5 reviews
- Leofwine_draca
- Nov 9, 2020
- Permalink
- phillip-58
- Nov 9, 2007
- Permalink
THE MAGNIFICENT TRIO (1966) is a colorful Hong Kong swordplay film that stars Jimmy Wang Yu as an ex-soldier who bravely intervenes in a dispute between villagers and a corrupt magistrate. The swordplay is abundant, but staged in the slash-and-swing style, in which the heroes kill their opponents with one slash, while they themselves suffer repeated stabbings and arrow wounds yet keep fighting. It's not terribly realistic, but is exciting and beautifully photographed at the Shaw Bros. studio. The film is often cited as a Hong Kong version of the Japanese film THREE OUTLAW SAMURAI. It does indeed play like a Samurai film but is laced with the melodramatic flavor common to Hong Kong films of the time.
In the course of the 108-minute film, Wang Yu arrives in town just after the villagers kidnap the magistrate's daughter and prepare a petition for visiting Minister Yuan alleging unjust taxation and exploitation by the magistrate. A deal is made and Wang Yu returns the daughter and offers to accept the punishment that would have been dished out to the three kidnappers. The magistrate breaks his word and the daughter, who has fallen for Wang Yu, has her maid help him escape. Usually cast as a loner, Wang Yu is joined here by two allies to form the trio of the title, first by his army buddy (Cheng Lei) and later by one of the magistrate's men (Lo Lieh), who sees the rightness of the villagers' cause. Eventually the trio takes on all the magistrate's guards in an effort to get the petition to the visiting minister.
In addition to the three main actors, the cast includes familiar Shaw Bros. players such as Wu Ma, Tien Feng and Ku Feng, as well as three excellent actresses in key roles, Margaret Tu Chuan, Chin Ping and Fanny Fan. There is a very nice original music score, although there are no songs. If you're a fan of Wang Yu's other 1960s swordplay films--TWIN SWORDS, THE ASSASSIN, THE ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN, TRAIL OF THE BROKEN BLADE, and RETURN OF THE ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN, all made before Wang Yu became Hong Kong's first genuine kung fu star in THE Chinese BOXER--you'll like this one also. The VHS edition available in the U.S. is in Mandarin with English subtitles and cries out for letter-boxing, because the full-frame transfer cuts off the subtitles on the sides, making some dialogue difficult to decipher.
ADDENDUM: In April 2003, Celestial Pictures/IVL released a Region 3 DVD offering a restored, remastered edition of this film as part of its new line of Shaw Bros. releases. It's letter-boxed and in Mandarin, with English subtitles.
SECOND ADDENDUM (Sept. 24, 2015): I watched THREE OUTLAW SAMURAI and THE MAGNIFICENT TRIO back-to-back this week. The Hong Kong film is a pretty close remake, plotwise, but it places a greater emphasis on romance, with each of the three heroes forming romantic relationships and all showing much greater expression of their feelings than their samurai counterparts. There are five significant female characters in the Hong Kong film. The Japanese film, in black-and-white, is darker, grittier and a bit more realistic, while the Hong Kong film, in color and Shawscope, is more visually beautiful with brighter lighting, lavish sets, cleaner, more elegant costuming and a few spectacular location shots (probably filmed in Taiwan). The morality is more black-and-white in the Hong Kong film, with none of the shades of gray you find in the Japanese film. The heroes are more idealized. The Hong Kong film is simpler and less demanding, but more entertaining. It won't hurt you to watch both versions.
In the course of the 108-minute film, Wang Yu arrives in town just after the villagers kidnap the magistrate's daughter and prepare a petition for visiting Minister Yuan alleging unjust taxation and exploitation by the magistrate. A deal is made and Wang Yu returns the daughter and offers to accept the punishment that would have been dished out to the three kidnappers. The magistrate breaks his word and the daughter, who has fallen for Wang Yu, has her maid help him escape. Usually cast as a loner, Wang Yu is joined here by two allies to form the trio of the title, first by his army buddy (Cheng Lei) and later by one of the magistrate's men (Lo Lieh), who sees the rightness of the villagers' cause. Eventually the trio takes on all the magistrate's guards in an effort to get the petition to the visiting minister.
In addition to the three main actors, the cast includes familiar Shaw Bros. players such as Wu Ma, Tien Feng and Ku Feng, as well as three excellent actresses in key roles, Margaret Tu Chuan, Chin Ping and Fanny Fan. There is a very nice original music score, although there are no songs. If you're a fan of Wang Yu's other 1960s swordplay films--TWIN SWORDS, THE ASSASSIN, THE ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN, TRAIL OF THE BROKEN BLADE, and RETURN OF THE ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN, all made before Wang Yu became Hong Kong's first genuine kung fu star in THE Chinese BOXER--you'll like this one also. The VHS edition available in the U.S. is in Mandarin with English subtitles and cries out for letter-boxing, because the full-frame transfer cuts off the subtitles on the sides, making some dialogue difficult to decipher.
ADDENDUM: In April 2003, Celestial Pictures/IVL released a Region 3 DVD offering a restored, remastered edition of this film as part of its new line of Shaw Bros. releases. It's letter-boxed and in Mandarin, with English subtitles.
SECOND ADDENDUM (Sept. 24, 2015): I watched THREE OUTLAW SAMURAI and THE MAGNIFICENT TRIO back-to-back this week. The Hong Kong film is a pretty close remake, plotwise, but it places a greater emphasis on romance, with each of the three heroes forming romantic relationships and all showing much greater expression of their feelings than their samurai counterparts. There are five significant female characters in the Hong Kong film. The Japanese film, in black-and-white, is darker, grittier and a bit more realistic, while the Hong Kong film, in color and Shawscope, is more visually beautiful with brighter lighting, lavish sets, cleaner, more elegant costuming and a few spectacular location shots (probably filmed in Taiwan). The morality is more black-and-white in the Hong Kong film, with none of the shades of gray you find in the Japanese film. The heroes are more idealized. The Hong Kong film is simpler and less demanding, but more entertaining. It won't hurt you to watch both versions.
- BrianDanaCamp
- May 20, 2001
- Permalink
I read about how, before he became a director, Quentin Tarantino was a video store clerk and saw a number of martial arts movies. I don't know whether or not he saw any Shaw Brothers movies, but their "Bian cheng san xia" ("The Magnificent Trio" in English) looks as if it could've easily been the inspiration for "Kill Bill". As with a number of martial arts movies, the plot is secondary to the action. Here we get lots of sword fighting, bloodletting, destruction, and even flying (so could it have also inspired "Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon"?). This story of a man taking on corruption in old China has everything that a fan of martial arts movies could want. It's a pity that the Shaw Brothers' movies aren't that well known in the west. Some truly cool stuff here.
- lee_eisenberg
- Mar 17, 2023
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