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Qi shi er sha xing

  • 1978
  • Not Rated
  • 1 h 33 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,7/10
85
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Qi shi er sha xing (1978)
ActionDrama

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThe Emperor's spy, the daughter of the killed governor Shih Han, a mysterious mercenary and a blind swordsman team up to defeat Chief Pirate, leader of the 72 Desperate Rebels, but eventuall... Ler tudoThe Emperor's spy, the daughter of the killed governor Shih Han, a mysterious mercenary and a blind swordsman team up to defeat Chief Pirate, leader of the 72 Desperate Rebels, but eventually it will be his daughter who will decide the end of the movie. This superb martial arts m... Ler tudoThe Emperor's spy, the daughter of the killed governor Shih Han, a mysterious mercenary and a blind swordsman team up to defeat Chief Pirate, leader of the 72 Desperate Rebels, but eventually it will be his daughter who will decide the end of the movie. This superb martial arts movie has nice imaginative touches and a very good planning direction.

  • Direção
    • Bing Lin
  • Roteiristas
    • Chien Chin
    • Yang Hsiang
  • Artistas
    • Hua Tsung
    • Barry Chan
    • Sing Chen
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,7/10
    85
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Bing Lin
    • Roteiristas
      • Chien Chin
      • Yang Hsiang
    • Artistas
      • Hua Tsung
      • Barry Chan
      • Sing Chen
    • 7Avaliações de usuários
    • 1Avaliação da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos17

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    Elenco principal21

    Editar
    Hua Tsung
    Hua Tsung
    Barry Chan
    Barry Chan
    • Shih Chi-Liang
    • (as Tzu-Yun Wei)
    Sing Chen
    Sing Chen
    • Wu Li-Wei
    Ying Bai
    Ying Bai
    • Po Ho Nin
    Ji-Lung Chang
    Shu-Lin Chang
    Chung-Wu Chiang
    Han Hsieh
    Han Hsieh
    • General Liu
    Ma Ju-Feng
    Ma Ju-Feng
      Fei Lung
      Fei Lung
      Chung Ouyang
      Chung Ouyang
      Te-Yun Pei
      Te-Yun Pei
      Kam Siu
      Kam Siu
        Yuan-Feng Su
        Miao Tien
        Miao Tien
          Hung Tsai
          Hung Tsai
          Shan Wan
          Kai Wang
          • Direção
            • Bing Lin
          • Roteiristas
            • Chien Chin
            • Yang Hsiang
          • Elenco e equipe completos
          • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

          Avaliações de usuários7

          5,785
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          10

          Avaliações em destaque

          BrianDanaCamp

          Sub-par kung fu film with some bizarre, imaginative touches

          72 DESPERATE REBELS is not terribly well-plotted or edited, nor is the kung fu what it should be in a film of this type, but it does have a certain visual flair and enough fight scenes to keep fans interested if not always seriously engaged. The plot has to do with a trio of heroes (two men, one woman) who take it upon themselves to try and bring down a powerful outlaw named Po Ho Nin (Pai Ying) who has an army of 72 killers and warriors whose combined skills have wreaked havoc throughout the region. The heroes are joined at one point by a blind swordsman (Lung Fei) who teaches them to 'fight in blindness' and, later, by a notorious swordsman who, they hope, can lead them to victory. At one point the heroes have to fight in different chambers set up by the bad guys, including the Tiger, Leopard, Crane and Phoenix chambers. In the latter, they are assaulted by hundreds of bells being rung overhead or thrown at them by women fighters.

          The villain's personal bodyguards include a midget and a giant. The giant (played by Siu Kam) has the same glandular condition as seven-foot-two actor Richard Kiel and sports a row of gold teeth, recalling Kiel's role as the steel-toothed 'Jaws' in a pair of James Bond films. The giant bites on opponents' swords and breaks them with his teeth. The running joke is that, like Jaws in the Bond films, every time he's left for dead, he always rises up in the next scene to continue the battle.

          The stars are not terribly charismatic. The female fighters are not memorable and not particularly skilled, although they are attractive. The only name actors in the cast are Tien Peng as one of the heroes; Pai Ying as villain Po Ho Nin; Lung Fei as the Blind Swordsman; Tsai Hung as one of the lead villains; and Chen Sing in one short fight scene as one of Po's warriors.

          The plot is somewhat incoherent, the actors not at their the best, the English dubbing awkward, and the kung fu too reliant on gimmickry, such as incredibly high leaps up great distances. However, there is a certain amount of imagination on display and the giant is quite a novelty.
          8ajoyce1va

          Standard "Bandit Chief vs. Young Heroes" story. The YH group has to fight their way up through the bandit hierarchy before they can confront the bandit chief himself.

          Anyone who thinks this is the worst movie or even the worst kung-fu movie ever made hasn't seen very many. It's true that "72 Desperate Rebels" suffers from many of the problems of the genre -- poor writing; stock situations and characters; uninspired, cheesy acting -- but there are many saving graces in this particular outing.

