IMDb RATING
6.3/10
2.4K
YOUR RATING
Princess Dragon Mom and her mutant army have risen, and only Infra-Man can stop them.Princess Dragon Mom and her mutant army have risen, and only Infra-Man can stop them.Princess Dragon Mom and her mutant army have risen, and only Infra-Man can stop them.
Dana
- Demon Witch-Eye
- (as Shu-Yi Tsen)
Bruce Le
- Sergeant Lu Hsiao-Lung
- (as Chien-Lung Huang)
Chin Chun
- Chairman of Meeting
- (as Chun Chin)
Hsu Hsia
- Science Research Center's Staff
- (as Hsia Hsu)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
...that you'll want to watch over and over again. A weird, psychedelic mixture of martial arts movies, Japanese giant monster movies, spy adventures, and just plain goofiness. The plot makes no senses, the characters are thinnest cardboard, and the monsters are truly hilarious. If you wonder where they came up with Power Rangers, look no further than here.
I saw this movie when it was first released to theaters in the US in 1975 as Inframan. The mid 70s were the days of Johnny Socko and Ultraman, so Inframan kind of felt like a souped up version of those.
The fact that I remember seeing this movie so vividly, even after 28 years have gone by, should be some indication that it's at least not humdrum. Sure, the monsters are fake, and the plot is ludicrous, but you aren't MEANT to take Inframan any more seriously than you did Ultraman (if you ever watched that show). This movie is nothing more (and nothing less!) than campy Japanese techno-samurai heroics at its Technicolor best.
Inframan does amazingly gymnastic things and defeats amazingly craptacular foes, and does so with great style and lots of intense colors. Though I was too young to have tried any hallucinogens back in 1975, I can say now, after more life experience, that this IS the kind of movie you would greatly enjoy while on hallucinogens; and even if you aren't tripping when you watch this movie, you'll get some of that same feel anyway. It's just that kind of movie. ;)
The fact that I remember seeing this movie so vividly, even after 28 years have gone by, should be some indication that it's at least not humdrum. Sure, the monsters are fake, and the plot is ludicrous, but you aren't MEANT to take Inframan any more seriously than you did Ultraman (if you ever watched that show). This movie is nothing more (and nothing less!) than campy Japanese techno-samurai heroics at its Technicolor best.
Inframan does amazingly gymnastic things and defeats amazingly craptacular foes, and does so with great style and lots of intense colors. Though I was too young to have tried any hallucinogens back in 1975, I can say now, after more life experience, that this IS the kind of movie you would greatly enjoy while on hallucinogens; and even if you aren't tripping when you watch this movie, you'll get some of that same feel anyway. It's just that kind of movie. ;)
Time to own up: Inframan is one of my favorite movies. This film is nothing less than an hour and a half of ferocious martial arts, monsters in costumes cheaper than you can imagine, and the fearsome pronouncements of Princess Dragon Mom - and it's a blast. I rent this movie at least once every couple of months just to remind myself how much fun a low-budget film can be. After all, how can you not love a movie whose villainess has her lair decorated with what appears to be Saran Wrap, and whose hero has to free himself from "liquid ice"?
This is a hoot and a half; a Shaw Brothers' gem. Add in a manga based story, the Shaw Bros. studio lot, sci-fi, and lots of amazing, kampy fighting surpassing even the staged corny fighting by the Bat in blue tights Adam West, and that's Super Inframan in a nutshell. According to production notes, Danny Lee did don the Inframan suit on and I loved the transformation sequences with really 70ish sound effects! There's 70s written throughout this one. I never knew a Demon Princess could dress and look so funky psychedelic! I thought she stopped by a Viking convention. Plus, best use of motorcycle helmets goes to the numerous black-clad skull minions who take turns getting an Inframan-ish beating and lots of well-timed body flips. This film is a very good homage to Japan's Kaiju. Please ignore the fact that the monsters are human-sized rather than several stories tall. The Super Inframan and the Mighty Peking Man should be shown back-to-back at Subway Cinema 2004 at the Film Forum in NYC!
Shaw Brothers is mostly known for their kung fu films, but they did occasionally try things outside of their wheelhouse namely Mighty Peking Man and Super Infra Man. Super Inframan is your basic rubber suit monster battle but filtered through the lense of Hong Kong kung fu flicks complete with bad audio syncing and out of place sounding impact shots. In terms of plot.....Image if you had an entire seasons worth of Power Rangers plots squished into 90 minutes and compressed the storytelling into about 20 minutes filling the rest with action scenes. The movie is non stop action and unapologetically silly and if you're a fan of silly monster movies or kung fu flicks you'll find something to like. Just don't expect much of a coherent narrative.
Did you know
- TriviaThis film has historical importance: it was the first superhero film that was made in China, the first film promotion in Hong Kong that used a hot air balloon, and the first Shaw Brothers production that used a storyboard.
- GoofsDuring several of the fights between the creatures and the Silver Suited Men in the film, several of them have tears in the crotches of their uniforms (which can be seen when the men land on their backs and their legs are not close together).
- Quotes
Princess Dragon Mom: Greetings to you, Earthlings; I am Princess Dragon Mom. I have taken over this planet; now I own the Earth, and you'll be my slaves for all eternity! The disasters you have witnessed are just small examples of our great power. Either surrender to me, or I'll destroy all humans! I've spoken; it's all the warning you're going to get from me. You'll be destroyed!
- Alternate versionsThe U.S. English-dubbed version has a completely different title sequence (except for when the "transformation" animation from the background of the original Hong Kong credit sequence has been reworked into the beginning of the U.S. credits) that replaces and deletes some of the original music (as well as adding library music into appropriate scenes), and all of the sequences of Lei-Ma's standard transformation into Infra-Man have been cut.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Siskel & Ebert: Guilty Pleasures - 1987 (1987)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 30m(90 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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