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The Dragon Strikes Back

Original title: Il mio nome è Shangai Joe
  • 1973
  • R
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Chen Lee in The Dragon Strikes Back (1973)
Spaghetti WesternActionDramaWestern

A Chinese immigrant, recently arrived in America, fights to free Mexican slaves from their cruel master.A Chinese immigrant, recently arrived in America, fights to free Mexican slaves from their cruel master.A Chinese immigrant, recently arrived in America, fights to free Mexican slaves from their cruel master.

  • Director
    • Mario Caiano
  • Writers
    • Mario Caiano
    • Fabrizio Trifone Trecca
    • Carlo Alberto Alfieri
  • Stars
    • Chen Lee
    • Klaus Kinski
    • Carla Romanelli
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mario Caiano
    • Writers
      • Mario Caiano
      • Fabrizio Trifone Trecca
      • Carlo Alberto Alfieri
    • Stars
      • Chen Lee
      • Klaus Kinski
      • Carla Romanelli
    • 23User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos46

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    Top cast38

    Edit
    Chen Lee
    Chen Lee
    • Shanghai Joe…
    Klaus Kinski
    Klaus Kinski
    • Scalper Jack
    Carla Romanelli
    • Cristina
    Gordon Mitchell
    Gordon Mitchell
    • Burying Sam
    Katsutoshi Mikuriya
    • Mikuja
    Robert Hundar
    Robert Hundar
    • Pedro, The Cannibal
    Giacomo Rossi Stuart
    Giacomo Rossi Stuart
    • Tricky the Gambler
    Piero Lulli
    • Stanley Spencer
    Umberto D'Orsi
    • Poker player
    Lorenzo Fineschi
    • Cowboy
    Federico Boido
    Federico Boido
    • Slim
    • (as Rick Boyd)
    Dante Maggio
    • Doctor
    Carla Mancini
    Carla Mancini
    • Conchita
    Luigi Antonio Guerra
    • Spencer Friend
    Andrea Aureli
    Andrea Aureli
    • Sheriff Andy Corrotto
    Enrico Marciani
    • Spencer Friend
    Giovanni Sabbatini
    • One-eyed Pirate
    George Wang
    George Wang
    • Master Yang
    • Director
      • Mario Caiano
    • Writers
      • Mario Caiano
      • Fabrizio Trifone Trecca
      • Carlo Alberto Alfieri
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    5.71.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8Bezenby

    Eeeeaaaeeaagghhhh!

    Shanghai Joe is just a regular Chinese guy who has moved to America to get a good job and live the dream. Sadly for Joe everyone he comes across is a racist moron who don't want Joe to get anywhere. Sadly for them Joe tends to lose his rag and beat everyone who crosses him into submission.

    This film is a lot of fun. A lot of fun. For the first half of the film Joe just goes from job to job being harassed and doling out justice, but then he crosses the wrong guy (a slave trader) and from then on the heat is on, in the form of ugly Gordon Mitchell and uglier Klaus Kinski! Basically just one action set piece after another, this film does not disappoint. Its a nice merging of spaghetti western and martial arts and Mario Caiano isn't daft, as he gives us loads of both in an overtly violent way.

    Honestly, for a spaghetti western this one is really high on violence. Wrists are broken and bones protrude, folk are drowned in boiling water, hands are cut off, torsos punctured by fists and Joe even manually removes a guy's eyeball! Entertaining stuff.

    I had this in my collection for years and now wish I'd watched it sooner. It's on YouTube if you don't own it.

    Also - Joe screams Eeeeeaaaaeeaagh before braining someone. Watch out for that.
    6billywiggins1967

    weird mash-up of 2 exploitation genres

    Ahhhh, the Kung Fu Spaghetti Western, a weird hybrid that existed for a brief flash in the world of exploitation cinema. This film, known by various titles including DRAGON STRIKES AGAIN and most commonly THE FIGHTING FIST OF SHANGHAI JOE, came out in 1974, probably the zenith year for such attempts. (FYI, 1992 was the peak year for the Cyborg/Kickboxer mash-up--but that's another story.) Directed by undistinguished Italian genre hack Mario Caiano, the pic presents the tale of a Chinese loner ambling his way through the American Old West. The lead is played by the little-seen Chen Lee. Lee has only three movie credits to his name, each in an Italian film, which begs the question of whether he is an actor per se or merely a expert martial artist that happened to be living in Italy at the time. But whatever the explanation, Lee manages to acquit himself rather well in this performance. He has an easygoing, laconic presence that is pleasantly free of the stiffness sometimes on display among non-acting fighters. (Of course his dialog is dubbed, but so is everyone else's here, so it's hard to judge him in that respect.) After a few vignettes depicting Lee's troubles in finding transportation, food, and ranch work due to the locals' bigotry and bullying, we settle in to the main thrust of the story, wherein Lee aims to help liberate Mexican peons who are being enslaved by evil rancher Spencer, played by the familiar Piero Lulli. Along to help him is the pretty Mexican Cristina (Carla Romanelli), and she turns into a sort of love interest for him.

