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Drunken Master

Original title: Jui kuen
  • 1978
  • PG-13
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
46K
YOUR RATING
Jackie Chan, Dean Shek, and Siu-Tin Yuen in Drunken Master (1978)
Trailer for Drunken Master
Play trailer1:26
2 Videos
99+ Photos
Kung FuMartial ArtsSlapstickActionComedy

Wong Fei-Hung is a mischievous, yet righteous young man, but after a series of incidents, his frustrated father has him disciplined by a master of drunken martial arts.Wong Fei-Hung is a mischievous, yet righteous young man, but after a series of incidents, his frustrated father has him disciplined by a master of drunken martial arts.Wong Fei-Hung is a mischievous, yet righteous young man, but after a series of incidents, his frustrated father has him disciplined by a master of drunken martial arts.

  • Director
    • Yuen Woo-Ping
  • Writers
    • Lung Hsiao
    • See-Yuen Ng
  • Stars
    • Jackie Chan
    • Siu-Tin Yuen
    • Jeong-lee Hwang
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    46K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Yuen Woo-Ping
    • Writers
      • Lung Hsiao
      • See-Yuen Ng
    • Stars
      • Jackie Chan
      • Siu-Tin Yuen
      • Jeong-lee Hwang
    • 97User reviews
    • 89Critic reviews
    • 68Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Drunken Master
    Trailer 1:26
    Drunken Master
    Drunken Master (Masters of Cinema) New & Exclusive HD Trailer
    Trailer 1:25
    Drunken Master (Masters of Cinema) New & Exclusive HD Trailer
    Drunken Master (Masters of Cinema) New & Exclusive HD Trailer
    Trailer 1:25
    Drunken Master (Masters of Cinema) New & Exclusive HD Trailer

    Photos128

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Jackie Chan
    Jackie Chan
    • Wong Fei-Hung
    • (as Jacky Chan)
    Siu-Tin Yuen
    Siu-Tin Yuen
    • Beggar So
    • (as Yuen Hsiao Tien)
    Jeong-lee Hwang
    • Jim Ti-Sam
    • (as Huang Cheng Li)
    Dean Shek
    Dean Shek
    • Ko Choi
    • (as Shih Tien)
    Kau Lam
    Kau Lam
    • Wong Kei-Ying
    • (as Chiao Lin)
    Linda Lin
    Linda Lin
    • Fei-Hung's Aunt
    Tino Wong
    • Bully
    • (as Chiang Wang)
    Hsu Hsia
    Hsu Hsia
    • Ceoi King-Tin
    • (as Hsia Hsu)
    Chiu-Jun Lee
    Chiu-Jun Lee
      Han-Chen Wang
      Han-Chen Wang
      • Restaurant Boss
      Kwai Shan
      Kwai Shan
      • Iron Head Rat
      • (as Yung Liu)
      Chin Chiang
      • Da Kuai-Dai
      Shun-Yee Yuen
      • Chen Kuo-Wei
      Fung Ging-Man
      Fung Ging-Man
      • Li Wan-Hao
      • (as Ging-Man Fung)
      Hui Tsai
      Hui Tsai
      Shao-Hung Chan
      Shao-Hung Chan
      Tong Ching
      • Hung's Cousin
      • (as Jing Tang)
      Huang Ha
      Huang Ha
      • Master Chao
      • (as Ha Huang)
      • Director
        • Yuen Woo-Ping
      • Writers
        • Lung Hsiao
        • See-Yuen Ng
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews97

      7.446.3K
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      Featured reviews

      gwerq

      Classic Chan

      This is my favourite jackie chan film. It's one of the funniest films i've ever seen. It starts with a fight and ends with one,so the action crowd won't be disappointed! Plus it contains the funniest scenes chan has ever put on film,such as the taunting of his idiotic teacher and the horror of realising the woman who he picks a fight with is his auntie!Brilliant.
      9winner55

      not only lives up to legend, it creates it

      It is said that this is the film that made Jackie Chan a star, but that isn't really true, since Snake in Eagle's Shadow actually had a bigger impact at the time, and allowed Chan to make this film. One way we know this is that there are some two dozen films made in the late '70s- early'80's designed to imitate Snake in Eagle's Shadow, and only a couple imitate this film. By the time Drunken Master had become legendary world-wide, the chop-socky cycle (to which it still belongs, to an extent) had passed into history, and Chan himself had abandoned historical 'fu films for contemporary comedy-thrillers.

