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Born Invincible

Original title: Tai ji yuan gong
  • 1978
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
577
YOUR RATING
Lo Lieh, Jack Long, Kuan-Wu Lung, and Carter Wong in Born Invincible (1978)
Action

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

  • Director
    • Joseph Kuo
  • Writers
    • Joseph Kuo
    • Ching-Kang Yao
  • Stars
    • Carter Wong
    • Lo Lieh
    • Kuan-Wu Lung
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    577
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joseph Kuo
    • Writers
      • Joseph Kuo
      • Ching-Kang Yao
    • Stars
      • Carter Wong
      • Lo Lieh
      • Kuan-Wu Lung
    • 18User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos23

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Carter Wong
    Carter Wong
    • Tieh Wu Ching
    Lo Lieh
    Lo Lieh
    • Ku Yu Tieh
    • (as Lieh Lo)
    Kuan-Wu Lung
    Kuan-Wu Lung
    • Sa Chien
    Jack Long
    Jack Long
    • Ming Tu
    Nancy Yen
    Nancy Yen
    • Ying Ying
    Corey Yuen
    Corey Yuen
    • Hei Pai killer
    Shun-Yee Yuen
    • Hei Pai killer
    Fei Lung
    Fei Lung
    • Lei Ping
    Alan Chung San Chui
    Alan Chung San Chui
    • Pa Chu, senior student
    Shan Wan
    • Brother Erh (3rd brother)
    Jen-Ping Su
    Jen-Ping Su
    • Liu Chin
    Pei-Ling Chen
    Pei-Ling Chen
    • Xiao Fei
    Shen Yuen
    Shen Yuen
    • School elder
    Chung-Shan Wan
    Chung-Shan Wan
    • Chang Wu
    Shao-Hua Chu
    • Chang Wu
    Kuo-Ren Wu
    Hua-Liang Hung
    • Old Tai Chi master
    Chiu Chen
    • Doctor
    • Director
      • Joseph Kuo
    • Writers
      • Joseph Kuo
      • Ching-Kang Yao
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    7.0577
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    Featured reviews

    9Riche-3

    Original, exciting and very well choreographed, this kung fu movie is a must.

    This is one of the rare kungfu movies ever made in Hong Kong. Nothing is boring here : interesting script, direct and efficient scenery, good acting. But what makes this movie so good is the fightscenes that are inventively and beautifully choreographed. Not only it's very good but it's also very hard-to-find. Dammage.
    the_oak

    One of the best kung fu movies I have seen

    Joseph Kuo has made a brilliant movie because the antagonist, the Chi Kung super villain, is such a good caracter. Carter Wong looks a bit like the icelandic world strongest man champion, Magnus ver Magnusson, but thats the only similarity. He is a killing machine, and there is nothing to be done to stop him. And that will be his demise. He is too evil for this world, and being a Chi Kung master, he should have evolved beyond blood lust. When Wong is asked by his female master to spare Lo Leihs life, Joseph Kuo shows signs of genius. The arch villain has a human side, but is is as repressed as that of Patrick Bateman in American Psycho.

    But more than just a super villain, Born Invinsible has a great cast of protagonists. The confidence and skill of Jack Long makes the deadly fights even more dramatic. And can there be a sexier woman than Lo Leih telling Carter Wong to go to hell?
    robotman-2

    White-Haired Supervillain

    Supervillains in Kung Fu movies are invaribly the coolest parts of the genre, because they are nearly always impervious and superior, both in intelligence and fighting ability, to anyone else. Their power is generated through sheer force and will, and only the hero(es) preternatural lust for revenge usually defeats these awesome Kung Fu menaces.

    In BORN INVINCIBLE, you get probably the most bizarre, yet realistic, supervillain in the whole of the genre. Carter Wong's Tai Chi training (a style developed by a woman), starting from a small child, results in iron skin, snow-white hair, and a high, feminine voice. This Tai Chi master becomes an unstoppable thug-chieftain who can fight a deadly duel and, simultaneously, carve a Chinese yin-yang symbol in the earth with his feet. This powerful supervillain operates from a source of disipline that is downright scary; Wong is entirely invincible but for his one weak point. When you see how relentless Wong's killer-master is, you can't help but relate to the terror in the heroes' faces when they have to take him on. Fact is, if not for the honor of their school, which is paramount to the students trying to take revenge for Wong's murder of their teacher, nobody would mess with the Tai Chi master, since it is considered by the most learned monks to be certain death.