    There are a few weird quirks about the pic that are worth noting. First, our hero goes unnamed for about the first 3/4 of the film--no one asks his name an he is never addressed by anyone. Then out of the blue, he offhandedly refers to himself as "Shanghai Joe" in a chat with Cristina. OK, after 80 minutes we learn his name... the in the very next scene, Spencer calls for "Joe" to be killed and shouts, "Go get Chin Hao!", a name by which "Joe" is referred for the final few minutes. What the heck? How did Spencer learn this guy's Chinese name? Is this a sloppy scripting gaffe, a botched dubbing mistake, poor exposition? Whatever the reason, it's weird.

    Another oddity is the plot twist where, late in the story, Spencer and his men meet to decide how to deal with Joe. They opine that four notorious hit men would each be perfect for doing away with the Chinaman. What follows is a quick series of pretty ridiculous vignettes as colorful baddies with names like "The Cannibal" are dispatched by Joe. Among these hit men are top-billed stars Gordon Mitchell as "Buryin' Sam" and Klaus Kinski as "Scalper Jack". Their scenes are so brief, basically cameo appearances, that neither of the two have a real chance to flex their wild, woolly acting chops. A wasted opportunity.

    The hit men sequences display another unusual aspect of this picture: a great number of grotesque, gory and explicit wounds and deaths. Kinski's character, obviously, relishes cutting his victim's scalps off; Mitchell builds a spiked grave-trap for his victim to fall into. Also seen elsewhere in the film are an eyeball gouged out, homemade acupuncture on a bullet wound, and a man's hand shot off. Gruesome stuff and oddly disconcerting, these shots don't give a visceral thrill or gasp, rather, they make you do a double-take in disbelief, like, "what was *that*?" Also unusual to the modern viewer are the camera tricks and staging used to suggest Joe's jumping and fighting prowess. Quite a few times we see the ol' "reverse footage" trick to depict someone jumping from a standstill up onto a tall perch. In '74 that might have wowed 'em, but by now we can see right through that trick.

    In the end, the various exploitation elements can't make this a cohesive, engaging feature. Caiano's pacing is suspect, as little momentum carries over from one scene to the next, giving the 93-minute picture quite a plodding pace. And with no protagonist other than the stone-faced Joe, there is no charismatic heart to the story. As capable as Lee is, an effervescent sidekick or partner might have livened things up. What we do have to stir the soul, however, is the absolutely BRILLIANT theme music by Bruno Nicolai, which plays several times throughout. As great as the Morricone-trained Nicolai is, I will without hesitation call this the greatest theme (that I've heard) of his career. It is a rousing, epic delight that will stay with you long after the flick is done.

    In all, I think the idea of this film is better than the actual finished product. Kung Fu, cowboys, cartoonish violence and gore, eastern philosophy, gunfights ... it ought to add up to a better picture that what it is. Not on anybody's must-see list, but a watchable curiosity. Call it a C+, or 6/10 stars.
    Samoan Bob

    'That Chinaman ain't human!'

    Shanghai Joe is a Chinese martial arts master who somehow finds himself in the racist Old West. Of course, Joe is pushed to his breaking point by them racist white folk, so he starts kicking honky ass left and right. Fast-paced and incredibly violent, 'The Fighting Fists of Shanghai Joe' is the kind of mindless entertainment that Spaghetti Western fans love. Klaus Kinski shows up to get his ass handed to him and add some star power to the proceedings...well, star power in our minds. Bruno Nicolai rips off his score to 'Have a Good Funeral, My Friend' but it's so good you won't care.
    sirarthurstreebgreebling II

    Dont push the small polite man

    This one is a real oddity, a martial arts western, with a small role for the ever evil Klaus Kinski as the bounty hunter set to go and kill our Hero Joe.

    Joe arrives in San Francisco, and instead of meeting the people of the land of the free he meets the land of the racists, and his troubles only just start to begin.

    Joe is far to nice for his own good, polite and well-mannered, thats until he needs to defend his life and then his fists of fury unleash some retribution.

    A lot of fun.
    6adamscastlevania2

    Enjoyable chop-suey hit

    (54%) A film that shows "good" old boy cowboys in maybe the worst light possible as nearly every person featured bar a few Mexican characters are portrayed as huge and total b#stards. The guy that carts main character Joe to Texas is a git, the barman he meets is a turd, while everyone else is if anything even worse. This may not look up to much on the outset, but for a lowish budgeted 70's martial arts spaghetti western hybrid I enjoyed its simple charm. This is a little rough around the edges, though it moves along at a good pace with never really a dull moment throughout. There's plenty of fights, lots bad guys getting what they deserve, a sweet romantic sub-plot, and best of all: it's fun to watch.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The scene in which Gordon Mitchell's character sings "Chin-Chin Chinaman" while carrying a shovel was improvised on the spot by Mitchell. He also created the song.
    • Goofs
      In the scene where Shangai Joe is in the bullfighting arena, at one point a red cape for attracting the bull's attention is visible.
    • Quotes

      Scalper Jack: Do you know who I am?

      Doctor: Yes I know and I wish I didn't.

    • Connections
      Featured in Denn sie kennen kein Erbarmen - Der Italowestern (2006)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 1976 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Shanghai Joe
    • Filming locations
      • Mini Hollywood, Tabernas, Almería, Andalucía, Spain
    • Production companies
      • C.B.A. Produttori e Distributori Associati
      • Compagnia Cinematografica Champion
      • Rewind Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 38 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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