. The Bride With White Hair, one of the most expensive and lavish features produced in China up through that time, capitalized on the success of 1987's Chinese Ghost Story with a romantic, supernatural fantasy epic. Yu co-adapted the script with several others, from a two-volume 1954 Chinese novel; it tells of the star-crossed love between a Wu-Tang Clan warrior and a female counterpart who saves him from a pack of ravenous animals. The summer release did incredible business, in Hong Kong and international markets; a sequel emerged that same year, also directed by Yu. 1995's The Phantom Lover , a melodrama that Yu loosely adapted from The Phantom of the Opera, dazzled audiences equally. In the late nineties, Hollywood beckoned, and invited Yu to revitalize the then-sagging Child's Play series (with 1998's Bride of Chucky) and the Nightmare on Elm Street and Friday the 13th series (with 2003's Freddy vs. Jason). The latter raked in such a healthy profit that its gross surpassed the profits of all the Elm Street and Friday movies, combined - an astonishing accomplishment, given the bankability of the individual films. In 2006, Yu returned to martial arts pictures for the Jet Li-starrer Fearless. A historical biopic, it features Li as the legendary Huo Yuanjia, who became the most infamous martial arts master in China at the turn of the 20th century. Rogue Pictures scheduled Fearless for general release in January 2006 (in China) and September 2006 (in the U.S.). Yu resides in Australia.


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