      It should be noted that the idea of making a film based on the early years of Wong Fei Hong was not original to Chan; at roughly the same time this film was being made, well-known martial arts choreographer Liu Chia Leung made a straight (non-comic) version of the story (without drunken boxing) over at Shaw Brothers, Challenge of the Masters, with Gordon Liu as Wong Fei Hung.

      The defining moment for the Chan-Yuen version of the film is the use of Drunken Boxing. There is no real evidence that the historical Wong Fei Hung was a master of this style; his more famous innovations involved the development of the shadowless hand technique and the no-shadow kick. Interestingly, in order to highlight Chan's use of Drunken Boxing, these other two techniques, better identified with Wong, are assigned in the film to the villain, "Thunderlegs" played by Hwang Jen Lee.

      At any rate, it would not be clear that one could consider this a Wong Fei Hung film at all - if it weren't for the fact that this film effectively redefined the Wong legend, so that it has since become pro-forma to assume that Wong was a bit wild in his youth. (Just to set that record straight, Wong was actually extremely studious, and recognized as a real child-prodigy in the martial arts, winning his first major public duel at the age of thirteen.) Drunken Master is solid martial arts entertainment. There are decided weaknesses in the plot and over-all staging of the film, but these can easily be ignored, as the film thrusts us along with kung fu and comedy to the grand final fight at the end. It must also be noted that these characters - even the villain - are well acted and quite likable and familiar, and thus add a credibility to the film. And Yuen's direction is also very professional and a couple notches above the average for a Hong Kong genre film of the time.

      Lives up to its own legend, and well-worth the viewing.
      bob the moo

      Roundly entertaining with plenty of impressive action

      Wong Fei-hung as a young man has a reputation different from that awaiting him as an adult. With a nickname of Naughty Panther, Fei-hung is in constant trouble with people and, no matter his intentions to help out just makes things worse for himself. When his father has had enough he sends Fei-hung away to be trained by a wine-guzzling master Su who is not only famed for his 8-Drunken Genii style but also for crippling many of his students. Fei-hung tries to get away from this fate but it is not long till his drunken teacher tracks him down and teaches him, whether he likes it or not. However, when he is humbled by the mighty killer Thunderleg, he decides to train to be better no matter what it takes.

      I've not given up on modern releases totally but a real death-march of uninspiring films of late has seen me using my DVD rental subscription to get in touch with older films and also genres that do not often show up on my basic TV package. Recently this has seen me getting some old-school martial arts films and of course Drunken Master had to be one of the first to be seen. When watching it, it is important that you keep your genre frame of reference because as a "film" (with no riders or expectations) it could be dismissed as having no substance to speak of - an accusation that I myself level at many blockbusters that offer me nothing to engage with. In this case though one does have to wonder if it matters because in terms of pure entertainment value there is just about sufficient story to pull a basic frame together for an amusing and exciting film.

      I say this because the plot doesn't do much other than set up the many fight sequences that the film has and really these are the reason why we are all here. Without exception, these are technically and visually impressive. The physical strength and control of the actors is just as impressive as the choreography and, unlike modern films, the camera sits back so we can see and doesn't get into the close and frantic editing which reveal the actor perhaps could only do one short movement at a time and needed lots of help from the camera. Speaking of camera movement, one of the joys of the film is to see what has now become the genre-defining zooms in on faces and other such clichés.

      Speaking of which, the acting also fits this mould as it is the wonderful OTT style of acting, with big hair and exaggerated performances that owe a debt to silent cinema. Chan is not at his funniest here (partly because his character necessitates a degree of arrogance that takes away a little) but he is still very comic and self-effacing in his comedy. He is well supported by Yuen, who is also very skilled and able to do comedy, while Hwang's villain is wonderfully 1970's martial arts and full of camp menace. The support cast features some familiar faces who bring stuff to the table such as the high-kicking Linda Lin and the amusing Dean Shek.

      Drunken Master is very much a genre film and those who do not like the conventions of the genre should not be too shocked to find that they don't like it here. However for martial arts fans and the casual viewer, this is a great film with plenty of brilliant action blended with a genial and comic tone that allows it to be solid good fun.
      mashood_khanuk

      Jackie Chan's finest hour

      This for me is Jackie Chan's finest, and is the film which propelled him to super stardom in Hong Kong. Whilst other martial artists were trying to be the new Bruce Lee, Jackie did something different. Why replace the irreplaceable when you could do something completely different? What Jackie did was introduce slapstick into the Kung Fu formula, the rest as they say is history.