    What separates Joe Kuo film villains, characters like Wong's and the great Ghost-Faced Killer from MYSTERY OF CHESS BOXING, is that Kuo puts one scene in there to show us the supervillain is also human. Wong's character is stopped from a killing rampage at one point by a white-haired nun, and there's a moment when Wong seems to reflect on what he IS, a killer, as opposed to what he trained to become, an otherworldly kind of priest attuned to nature and the inner forces like the nun. The fact that Wong won't, or can't, stem his bloodlust and sadism is his undoing. There's a lot going on in BORN INVINCIBLE aside from the superior fighting skill of the actors. One of the best Kung Fu films based merely on this unusual depth of character, and a knock-out all the way.
    8ckormos1

    Carter Wong grows a pair...

    Carter Wong grows a pair of white eyebrows and becomes the most iconic villain of all martial arts movies – the invulnerable white eyebrows character. I have been watching every martial arts movie ever made in chronological order from 1967 and my first notice of a white eyebrows villain was in 1968 in "The Swordsman of All Swordsmen". More famous invulnerable white eyebrows villains include Hwang Jang Lee and Lo Lieh. The rules of the villain also state that he does have one vulnerable spot that he can move around by will according to the time of day. This superpower is associated with a martial arts practice called Taiji Qigong that is an advanced part of the popular kung fu style usually referred to as Tai Chi in the East. None of the fights show real Tai Chi. Technically, a lot more is lost in the translation. The English dub oversimplifies the line "You must strike when he is not himself." The ability to shift one's vulnerable spot is always associated with the time of day. In the movie the shadow of the sword is shown to represent that factor. When he is not himself is not really when he is laughing. Every villain has that same laugh. A more accurate translation would be along the line of "You must strike when he does something a Qigong practitioner would never do – display overconfidence." As a practicing martial artist for most of my life I tend to notice details like this and they usually don't take any enjoyment away from the typical audience. Another thing I have over thought about the invulnerable villain is why no one ever thinks of dropping a net over him. Also the villain acts just like Superman in the old TV series when he stands tall to deflect bullets but then ducks when the empty gun is thrown at him. If he was really invulnerable he would not have to block or avoid any weapon or blow, he could just attack and nothing else. Nobody wants to see that fight choreography though so I will stop now. Many other reviewers have called this the best martial arts movie they have ever seen. I'm happy to read that but I encourage them to see more. I respect your opinion but there are many more movies out there and I am sure you will find other movies that are better.
    Papa Doc-2

    This movie is a Carter Wong tour-de-force, a prime example of the best of the non-Shaw 70's gongfu movies.

    While most of the stars of this movie are quite forgettable, two stand out: Carter Wong and Lo Lieh. Together, they are two nearly invincible killers filled to the brim with gongfu power.

    This is without a doubt one of CW's best, if not his all-time best film. He plays a white-haired master of taijiquan (hence the actual name, tai ji qi gong) who has trained since the age of 5 in this mystic art and is truly invincible -- except for his one weak point.

    A classic "revenge for wronged school/slain master" plot makes this film move solidly through its paces. Lo Lieh is terrific as a baton wielding parter to Carter Wong. Basically the young students of a gongfu school train hard to take revenge on the pair for slaying their master. But it's not as easy as it first seems.

    This movie has quite a few training scenes, all of them terrific, with some quite awesome schticks developed. The dubbing detracts not at all from the film, as the voice-over man perfectly reduplicates the squeaky voice that CW speaks in (due to his powers -- explained in the film). While CW's gongfu is not as good in this movie as in others, say, like Invisible Terrorist, he still keeps it up, and besides, why learn how to fight when no one can hurt you? The rest of the cast make up for it in spades.

    This movie is worth buying if you love 70's gongfu movies, even non Shaw Bros. ones.

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    Related interests

    Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
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      Referenced in Video Buck: Las traducciones más mierdosas pt. 2 (2015)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • 1978 (Hong Kong)
    • Countries of origin
      • Taiwan
      • Hong Kong
    • Language
      • Mandarin
    • Also known as
      • Tai ji yuan gong
    • Production company
      • Hong Hwa International Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 23m(83 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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