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March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
Old Master Q

Wikipedia

 
Old Master Q (老夫子; pinyin: Lǎo FūZǐ) is a popular Chinese comic strip originally published in 1962. It was created by Alfonso Wong. The series featured the cute, beloved characters of Old Master Q, Mr. Qin, Big Potato and Mr. Chen in a variety of hilarious situations.

The comic series was made into many Cantonese and Mandarin cartoon animations, TV series, and plays, including a feature film, Master Q 2001, which combined live actors and advanced Computer-generated imagery|CGI graphics. It starred popular Hong Kong stars such as Nicholas Tse and Cecilia Cheung. In 2003, there was a new movie called Old Master Q Pet Detective.

Characters in Old Master Q comic strips are usually portrayed in a variety of social statuses, professions and time periods, ranging from beggars and office workers to actors and ancient warriors, allowing for a wide variety of settings and ideas. More outlandish scenarios included close encounters with aliens, ghost sightings and the afterlife.

While Old Master Q comics primarily focus on humour, it also reflected changing social trends, particularly from the 1960s to the 1990s. The comics would sometimes feature social problems in urban life, such as poverty, criminal thefts and secret societies. It also poked fun at the arts, including clothing fashion, contemporary art and modern music. The language barrier, mostly between the Chinese language and the English language, was not overlooked either.

In rare cases, Old Master Q comics would express more serious views regarding major social or political changes taking place in Hong Kong. It had previously criticise overly westernised Chinese, who were sometimes shown in the comic strips to slant more towards the interests of westerners than native locals. The agreement to hand over power on Hong Kong to China, following the Sino-British Joint Declaration of 1984, would also become a subject matter, as a few comic strips were published through the late 1980s and early 1990s expressing the characters' fears of handover, normally represented in a numeral of the year it would take place: 1997. Some of these comic strips had even went the distance to depict direct assault of what appeared to be a representation of the Chinese government, which usually takes place near the end of the comic strip.



  • http://www.oldmasterq.com/ Official Old Master Q site


Category:Comic strips
category:Hong Kong comics

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Old Master Q".


Last Modified:   2005-04-13


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