          Top of my list would be the presence of marvelous, always menacing, veteran villain Pai Ying as the bandit chief. He doesn't have much to do here, but it's always satisfying to see him. Also, even though it was just a short cameo appearance (and rather disappointing for that), there's a brief fighting scene featuring a very buff Chen Sing in his prime. The rest of the cast consisted of people I never saw before or since.

          Second, the production values are surprisingly high for an indie film company. Even the extras have great costumes. There are good sets and outdoor locations, especially along what looks like the southern Taiwan coast. I particularly appreciated the absence of the cheap camera tricks like slow motion and fast, back & forth Leone-style cuts so overused by Hong Kong companies. Scene setup and art direction are quite good, all things considered.

          Third, some of the action actually showed some flashes of creativity. As the Young Heroes fight their way up the hierarchy to get to the bandit chief, they pass through some rooms of a sort of magic causing them visual disorientation, dizzying flag twirling, and a bizarre contraption of small, deafening bells attached to an overhead bamboo framework. Not terribly believable, but interesting to see. Also, when the Young Heroes plus add-ons like the blind man and the one-armed swordsman have fought their way up to be able to confront the 7-foot tall pituitary giant, the tricks they use against him and his counter-moves showed unusual cleverness. Kept me watching all the way to the end.

          I rented this movie from Netflix and would recommend it. The one thing I really missed in it was the scene so common in Hong Kong "BC vs YH" movies from the 60's and 70's where the lower orders of the bandit gang come back to report the the Young Heroes have beaten them soundly. The chief stands up, waves his fist at them, and shouts "You idiots," and the gang -- all neatly lined in ranks like a military company -- bow and shout back "Yes, Sir!"
          5ckormos1

          Good grade for effort but only passing results

          The narrator explains all about the pirates. A general comes to arrest the leader but the giant bites off his sword and spits the tip back into his forehead. Barry Chan teams up with the kung fu chick and they hear that "Ghost Killer" is coming to take on all 72 of Pai Ying's men. But Barry and the girl take the challenge first.

          The plot here is really all about the martial arts. Barry does his usual competent job in the fight sequences but the girl has no power in her moves. She swings the sword as if afraid she might hurt the stunt men. Wan Shan as "Ghost Killer" arrives during the final fight. This movie makes every attempt to put something different on the screen, something the audience has not seen before. The problem is creativity is more than just being different. True creativity shows the audience what they haven't seen before plus what they never would have imagined seeing.

          This movie seems to set the format for the upcoming "ninja" movies. I mean the movies with "ninja" in the title but have nothing to do with ninjas, with outrageous colorful shiny costumes, with fights that defy every law of physics, with weapons never before seen and with nothing that makes sense in between the fights.
          1mcww_ml

          Contender for Worst Film Ever

          Forget the films of Ed Wood. This film is definitely a contender for the worst film of all time. Tension, drama, script, acting, direction you name it, this film fails at every level.

          Every cliché of the Kung-Fu genre appears in this film. A blind swordsman, an indestructible enemy, interminable sequences of Kung Fu that seem more like country dancing than a form of combat, a plot so inchorent if not stupid it should get the kind of critical acclaim reserved for incoherent art house films and heroes so irritating they deserve a fate worse than death.

          The most stupid scene is probably in the inital scene where the merits of the 72 killers are described, each group wearing different colour head band to signify the number of people they have killed.

          Enormously funny if watched with a group of people in the right frame of mind.
          8jinxs

          classic kungfu action

          Directed by Lin Bing, this kungfu classic features all sorts of various characters and concepts. The pirate Po Ho Nim has gathered 72 fighters to guard him from the Chinese government. However, a band of fighters from various parts of China take a stand and seek out Po to defeat him. This film also is memorable for its 7 foot tall, gold toothed monk who can bite through metal (a reference to James Bond?). The films action starts out slow, but picks up its pace as the heroes take on 4 different branches of Po's army. The ending, however, is a bit disappointing and anti climatic. All in all, classic kungfu action, if you don't take it too seriously.

          Rating: 8/10

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          Você sabia?

          Editar
          • Erros de gravação
            The 18 monks had wooden staffs, but in the fight, each strike of sword against them has the loud clang of metal on metal.
          • Versões alternativas
            Released by Xenon (as "Killer Hillz"), this version is taken from unauthorized laserdisc/VCD and is in widescreen (as opposed to the Pan-Scan only Tai Seng version)

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          Detalhes

          Editar
          • Data de lançamento
            • 6 de fevereiro de 1981 (Alemanha Ocidental)
          • País de origem
            • Taiwan
          • Idioma
            • Mandarim
          • Também conhecido como
            • Killer Hillz
          • Empresa de produção
            • Li Yun Film Company
          • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

          Especificações técnicas

          Editar
          • Tempo de duração
            1 hora 33 minutos
          • Cor
            • Color
          • Mixagem de som
            • Mono
          • Proporção
            • 2.35 : 1

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