      Jackie stars as Freddy Wong aka (Fong Sai Yuk) depending upon which dub you watch. A juvenile delinquent with a penchant for feeling up immediate female members of his family. His father, fed up of his delinquency hires Sam Seed aka The Drunken Master to teach him some discipline as well as his secret fighting style. Naturally the two get off on the wrong foot but learn to respect each other as the film goes on whilst of course getting into the obligatory scrapes and japes. There is of course a villain of the piece in this case its the Tae Kwan Do master Hwang Jan Lee as the underworld assassin "Thunderfoot" who in real life was just as badass as he is in the film.

      So it's all pretty derivative then? Well yes and no. There is a genuine rapport between Jackie and Yu Su Tien as pupil and teacher. The martial arts is brilliantly choreographed and inventive (the scene in the restaurant is probably my favourite) and the whole thing has a "joie de vivre". Watching it, it seems to me that the actors had a ball making the film. Which is just as well as I had a ball watching it.
      8BA_Harrison

      Jackie is staggering.

      Directed by legendary kung fu choreographer Yuen Woo-Ping, Drunken Master is considered by many martial arts fans to be one of the best films of Jackie Chan's career, but while it certainly displays the star's kung fu and acrobatic ability to great effect, and is a thoroughly enjoyable watch, I found the plot just a little too generic (and the comedy a little too broad) to rate it any higher than an 8 (I actually give it a 7.5, but I've rounded my score up for IMDb).

      There really is very little going on here in terms of storyline, and what there is most seasoned fans of old school martial arts fans will have seen countless times before: a young upstart, Wong Fei-Hung (Chan), causes trouble in his local town and is sent by his disappointed father to train with a kung fu master, Beggar Su (Siu Tin Yuen). Beggar Su's techniques are harsh but very effective, so when an assassin named Thunderfoot (Hwang Jang Lee) is hired to kill Fei-Hung's father, the young man is able to step in and save the day.

      Jackie Chan's comedic style is very much in evidence here, with buffoonery, slapstick action, and fart and poo gags, plus quite a few characters with peculiar facial features (a hairy mole, a red nose, drawn on freckles and goofy teeth), and the humour will not appeal to all (I nearly always struggle with Chinese comedy). Thankfully, the excellent fighting more than makes up for the silliness, with Jackie performing some mind-bogglingly amazing feats of physical prowess, making the absolute most of his Chinese Circus training. He leaps, he flips, he tumbles, he kicks, and he punches, performing snake style, monkey style and—of course—drunken style, all with incredible energy, speed and split second timing; it's absolutely breathtaking to behold.

      Naturally, Beggar Su and Thunderfoot are no slouches in the chop socky department either, the old drunken beggar pulling off some very cool moves against a baddie called The Stick King (Hsia Hsu) and Thunderfoot more than living up to his title: with his technique 30% hands and 70% legs, Hwang Jang Lee is given plenty of opportunity to show off his legendary kicking skills. Also very impressive in her small role as Wong Fei Hung's auntie is Linda Lin Ying: I don't know much about her, but the one fight scene she shares with Jackie is quite stunning—her flexibility and leg control made my jaw drop (I must check out some of the other titles in her filmography—Dance of the Drunk Mantis also stars Hwang Jang Lee, so that would seem like an obvious place to start).

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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        Jackie Chan (Wong Fei-Hung) nearly lost an eye when Jang Lee Hwang (Jim Ti-Sam) kicked him in the head during the final fight scene. When Hwang became aware of this, he refused to do more takes for the shot.
      • Goofs
        The wire enabling Beggar So to pull Fei-Hung underneath the table at the restaurant.
      • Quotes

        Wong Fei-Hung: You watch out or you'll have a body with no ass!

      • Alternate versions
        German version was cut by approximately 20 minutes.
      • Connections
        Featured in The Incredibly Strange Film Show: Jackie Chan (1989)

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      FAQ

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • October 5, 1978 (Hong Kong)
      • Country of origin
        • Hong Kong
      • Languages
        • Cantonese
        • Mandarin
      • Also known as
        • Tráfico de arte
      • Filming locations
        • Jardim de Lou Lim Ioc - 10 Estrada de Adolfo de Loureiro, Sao Lazaro, Macau, China(training sequences)
      • Production companies
        • Golden Harvest Company
        • Seasonal Film Corporation
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

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      • Budget
        • HK$6,763,793 (estimated)
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

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      • Runtime
        1 hour 51 minutes
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 2.39 : 1

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