Two warlord chiefs, a ton-fa wielder who can destroy an opponents weapon and a Tai Chi expert that is impervious to weapons, send a pair of killers to track down and kill an old master sword... Read allTwo warlord chiefs, a ton-fa wielder who can destroy an opponents weapon and a Tai Chi expert that is impervious to weapons, send a pair of killers to track down and kill an old master swordsman who has given up fighting. When the killers assassination attempt is foiled by a grou... Read allTwo warlord chiefs, a ton-fa wielder who can destroy an opponents weapon and a Tai Chi expert that is impervious to weapons, send a pair of killers to track down and kill an old master swordsman who has given up fighting. When the killers assassination attempt is foiled by a group of kung fu students from a nearby school, the chiefs themselves come to the school to de... Read all
- Ku Yu Tieh
- (as Lieh Lo)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
thing, lots of kung fu movies - most of them were bad, but some held the
same mythology that if you trained hard enough and knew every secret
there was you'd become invincible. This idea sporned the White Haired
supervillians that would become to showcase kung fu movies. Impossible
to beat, super-tough villians that would sometimes steal the show. The
more white hair, the more powerful they were.
In this movie the real star is the bad guy as we see him kill all those
who stand in his way. Excellent kung fu duels are plenty in this film,
though the ending is a bit silly.
I'd love a redux of this movie for the 21st century - but it'll never
happen - instead enjoy kung fu mastery of the white haired kind in this
movie.
Ove
It all started when some students tried to help an old man getting beaten by the villain's henchmen. This then establishes the years long feud. Eventually, the henchmen are killed until there's a final showdown with the main villain of the film. And they're ready to exploit his weakness, which the movie took some time to figure out.
The kung fu here has lots of fancy flips and jumps (villains finishing move is a jump-flip head-butt). This isn't some goofball kung fu although the movie is pretty hilarious cause of the cliché bad guy and Asian people fighting for honor as if they'd die without it.
I'm looking a bit too deep here, but the best thing about this film is it questioned whether it's right if the good guys cheat in fights for justice. The dubbing is hilarious and over the top like in all horribly brilliant kung-fu films. Good film to watch every now and then to see some ideal kung fu fighting. 9/10
Did you know
- ConnectionsReferenced in Video Buck: Las traducciones más mierdosas pt. 2 (2015)
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Tai ji yuan gong
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro