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IMDbPro

The Hammer of God

Original title: Long hu dou
  • 1970
  • R
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
1K
YOUR RATING
The Hammer of God (1970)
Kung FuMartial ArtsActionCrimeDrama

A martial artist seeks revenge after his master and his entire Kwoon are wiped out by Japanese Karate masters who're in cahoots with a vile martial artist seeking to control the area by open... Read allA martial artist seeks revenge after his master and his entire Kwoon are wiped out by Japanese Karate masters who're in cahoots with a vile martial artist seeking to control the area by opening casinos and trapping people in debt.A martial artist seeks revenge after his master and his entire Kwoon are wiped out by Japanese Karate masters who're in cahoots with a vile martial artist seeking to control the area by opening casinos and trapping people in debt.

  • Director
    • Jimmy Wang Yu
  • Writer
    • Jimmy Wang Yu
  • Stars
    • Jimmy Wang Yu
    • Lo Lieh
    • Ping Wang
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jimmy Wang Yu
    • Writer
      • Jimmy Wang Yu
    • Stars
      • Jimmy Wang Yu
      • Lo Lieh
      • Ping Wang
    • 16User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos62

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    Top cast72

    Edit
    Jimmy Wang Yu
    Jimmy Wang Yu
    • Lei Ming
    • (as Yu Wang)
    Lo Lieh
    Lo Lieh
    • Kitashima
    • (as Lieh Lo)
    Ping Wang
    Ping Wang
    • Li Shao-ling
    Hsiung Chao
    Hsiung Chao
    • Diao Erh-yeh
    Mien Fang
    Mien Fang
    • Master Li
    Lei Cheng
    Lei Cheng
    • Chang Da Lung
    Sing Chen
    Sing Chen
    • Ishihara
    Li Tung
    Li Tung
    • Lumura
    • (as Kang Hua)
    Kuang Yu Wang
    Kuang Yu Wang
    • Sun Tung
    No Tsai
    • Lin Hung
    Chung Wang
    Chung Wang
    • Tanaka
    Ling Chiang
    Ling Chiang
    • Lin Ah-Chuan
    Lung Yu
    • Greeting student
    • (as Yu Chung Chieh)
    Ho Bao-Hsing
      Chi-Ping Chang
      Chi-Ping Chang
      Shih-Ou Chang
      Shih-Ou Chang
      Chiang Chen
      Hsing-Tang Chen
      • Director
        • Jimmy Wang Yu
      • Writer
        • Jimmy Wang Yu
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews16

      6.81K
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      Featured reviews

      7henry-girling

      Quite Good

      Jimmy Wang Yu, an authentic Asian superstar, directed and wrote this film which I have only seen in a dubbed videotape version. The widescreen (Shaw Scope!)shape was lost and the original actor's voices absent but this is still good to watch. The story is the usual martial arts school fights villains from Japan plot with our young hero winning out in the end by beating up loads of assorted thugs.

      The combat gets better as the film unravels. Early in the film it looks stiff and dull but later there is a great scene where Wang Yu fights hordes in a gambling joint then walks out into a snowy scene and takes some more villains on with knives, sword and fists. That part is very exciting.

      Quite good then but it would be interesting to see a non dubbed widescreen version if there is one.
      8ckormos1

      A Shaw Brothers movie written by, directed by, and starring Jimmy Wang Yu.

      The most important fact about this movie: A Shaw Brothers movie written by, directed by, and starring Jimmy Wang Yu. That was the first and last time that ever happened.

      It starts on a busy street in a small Chinese town. I think Shaw Brothers was just showing off that they could put together a throw away scene with hundreds of extras wandering a complete small town. So it really starts when our villain enters a kung fu school and criticizes them. He is a former student, kicked out for violence, and now a student of Japanese martial arts. Challenge accepted! He fights them but his moves do not resemble karate. During the opening credits one student runs, it seems to be about ten miles, to notify the master. He arrives first at a rock quarry where Jimmy Wang Yu and Cheng Lui seem to be working like slaves. They rush back to the school. Karate guy is now using judo. After introductions and rudeness the teacher arrives. They fight and teacher draws first blood. Karate/Judo guy vows to return with karate experts.

      Cut to Jimmy Wang Yu walking and talking with his girl. She predicts a bad ending to all this karate versus kung fu business. Back at the school the master bores everyone with a lecture on the history of martial arts. Two important points are- the Chinese take credit as the originators of all martial arts and the Iron Palm and Light Leaping techniques can defeat karate. Remember that, there will be a one question test at the end of the movie. "How do you defeat karate?"

