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Come Drink with Me

Original title: Da zui xia
  • 1966
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
5.4K
YOUR RATING
Pei-Pei Cheng, Yueh Hua, and Hung-Lieh Chen in Come Drink with Me (1966)
Come Drink With Me: Too Far
Play clip1:39
Watch Come Drink With Me: Too Far
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67 Photos
WuxiaActionCrime

Bandits kidnap a governor's son and demand their imprisoned leader to be set free in exchange. The governor's daughter, a skilled martial artist, is sent to rescue him, but eventually finds ... Read allBandits kidnap a governor's son and demand their imprisoned leader to be set free in exchange. The governor's daughter, a skilled martial artist, is sent to rescue him, but eventually finds herself overmatched and in need of assistance.Bandits kidnap a governor's son and demand their imprisoned leader to be set free in exchange. The governor's daughter, a skilled martial artist, is sent to rescue him, but eventually finds herself overmatched and in need of assistance.

  • Director
    • King Hu
  • Writers
    • King Hu
    • Shan-Hsi Ting
  • Stars
    • Pei-Pei Cheng
    • Yueh Hua
    • Chih-Ching Yang
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    5.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • King Hu
    • Writers
      • King Hu
      • Shan-Hsi Ting
    • Stars
      • Pei-Pei Cheng
      • Yueh Hua
      • Chih-Ching Yang
    • 41User reviews
    • 77Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Come Drink With Me: Too Far
    Clip 1:39
    Come Drink With Me: Too Far

    Photos67

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    Top cast47

    Edit
    Pei-Pei Cheng
    Pei-Pei Cheng
    • Chang Hsuan-yen
    Yueh Hua
    Yueh Hua
    • Fan Ta-p'i
    • (as Hua Yueh)
    Chih-Ching Yang
    Chih-Ching Yang
    • Tiao Chin-tang
    Hung-Lieh Chen
    Hung-Lieh Chen
    • Ting Chung-yu
    Ying-Chieh Han
    Ying-Chieh Han
    • Bandit
    Lao Shen
    Lao Shen
    • Wu Pao
    Chien Chuan Lin
    Ku Feng
    Ku Feng
    • Jade Faced Tiger's Henchman
    • (as Feng Ku)
    Yunzhong Li
    Yunzhong Li
    • 'Smiling Tiger' Tsu Kan
    • (as Yun-Chung Li)
    Chung Wang
    • Chang Pu-ching
    Ying-Chi Kuan
    Cheng Huang
    Wei-Lieh Lan
    Yi Feng
    Yi Feng
    • Hou Chen
    Siu-Tin Yuen
    Siu-Tin Yuen
    • Bandit
    Ho Li-Jen
    Ho Li-Jen
    • Monk
    • (as Li-Jen Ho)
    Shao-Hung Chan
    Shao-Hung Chan
    Hsi Chang
    Hsi Chang
    • Innkeeper
    • Director
      • King Hu
    • Writers
      • King Hu
      • Shan-Hsi Ting
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews41

    6.95.4K
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    Featured reviews

    6Leofwine_draca

    Early Shaw Brothers classic

    The Shaw Brothers studio was known for pumping out martial arts epic after martial arts epic during its heyday in the 1970s. These films were known for their sumptuous costumes and set design, their electrifying fight scenes packed with expert choreography and gallons of gore...I could go on. COME DRINK WITH ME is an early example of the genre, following on from TEMPLE OF THE RED LOTUS and sowing the seeds of what was to come.

    It's fair to say that COME DRINK WITH ME is a little dated compared to later Shaw vehicles, but it's still a worthwhile film. It's just that the fighting style is a little more simplistic than we're used to, the performances a little more mannered. Nonetheless, Cheng Pei-Pei still cuts the mustard as the skilled swordswoman, and the range of foes up against her remain entertaining to the end.

    The film has a few slow spots in the plotting and some extraneous moments, but it looks so good on a visual level, with excellent set design and costumes, that you just don't care. There are a wealth of strong performers in the supporting cast, including Yueh Hua's drunken sidekick, and fans of '80s-era Hong Kong cinema may spot the instantly recognisable Mars back when he was a child actor. Watch COME DRINK WITH ME to see where the martial arts and wuxia genres began.
    9travisgift2005

    what an inspiration!

    If you want to see the inspiration for Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon this is it. I saw this after being opened up to wuxia (Chinese sword fight pics) by CTHD. Ang Lee was obviously inspired by Come Drink With Me. Remember the rooftop scene in CTHD?, the big bar brawl?, catching those little darts?, and the actress who played the Jade Fox (Cheng Pei Pei)? All are in Come Drink With Me. The story behind the movie is that Run Run Shaw of the legendary Shaw Brothers Studio wanted to make a Chinese version of a Japanese Samurai (Chanbara) movies. He hired a young, inexperienced, director now known to us as King Hu. The result was a movie that, for its time, was groundbreaking and it is still a lot of fun to watch today. Somebody PLEASE release a high quality DVD version though, because the only one I have found is AWFUL!
    7Lord_of_the_Things

    Beautifully shot

    Beautifully shot early Kung Fu movie.

