5 reviews
Injured by bandits in an ambush that killed his parents, a young man by the name of "Kuei Wu" (Jimmy Wang Yu) is nursed back to health by a mysterious female warrior known simply as "the Red Lady" (Ivy Ling Po). Once fully recovered, he then makes it his mission to find those responsible and avenge himself on them. However, before he can do that, he feels compelled to marry the woman they had previously arranged for him named "Jin Lian Zhu" (Ping Chin). However, upon finally arriving at her parent's house, he quickly comes to the conclusion that her father is actually in charge of the same bandit group that attacked him previously--and this creates all kinds of problems for all involved. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that this was an okay action film which was limited by inferior subtitles--which tended to complicate things unnecessarily. Likewise, some of the action scenes were downright ridiculous as well. But then, many of these action stunts were basically a product of the Chinese film industry during this time. In any case, while I don't consider this to be a great action film by any means, I suppose it was enjoyable enough for the time spent, and I have rated it accordingly. Average.
- Leofwine_draca
- Jul 18, 2020
- Permalink
TEMPLE OF THE RED LOTUS (1965) is notable for being the first color swordplay film from Hong Kong's Shaw Bros. studio with an emphasis on martial arts. It's a fairly straightforward costume adventure drama about the ongoing battle between a righteous martial arts clan and one devoted to banditry. Shot in widescreen, with a mix of studio sets and picturesque outdoor locations, it's beautiful to behold, especially on the DVD edition from Celestial Pictures released as part of its package of restored, remastered Shaw Bros. titles. It was followed by a sequel, TWIN SWORDS (1965), which is also reviewed on this site, but which is not listed on Celestial's 2004 release slate. (Also missing from the slate is the third film in the series, THE SWORD AND THE LUTE.) Since the sequel is so much more incident- and action-packed, TEMPLE seems kind of naked without it, just as TWIN SWORDS would have benefited from a viewing of TEMPLE beforehand to fully appreciate it. The success of TEMPLE and its follow-ups meant the emergence of the martial arts film as a viable genre for the studio's active production line, leading directly to the works of notable kung fu directors Chang Cheh and Lau Kar Leung, among many others.
Jimmy Wang Yu (ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN) appears in one of his earliest starring roles as a young swordsman who visits the Jin Clan at their castle in Dragon Valley for the first time in ten years in order to learn new skills and marry his betrothed, Lianzhu (Chin Ping), granddaughter of Clan leader Dragon Jin (Tien Feng). A misunderstanding over the clan's activities arises from witnessing a raid by the family on disguised members of the corrupt Red Lotus Clan in the opening scene, prompting "Little Wu" (Wang Yu) to try to leave the family compound and take his bride with him, in order to continue his own mission of finding his parents' killers. The family objects, in its own characteristic fashion, while the Red Lotus bandits stir up more trouble, including taking over a temple and disguising themselves as monks and nuns.
There's a long, talky middle portion that is tough going for a while, but there are spectacular action scenes at the beginning and end of the 90-minute production. The martial arts combat is not as sophisticated as it would be in the studio's later films and consists mostly of constant sword-swinging and slashing and dart-throwing, but remains pretty exciting and is a little bloody in parts. There are some brief training scenes. The fight choreography would be greatly improved in the sequel.
The women play an important role in the Jin Clan's activities and participate equally in the fighting (but especially in the sequel). There's an interesting lone female warrior identified in the subtitles as "Red Lady," but more colorfully labeled "Scarlet Maid" in the tape edition of TWIN SWORDS. Played by Shaw Bros. superstar Ivy Ling Po and dressed all in red, she pops up at crucial moments to intervene on behalf of the hero for reasons not yet disclosed. She cuts a striking figure and makes one wish Shaw Bros. had made a series of films showcasing this character exclusively. (The character, or one very much like her, was featured in silent Chinese movie serials.) Also in the cast is child star Petrina Fung Bo-bo, who plays the youngest member of the Jin Clan and lends the film an unmistakable quotient of adorability. She looks a little older in the sequel, wherein she gets to wield the lethal "Iron-cutting Sword." Other key Shaw Bros. actors in the cast are Tien Feng, Ku Feng, Lo Lieh, Feng I, and a young Wu Ma.
Fans of Wang Yu's hard-edged later works, e.g. ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN, Chinese BOXER, ONE-ARMED BOXER and MASTER OF THE FLYING GUILLOTINE, may be surprised at how young, wide-eyed and cleancut he appears in his role here as a martial arts novice. He's nowhere near the brooding tough guy most kung fu fans know and love. He gets quite emotional in the sequel. The petite Chin Ping, as Wu's bride, may not make the most convincing swordswoman, but she's beautiful, sincere and spirited and is gorgeously costumed throughout. There is a traditional Chinese music score, with a couple of choral narrative songs on the soundtrack very late in the film. The opening credits feature some striking painted illustrations as backdrops.
ADDENDUM: (9/26/07) Since I wrote the above review, both of the sequels, TWIN SWORDS and THE SWORD AND THE LUTE, have come out on restored/remastered Region 3 DVDs from Celestial Pictures. The entire trilogy can now be viewed in high-quality editions in their proper order.
Jimmy Wang Yu (ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN) appears in one of his earliest starring roles as a young swordsman who visits the Jin Clan at their castle in Dragon Valley for the first time in ten years in order to learn new skills and marry his betrothed, Lianzhu (Chin Ping), granddaughter of Clan leader Dragon Jin (Tien Feng). A misunderstanding over the clan's activities arises from witnessing a raid by the family on disguised members of the corrupt Red Lotus Clan in the opening scene, prompting "Little Wu" (Wang Yu) to try to leave the family compound and take his bride with him, in order to continue his own mission of finding his parents' killers. The family objects, in its own characteristic fashion, while the Red Lotus bandits stir up more trouble, including taking over a temple and disguising themselves as monks and nuns.
There's a long, talky middle portion that is tough going for a while, but there are spectacular action scenes at the beginning and end of the 90-minute production. The martial arts combat is not as sophisticated as it would be in the studio's later films and consists mostly of constant sword-swinging and slashing and dart-throwing, but remains pretty exciting and is a little bloody in parts. There are some brief training scenes. The fight choreography would be greatly improved in the sequel.
The women play an important role in the Jin Clan's activities and participate equally in the fighting (but especially in the sequel). There's an interesting lone female warrior identified in the subtitles as "Red Lady," but more colorfully labeled "Scarlet Maid" in the tape edition of TWIN SWORDS. Played by Shaw Bros. superstar Ivy Ling Po and dressed all in red, she pops up at crucial moments to intervene on behalf of the hero for reasons not yet disclosed. She cuts a striking figure and makes one wish Shaw Bros. had made a series of films showcasing this character exclusively. (The character, or one very much like her, was featured in silent Chinese movie serials.) Also in the cast is child star Petrina Fung Bo-bo, who plays the youngest member of the Jin Clan and lends the film an unmistakable quotient of adorability. She looks a little older in the sequel, wherein she gets to wield the lethal "Iron-cutting Sword." Other key Shaw Bros. actors in the cast are Tien Feng, Ku Feng, Lo Lieh, Feng I, and a young Wu Ma.
Fans of Wang Yu's hard-edged later works, e.g. ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN, Chinese BOXER, ONE-ARMED BOXER and MASTER OF THE FLYING GUILLOTINE, may be surprised at how young, wide-eyed and cleancut he appears in his role here as a martial arts novice. He's nowhere near the brooding tough guy most kung fu fans know and love. He gets quite emotional in the sequel. The petite Chin Ping, as Wu's bride, may not make the most convincing swordswoman, but she's beautiful, sincere and spirited and is gorgeously costumed throughout. There is a traditional Chinese music score, with a couple of choral narrative songs on the soundtrack very late in the film. The opening credits feature some striking painted illustrations as backdrops.
ADDENDUM: (9/26/07) Since I wrote the above review, both of the sequels, TWIN SWORDS and THE SWORD AND THE LUTE, have come out on restored/remastered Region 3 DVDs from Celestial Pictures. The entire trilogy can now be viewed in high-quality editions in their proper order.
- BrianDanaCamp
- Jan 1, 2004
- Permalink
The beauty of this is in the casting, the main boy and girl (Jimmy Wang Yu and Ping Chin) are a perfect screen couple in likability. You are just glued to them and they evoke young love inside this alien fairy tale, mythic world of ancient China. When the swords come out at the end, it's been a long hour plus build-up. Of course we the audience don't know yet that character is the kung fu legend Wang Yu, we just saw him as the boyish guy in the first half fumbling around. So his explosion of swordplay is cathartic. The sword fights I would not really say are glamorous or even artistic. It is a kind of swordplay that seems realistic, exhaustive, but also achieving in theatricality. It is just really satisfying to watch. Throughout it, the film has these flashes of violence and gore inside a restrained chamber family drama. I was impressed at how much it is doing with how little, with two or three characters just talking in those stretches and forming this whole family dilemma. Meanwhile it is doing all this pulp. The villains of the Red Lotus seem out of a spaghetti western, perhaps it's introducing them too late. But there are some cool booby traps, spikes out the ground and statues that hug you. I loved it how it crosses pulp action cinema with Merchant Ivory class, and there are not really any western equivalents, so it's very fresh for me. The comedic touches, and this constant danger that any moment the ninja stars / darts can take someone out are keeping you constantly on the edge. But sometimes the darts have sarcastic messages they unpeel from slips of paper. Last, the women, including the whole line of the girl, mother, and grandma, it's a profound exploration of women on screen that I wasn't expecting, with these evocative close-ups. The movie is a beautiful kind of punk art. I hope to see the sequels next, the Twin Swords and the Sword and the Lute.
- ReadingFilm
- Sep 18, 2024
- Permalink