Ask for a movie. . .
Among Ni Kuang's many science fiction novels, few can be adapted into movies, but his Feng Shui is directed by Xu Xiaoming, a senior director from Hong Kong, and Ni Kuang is a screenwriter consultant, so the film has a high degree of restoration of the novel. It tells the story of two brothers Ruan () and Wei () who found the dragon cave overlord and unloaded his armor (the place where whales were swallowed). Brother Ruan intends to be buried in the first cave (distributing power) after his death, so that future generations can become power figures who have the right to rule the world, but Brother Wei knows that this cave is ominous. If Ruan Ge succeeds, the world will be in chaos. I tried to stop it, but it ended in failure. Twenty years later, the descendants of the three families began the struggle between justice and evil. What makes people relish is that Xu Xiaoming specially invited Lu Keming, a famous water consultant in Hong Kong.
Lu Keming is a famous figure in Hong Kong geomantic omen, and he is known as the master of three elements. It is said that when he was a teenager, he found a good tomb for local dignitaries and became famous in one fell swoop. In the 1980s, Wei Qianli of Wei Bei in Nanyuan studied Feng Shui with Lu Keming, who was only forty or fifty years old at that time. In the film, because of Lu Keming's guidance, Xu Xiaoming quoted "the three mountains of Guaguan are connected at three points. The first point is to develop strength and represent strength, the second point is to make a fortune and represent wealth, and the third point is to develop wisdom and represent cleverness." Geomantic omen theory makes movies more convincing.