How ‘middle class’ Hong Kong movie studio D&B Films became one of the most respected
D&B films, started by watch retailer Dickson Poon, launched Michelle Yeoh’s action-movie career and was known for its ‘middle class values’
![Cynthia Rothrock (left) and Michelle Yeoh in a still from Yes, Madam! (1985), made by D&B Films, a studio founded by watch retailer Dickson Poon, who would go on to marry Yeoh. Photo: Handout](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/canvas/2024/11/28/d7b08dfe-5402-4b20-8200-19d0d1803702_684749b0.jpg?itok=xwNnLYxD&v=1732785077)
By the mid-1980s, Hong Kong’s once-powerful Shaw Brothers studio had stopped producing films, and the city’s film industry was dominated by Shaw’s former rival Golden Harvest and the newer, comedy-oriented studio Cinema City.
Into this melee stepped an unexpected competitor: D&B Films, owned by Dickson Poon, a wealthy watch retailer with no experience of the film industry.
![Paul Chun (centre) in a still from The Lunatics (1986). Photo: Handout Paul Chun (centre) in a still from The Lunatics (1986). Photo: Handout](https://img.i-scmp.com/cdn-cgi/image/fit=contain,width=1024,format=auto/sites/default/files/d8/images/canvas/2024/11/28/4beed8e9-e225-4fcc-9d18-32134c3f25b5_a77f89b3.jpg)
Quickly frustrated by the low number of cinema screens he could show his films on under an arrangement with Golden Harvest, which ran a chain of cinemas as well as a production company, Poon courageously assembled the Dickson cinema chain to screen the D&B productions.
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