I just saw a screening of this movie at my college last night, and Micah Moore (the director) was there to do a Q&A. The movie started out kind of slow and awkwardly, but once the audience (pretty much entirely college students) got into it, it was very entertaining. Moore had a good sense of humor about the quality of the movie. He said he wanted to go ahead and make an all-out exploitation film that was completely ridiculous, and it worked. Some of the scenes that weren't naturally funny became funny just because of how awkward they were. The plot isn't necessarily creative or fantastic, but there is a plot there, at least. And the acting is pretty cheesy, because they cast stunt men instead of real actors. The fight scenes are actually really impressive and well-choreographed. That's the good thing about kung-fu and martial arts movies: you can actually see and follow the action, because it isn't cut choppily like in some blockbuster action movies. It's just a good martial-arts gangster movie that you can laugh at.