Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuPrince Chien Lung, who soon became the Ching Dynasty's most famous and far-reaching emperor, travels with his bodyguard to locate a secret document offering evidence of the prince's Han Chin... Alles lesenPrince Chien Lung, who soon became the Ching Dynasty's most famous and far-reaching emperor, travels with his bodyguard to locate a secret document offering evidence of the prince's Han Chinese heritage. The document is held within Shaolin Temple. The Prince enlists the help of h... Alles lesenPrince Chien Lung, who soon became the Ching Dynasty's most famous and far-reaching emperor, travels with his bodyguard to locate a secret document offering evidence of the prince's Han Chinese heritage. The document is held within Shaolin Temple. The Prince enlists the help of his cousin, who is a Kung Fu expert to go and get the document.
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Fans of fight scenes will, of course, be satisfied. Carter Wong takes on all manner of opponents in the first half of the film, in scenes that are usually shot outdoors on location. In a lengthy middle portion of the film, Cliff Lok takes on pretty much every fighting monk at Shaolin in a series of "tests" that all take place in one day. He even takes a crash course in the 12 Tamo Strikes with the revered Shaolin Abbot. The famous 18 Bronze Men turn up in one bit, but they don't fight at all. (Lok turns up in the next sequence none the worse for wear despite the punishment he took in those fights.) Finally, there's one more big fight pitting Cliff Lok and his anti-Ching entourage against Carter Wong and his men, culminating in a one-on-one showdown between Lok and Wong. Doris Chen (aka Lung Chung Erh) shows up in a couple of scenes, but doesn't have much to do. Kam Kong, frequently a villain in these films, plays one of Lok's allies.
I was quite alarmed to note that the Shaolin fight scenes seem to have been filmed in an actual temple, and one that looks freshly painted, to boot. I'm hoping the statues and altars so close to the fighting were props. In one maneuver, Lok even spills black oil on the floor to slide along in order to make him too slippery for his opponents. I kept thinking about those poor temple caretakers and wondering if they simply banned all filmmakers from the premises thereafter.
My copy has the German title page. It is a wide screen video with English dubbing.
It opens with Cliff Lok doing forms demonstrations under a waterfall. Cut to the emperor, Carter Wong gets a message about proving his legitimacy as successor to the throne. He goes to a shrine (possibly the cheapest set in movie history) with his men and they are attacked. The first fight is Carter against about eight attackers. It appears exciting but on a closer look is just Carter flailing his arms as attackers step forward with feeble and off target motions. The second fight is mostly in the dark and what could be seen was only a little better. Pai Ying and Carter go to the brothel where Doris Lung Chun-Erh is one of the girls. Pai Ying ends up carried away in a sack.
At about the thirty minute mark Cliff Lok's character enters the Shaolin temple. His fights there are the highest level. I counted over thirty moves before a cut in some of his fight sequences. Today there are techniques in film editing that can fake this but back in 1976 it took real skills to do a fight sequence like that. For about thirty minutes Cliff Lok continues with almost non-stop action.
Cliff Lok started in martial arts movies in the 1960s. His first lead was 1972 "The Roaring Lion" which I also reviewed here. I rated his fight against Sek Kin in that movie as one of the best fights ever as of 1972.
I rate this movie above average for a martial arts movie of the golden age from 1967 to 1984 and recommend it for all fans of the genre.
The prince character is somewhat amoral in this film and takes a back seat to the proceedings, allowing Carter Wong to do the hard share of the fighting. The action is entertaining enough while at the same time lacking the finesse of, say, a Shaw Brothers movie, but then of course it was made in Taiwan for a lot less money without the wealth of talent that Shaw were able to afford over in Hong Kong. Cliff Lok does well in a fairly complex role and his episode in the Shaolin temple is the most interesting part of the movie.
THE BEST OF SHAOLIN KUNG FU features a cameo appearance for the popular 18 Bronze Men characters, although they only stand around and don't do any actual fighting. However, there are plenty of bouts with the monks themselves which are fun, and the use of no less than 12 different styles (including bird's foot style!) is engaging. One of my favourite moments is a fight with monk Phillip Ko on some vines hanging down a cliff face! The final fight, which is usually the highlight of a kung fu movie, is a little undistinguished, although not the worst I've seen.
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- PatzerA group with swords attacks Carter, who handles them easily. Midway through the fight, their swords inexplicably disappear before they start a second round unarmed, apparently hoping for a better outcome without any weapons.
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- The Best of Shaolin Kung Fu
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 18 Min.(78 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1