ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,2/10
2,1 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueTwo rival warriors, a Japanese and a Chinese, are forced to work together after their master has been killed by a mighty enemy.Two rival warriors, a Japanese and a Chinese, are forced to work together after their master has been killed by a mighty enemy.Two rival warriors, a Japanese and a Chinese, are forced to work together after their master has been killed by a mighty enemy.
- Prix
- 1 nomination au total
Jeong-lee Hwang
- The Magician
- (as Jang Lee Hwang)
Yeong-moon Kwon
- Sanchiro
- (as Wing-Man Kwan)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAfter the film's success, producer Ng See Yuen had a huge dispute with the Taiwanese producers regarding with hiring Conan Lee to their pictures which led to misleading where producers thought Ng refused to let them hire Lee. This ended up led the Taiwanese producers to hire a Taiwanese triad members to severely injure and black mailing Ng. Ng See Yuen decided to let Conan Lee off from the contract.
- GaffesDuring the intro scenes, eight ninja run the parcour. When they scale the wall with their hand-claws, there are suddenly just six, and when they run down the steps in the forest, they suddenly number eight again.
- Autres versionsGerman theatrical and VHS releases are cut during some violent scenes to qualify for a "Not under 16" rating. With the same "Not under 16" rating, only in the 2010s was the movie released uncut on DVD and Blu-ray in Germany.
- ConnexionsFeatured in NG See Yuen: Inside the Dragon's Den with Roy Horan (2002)
- Bandes originalesThe Legend of the Ninja
Written by Casey Rankin and John Scott
Performed by Alfredo Chen Singers
Courtesy of Columbia Records
Commentaire en vedette
This is the sort of Kung Fu movie I love, one with lots of action, plenty of daft, broad, but enjoyable humour, a cracking pace, and a storyline that although it isn't groundbreaking, does hold your interest and give the film a bit of structure. Its also great to see a mix of fighting styles and plenty of weapon use mixed in with the kung fu. This is low budget (although high at the time for a Hong Kong film) with dodgy music and sound effects, and some dodgy lines (although that might have been through translation), but it doesn't take itself too seriously until near the end, so you can't help but love it.
It really hasn't been given enough respect this film, hardly anyone seems to have seen it on any of the Kung Fu fan sites. It is readily available on the Hong Kong Legends series in remastered widescreen format with plenty of extras though, so I recommend anyone who loves old style Martial Arts films (especially ones like Drunken Master) to buy this now!
It really hasn't been given enough respect this film, hardly anyone seems to have seen it on any of the Kung Fu fan sites. It is readily available on the Hong Kong Legends series in remastered widescreen format with plenty of extras though, so I recommend anyone who loves old style Martial Arts films (especially ones like Drunken Master) to buy this now!
- dave_or_did
- 11 août 2002
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By what name was Long zhi ren zhe (1982) officially released in India in English?
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