    The fight choreography is primitive and lacks the excitement and creativity of later martial arts movies, but overall the movie delivers.

    Has all the classic characters. Drunken hobo, wandering bounty hunter, evil Abbot, and ghostfaced villain.

    Worth watching.
    9simon_booth

    The one that started it all

    This is the movie that started it all, the watershed wu xia movie in Hong Kong to which pretty much all the kung fu and wire fu movies owe a debt. King Hu was the visionary director who introduced this new style of movie making to the world, and Come Drink With Me is the movie where he first did it.

    Such an important movie in HK history was clearly going to be one of the jewels in Celestial Pictures' remastered Shaw Brothers series, and indeed it was chosen as the flagship title - a restored print did a small tour of the world to build up interest in the catalog and secure distribution. The DVD was one of the first released, and is a very nice package with beautiful picture and sound quality, great subtitling and an interesting set of interviews. After so many years it's great to see the movie looking and sounding so good.

    Come Drink With Me begins with a group of bandits attacking a government party and capturing an official, who they hope to use as a hostage exchange for their leader, currently in prison. The government sends out an agent to negotiate the deal, the legendary swordsman Golden Swallow. Golden Swallow is played wonderfully by a young Cheng Pei Pei, in the "woman dressed as a man" character that would become a regular wuxia feature. They first meet in an inn that strongly resembles that from Dragon Inn (1992), where they engage in a battle of words and martial arts prowess that leaves the bandits in no doubt that Golden Swallow is not about to let them get away with their plans.

    Like seemingly all King Hu movies, the plot is layered and intricately woven, full of intrigue and politics and power plays. There's always more going on than meets the eye. It manages this without being at all difficult to follow though, unlike many of its imitators and successors.

    Come Drink With Me is full of colourful characters, such as the cheerful bandit Smiling Tiger or the singing drunken beggar played by Yueh Hua. Without a doubt the movie belongs to Cheng Pei Pei though, who is beautiful, graceful, fierce and proud, and a tremendous fighter. It's easy to see why audiences loved her, and her character left such a lasting influence on the wu xia movie.

    The production values in the movie are very high, with beautiful sets, locations and costumes and very nice cinematography. King Hu's skillful camera work is legendary, and the imagery is not as memorable as the imagery in Hu's later work such as A Touch Of Zen it is still of very high quality and way above its peers.

    The action scenes are probably the main legacy that Come Drink With Me left behind it though. As all the interviews on the disc agree, Hu's approach to choreographing and filming the sword fights raised the bar of Hong Kong martial arts movies to unparalleled levels, and really started the 'fight scene as art form' philosophy that would quickly come to be the defining characteristic of the colony's cinema. By todays standards there is no question that the fight scenes look slow and crude, and are a long way from the grace and beauty that the wu xia movie would eventually achieve under directors such as Tsui Hark and Ching Siu Tung (who has a small part in the movie as a child actor!). However, many of the cinematic styles and techniques were making their first appearance in this movie, so it is fascinating to see them and imagine how exciting they must have been to audiences at the time. The image of Cheng Pei Pei with her twin short swords is one that will linger in the memory for some time even now.

    Come Drink With Me had quite a reputation to live up to, and the difficulty a keen viewer had in seeing it until now doubtless enhanced that. Probably there will be many viewers that wonder what all the fuss was about, but I think few could dispute that it is a well crafted movie even without considering its historical importance. As is obligatory with any King Hu review though, I do have to point out that it is not as good as A Touch Of Zen
    7Stofft

    Another SB masterpiece!

    Even if this film goes way back in time (back to 1966) this film is very well shot indeed.

    And from what I have heard this was the film that kind of set the standard for future kung fu flix in this particular style. Flying ppl, big battles and beautiful action style.

    No need to really lay so much upon the story on what happens in it. as it can be read on the main page.. but I do wanna announce that if you wanna get this one on DVD you should look for the re-mastered version released/made by the Asian company Celestial Pictures/ IVL (Intercontinental Video Limited)

    They have done a great job in shaping up this film.. so ti more or less looks like it could have been produced today.

    Also comes with lots of Xtras like interviews with the cast and other fun stuff.

    Well worth having in your collection

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    Related interests

    Maggie Cheung in Hero (2002)
    Wuxia
    Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
    Action
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The original film was followed by a sequel, Golden Swallow again with 'Pei-pei Cheng' but with 'Yu Wang' as the lead actor.
    • Quotes

      Chang Hsuan-yen: May I ask your name?

      Fan Ta-p'i: They call me Drunken Cat

    • Connections
      Featured in Top Fighter 2 (1996)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 7, 1966 (Hong Kong)
    • Country of origin
      • Hong Kong
    • Language
      • Mandarin
    • Also known as
      • Das Schwert der gelben Tigerin
    • Production company
      • Shaw Brothers
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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