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Return of the One-Armed Swordsman

Original title: Du bei dao wang
  • 1969
  • R
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Jimmy Wang Yu in Return of the One-Armed Swordsman (1969)
ActionAdventure

The One-Armed Swordsman is forced out of retirement by a criminal organization consisting of eight swordsmen, who has forced every clan to send their best to compete against them for swordsm... Read allThe One-Armed Swordsman is forced out of retirement by a criminal organization consisting of eight swordsmen, who has forced every clan to send their best to compete against them for swordsman supremacy.The One-Armed Swordsman is forced out of retirement by a criminal organization consisting of eight swordsmen, who has forced every clan to send their best to compete against them for swordsman supremacy.

  • Director
    • Cheh Chang
  • Writer
    • Cheh Chang
  • Stars
    • Jimmy Wang Yu
    • Chiao Chiao
    • Chia Essie Lin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Cheh Chang
    • Writer
      • Cheh Chang
    • Stars
      • Jimmy Wang Yu
      • Chiao Chiao
      • Chia Essie Lin
    • 16User reviews
    • 23Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos34

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    Top cast67

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    Jimmy Wang Yu
    Jimmy Wang Yu
    • Fang Gang
    • (as Yu Wang)
    • …
    Chiao Chiao
    Chiao Chiao
    • Hsiao Man
    Chia Essie Lin
    Chia Essie Lin
    • 'Thousand Fingers' Hua Niang
    Feng Tien
    Feng Tien
    • 'Unknown Nemesis' Ling Hsu
    Ho Bao-Hsing
      Chiang Chen
      Hsing-Tang Chen
      Sing Chen
      Sing Chen
      • Shan Hsiung
      • (as Hsing Chen)
      Lei Cheng
      Lei Cheng
      • Lu Tung
      Tang Chia
      • 'Wheelmaster' Sung Wen
      • (as Chia Tang)
      Liu Chia-Yung
      Liu Chia-Yung
      • 'Hades Buddha' Shih Hu
      • (as Chia-Yung Liu)
      Ming Chiu
      Ming Chiu
      • Lei Ming
      Chung-Chi Chou
      • Lu Ta
      Chin Chu
      Siu Boh Chu
        Chen Chuan
        Chen Chuan
          Chin Chun
          Chin Chun
            Chun Erh
            Chun Erh
            • Director
              • Cheh Chang
            • Writer
              • Cheh Chang
            • All cast & crew
            • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

            User reviews16

            7.11.5K
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            Featured reviews

            7SnoopyStyle

            more action than the original

            Fang Gang and XiaoMan are living peacefully as farmers. Brothers Black and White Swordsman deliver him an invitation to a gathering by the Eight Warlords. Each warlord with their own minions fight using specific weapons and techniques. The Black and White brothers kill anybody unwilling to attend. Fang Gang refuses and rebukes the brother. The various masters who submit are slaughtered with some imprisoned. The Eight Warlords order the students of these sword clans to cut off their right arm before retrieving the bodies of their masters. In desperation, some of the students come to Fang Gang for help.

            This sequel has far more swordplay and action than the original. There are more stunts, bigger stunts and even rudimentary wire work. The various fighting styles are fun. The story does have a few minor problems. The story isn't quite as compelling. It's relatively straight forward. It's still plenty of fun to battle each one of the Warlords.

            Fang Gang says that he suspected Hua Niangzi (the Thousand Hands King) all along but he allow her to walk around killing so many men. He could have just searched her for her swords. Even worst, he allowed her to kill his badly injured man telling him to finish her off. The guy needed immediate medical attention. There are also a lot of coincidences and too convenient moments. I'm willing overlook all of those flaws for some some pretty awesome fun fights.
            7planktonrules

            Not nearly as good as the first film, but I loved that female villain!

            "The One-Armed Swordsman" is a classic and one of the best martial arts films of all time. So, it's not surprised that the movie had sequels. While not nearly as good, Yu Wang is back as the title character and it's interesting enough to merit watching if you like these sorts of pictures. If you don't, this one is unlikely to convert you.

            When the film begins, a group of baddies named the 8 Kings attack the leaders and best students of the 40 martial arts schools. They then send an ultimatum to all the surviving students back home...."Cut off one of your arms or we'll kill your masters". Not surprisingly, they decide instead to seek out the One-Armed Swordsman and enlist his help. Will he come out of retirement to help? Well, considering the title of the film, it's pretty much a foregone conclusion.

            Along the way, they encounter a lot of treachery and baddies. My favorite was the evil woman who smiles so convincingly...as she murders folks right and left. She is an amazingly good villain and it's a shame she's only in a small portion of the film. In addition to her, you'll see LOTS of blood and gore and tons of ridiculous fight scenes using 'wire fu'. This is the most serious problem of the movie. In the first film, there is some wire fu but mostly it's just really, really great swordsmanship and martial arts. Here, however, the quality of the fighting is much, much lower with blood substituting for quality fighting. Not a terrible fighting film but certainly not near the quality of the first one despite having the same leading man and director. Diverting but far from a must-see. After all, you DON'T expect total realism from a one-armed film...but you do expect better than this.