      What follows is then the first training sequence. Jimmy engaged in many exercises to show the physical demands required to gain martial arts proficiency. In reality this is a redundant and mind numbing process so the movies had to make it look more interesting.

      Lo Lieh plays an absolute bad guy in this movie. He is one of the few leading men who had real martial arts experience before he started acting. His career began with hero roles but subsequently turned to villains. He is probably better remembered as a villain. His background was in karate so was a perfect fit for this role. Chan Sing is another villain in this movie. He also has a background in Goju-Ryu karate. I am unable to verify of this is before, after, or during his acting career. He fights Jimmy at about 30 minutes into the movie and most of the fight choreography is actually karate for the first time in this movie. He takes out Jimmy with a hit to the forehead.

      This movie has my highest recommendation which is underwhelming because it is a landmark film that had social and cultural influence beyond the movie world and is mandatory viewing for any fan of this genre.
      8mhantholz

      Top-notch entry in 1970s kung fu craze

      Saw this as HAMMER OF GOD @ Loew's DELANCEY with Mario Bava's HATCHET FOR THE HONEYMOON-- -one of the *best* twin-bills I ever saw and I saw hundreds from the mid-1950s till the *end of the double-bill*, as a movie-going fact-of-life, mid-late 1970s.

      The DELANCEY was a huge old "movie palace"-style theater, with humongous screen, super sound system, balcony, full-service concession stand in a big-BIG lobby, *the works*.

      The big screen is absolutely *vital* to the peak enjoyment of the rich color, speed-of-light action of HAMMER.

      The impact of HATCHET on a small home screen must be terribly attenuated, the atmosphere sharply reduced, surely.

      BOTH these films were made with *big screens* in mind. The film-makers of that bygone era could not have foreseen today's cracker-box 'plex "theaters" (*hawk-ptooi*) which generally seat >500, in malls built in the ever-popular Birkenau style of architecture.

      I'm High Church about the big-theater films of that era ---I simply won't see them again: My *memory* serves me well enough.

      It is simply too depressing, too degrading to see the scratched and pitted prints with their bleached-out "colors" and raggedy soundtracks on a tiny home screen.

      I wouldn't accept THE LAST SUPPER or LA PRIMAVERA as thumbnails, and that's what watching vintage movies of happy memory is to me today.

      Cheers !
      Jules-78

      Classic old style Chop Socky

      The Chinese Boxer, unsurprisingly bears some similarity to Jimmy Wang Yu's other popular franchises- The One Armed Swordsman and the One Armed Boxer. This time Jimmy takes on the baddies with both arms. It's a simple morality play, he's good, they're bad and after inflicting pain upon him, his family and his village, they're going to have to pay. What makes it so damn entertaining, is the style, and dare I say it, the passion that has gone into it. Ignore the bad dubbing (the Australian version has an atrocious British accented soundtrack) the panning and acanning, and sit back and enjoy a true classic of HK cinema. You'll also enjoy learning traditional Chinese medicine and philospohy in the manner with which it was intended. Take note of the traditional themes of Chinese cinema- Honour, family values, retribution. Listen for the quick sample of one of John Barry's Bond themes in some of the action sequences.
      8john-1451

      china's secret weapon-jimmy wang-yu

      In the last few months, I've become reacquainted with Jimmy Wang-Yu, whose movies I hadn't seen since Friday nights at the drive in back in the 70's. An authentic Asian superstar, Wang-Yu's movies usually have a simple plot familiar to any chop-socky fan. What sets him apart is that he had an appreciation of fighting styles from other countries that really liven up the fight scenes. (A great example of this is the movie "The Chinese Professionals".) This movie is one of the few to explain why karate fighters had an easy time with kung fu students but would always fall to the masters. If you're looking for a representative kung fu movie, this is the one. The plot is a template for most every kung fu flick that came after. Not as spectacular as his later films, but the climactic battle with Lo Lieh (star of another classic, "Five Fingers of Death") is well worth the price of the movie. Recommended.

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      Related interests

      Donnie Yen in Ip Man 3 (2015)
      Kung Fu
      Bruce Lee in Enter the Dragon (1973)
      Martial Arts
      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)
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      Storyline

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      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        This is the first chinese martial arts movie where they dont fight with swords but rather with hands
      • Alternate versions
        UK video versions were cut by 1 min 3 secs by the BBFC to edit lethal body blows and to heavily reduce the rape scene.
      • Connections
        Featured in Trailer Trauma Part 4: Television Trauma (2017)

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      FAQ13

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • June 1973 (United States)
      • Country of origin
        • Hong Kong
      • Language
        • Mandarin
      • Also known as
        • Der Karate-Killer
      • Production company
        • Shaw Brothers
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 30m(90 min)
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 2.35 : 1

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