1989, Jiahe Film Company produced "One Eyebrow Road flyover" directed by Ching-Ying Lam. This is the first time that Ching-Ying Lam directed a film independently, and it is also the first time that he combined Oriental Feng Shui with Western vampires. Just like Hong Kong, a city where Chinese and foreign cultures blend, it presents a magnificent effect of cultural hybridization and strangeness. Commercially, the film has also achieved great success, with a box office of over 10 million Hong Kong dollars.
From 1980s to early 1990s, Ching-Ying Lam's zombie movies were popular in Asia. As one of the genre films in Hong Kong, in the golden age of Hong Kong films, although it can't be compared with Wu Yusen's Jianghu films, Tsui Hark's martial arts films and Stephen Chow's comedies, it is unique and becomes one of the representative figures.
One of the shadows of childhood, the seduction war in Banana Ghost, the journey of Ghost in White and the final battle of vampires, especially the final battle of vampires, are simply childhood nightmares?
Although the special effects of horror films now far exceed those at that time, they do not have the shock of "ghost films" at that time. The reason may be "growing up".