            By the way, if you want to make this film a drinking game, I suggest everyone take a shot every time a character is mortally wounded yet miraculously, for a few seconds, begins fighting again despite losing gallons of blood or having HUGE swords thrust through them! I especially love the scene with the guy impaled with a sword and he manages to kill a dozen more guys for about the next five minutes before he ultimately expires!
            6Jeremy_Urquhart

            A serviceable - but slightly lacking - martial arts movie

            I guess The One-Armed Swordsman (1967) must have done pretty well, because just two years later it got a sequel. One thing I've noticed about Shaw Brothers movies is that sequels are shockingly rare. The genre/action movies made in Japan in the 1960s and 1970s often got tons of sequels greenlit straight away (the Stray Cat Rock series had all five movies released in a window of less than 18 months, from memory), but Shaw Brothers in the Hong Kong scene seemed to have a different practice. They produced movies with similar premises often featuring a rotating cast of actors, but direct sequels themselves weren't too commonplace (maybe that's a natural consequence of having like half the movies end with the main character dying in an epic blaze of glory).

            So as for this sequel to The One-Armed Swordsman? It's just okay. It benefits from being able to hit the ground running, but none of the beats it ends up hitting are all that amazing. It's just a serviceable martial arts movie, and in typical (and unfortunate) sequel fashion, it more or less does what the first movie does, but just in ways that are slightly less exciting. It's consistent in that regard... just consistently less exciting and entertaining, and I say that as someone who liked but didn't love the first movie.

            But then again, an average Shaw Brothers martial arts movie is still better than an average anything else movie, because their standard of quality was generally so high throughout the late 1960s and into the 1980s. That makes Return of the One-Armed Swordsman a worthwhile watch for martial arts movie fanatics, but I don't think I'd recommend it to more casual action movie fans, in all honesty.
            10udar55

            One of Wang Yu's finest hours

            Having never seen the sequel to The One-Armed Swordsman (1968), I was in for quite a shock. To put it simply, this is one of the best kung fu follow-ups I have ever seen. Knowing that the one-armed character is by this time firmly established (and a box office success), director Chang Cheh opts for full-blown action this time around. It is basically The Road Warrior (1981) to the first film's Mad Max (1979), pumping up the action quotient ten fold and rarely slowing down from beginning to end.

            Sword fights come at you every five minutes or so, resulting in some amazingly bloody action. I had no idea that any kung fu film from the 60s was so bloody. This effect is remarkably enhanced by the use of palm squibs to send bloody flying and the heroes all white outfits. Another exciting aspect of the film (which would later become a Wang Yu staple) is the use of unorthodox weapons by the heavies. With eight super villains there is a lot of room for some creativity and Cheh and co. don't fail. My personal favorite is the sinister female demon that pulls any numbers of knives from under her flowing robe.

            But it is not to say that the film abandons the dramatic aspects of the story. Cheh spends a decent amount of time focusing on Fang Gang's reflection of his violent ways, both past and present. Fang essentially wants to be left alone with his wife but, to employ an overused quote, every time he thinks he is out, they pull him back in. He is a complex character and it is good to his emotional complications played out on screen, especially after the final battle during a celebration. The relationship between Fang and his wife is also highlighted, with both Wang Yu and Chiao Chiao performing well.
            8KentaroGod

            The Return of the one armed Swordsman indeed

            A great sequel to the original film 1967 with the two main characters husband and wife reprise their role but went straight to the plot a against the eight dagger clan more action less drama more blood shedding and fight scene... it's already built up all the storyline in the first one... the second one is just smooth sailing onwards

            Smooth transition from the original to the sequel... great antagonist and protagonist.

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            Related interests

            Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
            Action
            Still frame
            Adventure

            Storyline

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            Did you know

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            • Trivia
              Italian censorship visa # 73229 delivered on 15 March 1979.
            • Quotes

              'White Knight' Kuan Hsien: An honourable person doesn't reveal his true self.

            • Connections
              Followed by Triple Irons (1971)

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            Details

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            • Release date
              • February 28, 1969 (Hong Kong)
            • Country of origin
              • Hong Kong
            • Language
              • Mandarin
            • Also known as
              • Độc Thủ Đại Hiệp Tái Xuất Giang Hồ
            • Filming locations
              • Hong Kong, China
            • Production company
              • Shaw Brothers
            • See more company credits at IMDbPro

            Tech specs

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            • Runtime
              • 1h 49m(109 min)
            • Sound mix
              • Mono
            • Aspect ratio
              • 2.35 : 1

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