IMDb RATING
5.8/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
A goofy student is taught a lost martial art style by five ghosts.A goofy student is taught a lost martial art style by five ghosts.A goofy student is taught a lost martial art style by five ghosts.
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
5.82.7K
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
A Goofy but Charming Early Jackie Chan Gem
Spiritual Kung Fu (1978) is one of Jackie Chan's more unusual early films, mixing traditional martial-arts action with fantasy, slapstick comedy, and some delightfully low-budget special effects. It definitely isn't his most polished work, but it is an entertaining look at the evolution of his signature comedic style.
Jackie plays Yi-Lang, a clumsy Shaolin student who ends up being trained by five ghostly monks after a forbidden manual is stolen from the temple. The story is simple and often silly, but that's part of the film's charm. The glowing spirits, bright red wigs, and playful tone give it a quirky personality that sets it apart from other kung-fu films of its era.
Where the movie really shines is the martial-arts choreography. Even at this early stage, you can see Jackie's creativity and physical talent on display. The fight scenes are energetic, inventive, and fun to watch, especially the final showdown.
Yes, the humor can be corny, and the effects haven't aged well-but if you go in expecting a lighthearted kung-fu fantasy rather than a serious action film, Spiritual Kung Fu is a surprisingly enjoyable ride.
Bottom line: A fun, weird, and undeniably charming martial-arts movie that shows Jackie Chan on the road to becoming the star we know today. Perfect for fans of old-school kung fu and Jackie completists.
Jackie plays Yi-Lang, a clumsy Shaolin student who ends up being trained by five ghostly monks after a forbidden manual is stolen from the temple. The story is simple and often silly, but that's part of the film's charm. The glowing spirits, bright red wigs, and playful tone give it a quirky personality that sets it apart from other kung-fu films of its era.
Where the movie really shines is the martial-arts choreography. Even at this early stage, you can see Jackie's creativity and physical talent on display. The fight scenes are energetic, inventive, and fun to watch, especially the final showdown.
Yes, the humor can be corny, and the effects haven't aged well-but if you go in expecting a lighthearted kung-fu fantasy rather than a serious action film, Spiritual Kung Fu is a surprisingly enjoyable ride.
Bottom line: A fun, weird, and undeniably charming martial-arts movie that shows Jackie Chan on the road to becoming the star we know today. Perfect for fans of old-school kung fu and Jackie completists.
Jackie taught kung fu from five skirt-wearing fairies!
A sacred manual of the Seven Fist technique is stolen from the legendary Shaolin temple, and the only style good enough to conquer it, the Five Fists, has long since vanished. Thankfully a meteor hits the temple walls, unearthing the spirits of the Five Fists style, who summarily teach their deadly animal kung fu to lazy student Jackie Chan, so that maybe he can help when the Seven Fist thief strike again. What makes this Lo Wei adventure so endearing is the shoddy special effects with Star Wars released the year before, Spiritual Kung Fu plainly outlines how behind the times HK was in their effects department (the meteor is a sparkler on a piece of string), and the flame-haired, hula-skirt wearing superimposed ghosts do retain a certain charm despite the cheapness.
Highly entertaining kung fu flick
This movie (which really should have "Spiritual Kung Fu" listed as an alternate title) may be mostly for those who specifically like kung fu movies, but if you're one of those then this is a classic. While it forebodes the comedic action of later Chan movies, it is actually much more serious, and Jackie's part may be the biggest part, but it is almost matched by several other characters, so the emphasis doesn't lie so squarely on the lead character as it usually does in Chan's movies.
If you're a kung fu movie fan, don't listen to the negative comments posted here. This is one cool movie with lots of cool weirdness, and definitely some very cool fights. At one point, Jackie, who's still considered a novice, has to fight the 18 top students, and he licks every one of them in a long and impressive fight scene. This movie is definitely worth your while.
My rating: 8 out of 10.
If you're a kung fu movie fan, don't listen to the negative comments posted here. This is one cool movie with lots of cool weirdness, and definitely some very cool fights. At one point, Jackie, who's still considered a novice, has to fight the 18 top students, and he licks every one of them in a long and impressive fight scene. This movie is definitely worth your while.
My rating: 8 out of 10.
Comedy Gold
I watched this movie a few month back. It's plot is pretty forgettable, same for the fighting scenes. For the most part the movie is cliché-ridden and steadily mediocre, but there is one, big exception.Around the half of the first hour of the movie there is this scene that will stay with me forever. As you might have figured out from the synopsis, the ghosts that haunt Jackie are the big part of this movie. Before the said scene they appear a few times, later they teach him some moves and thank to that Jackie wins the final fight. But the first encounter between the ghost and Jackie is one of the funniest moments in all of Jackie Chan's films. The poor special effects, the ridiculous script (Jackie starts peeing at the ghost), the whole insanity of seeing a fake skeleton bounce on the screen because the guy used X-Ray Vision scroll and looked at his friend is more then enough reason to watch this movie. I haven't laughed much at the movie for a long time, and I'm happy that I saw this low-budget martial arts extravaganza.
In conclusion if you have the opportunity to watch this movie, please do. The first 1/3 is pretty boring, and for the rest of the movie you wish that the craziness that occurred around 30 minutes in repeats itself, but sadly that doesn't happen. But this 10 minute segment of Jackie playing around with ghost is more than enough for you to rent this movie.
In conclusion if you have the opportunity to watch this movie, please do. The first 1/3 is pretty boring, and for the rest of the movie you wish that the craziness that occurred around 30 minutes in repeats itself, but sadly that doesn't happen. But this 10 minute segment of Jackie playing around with ghost is more than enough for you to rent this movie.
5 out of 10
this one is a weird, weird flick. funny at times, exciting at times, scary at times(not a lot though), but mostly just weird. it invloves jackie learning a lost style of kung fu from some red haired, tutu wearing ghosts. at some time in the movie, he even takes a leak (urinates, to make myself clearer) on them! like i said, very weird.
Did you know
- TriviaAlong with Dragon Fist (1979), this movie was filmed in early 1978. As Wei Lo's studio went bankrupt, they shelved both movies due to cost-cutting measures and Chan was loaned out to Seasonal Films for a two-picture deal. While there, he made Snake in the Eagle's Shadow (1978) and Drunken Master (1978) with Yuen Woo-Ping. The success of these two movies at the domestic box-office prompted Lo to give belated releases to this movie and Dragon Fist (1979).
- GoofsWhen one of the ghosts tease Yi-Lang with the candle it is clear that there is a pane of glass between Yi-Lang and the candle because there is a clear reflection of that candle visible on-screen.
- Alternate versionsIn at least the Mandarin, French and English export versions, Ya Long is knocked out with a chop to the neck. In the Cantonese version, he is knocked out with poison.
- ConnectionsEdited into Fearless Hyena 2 (1983)
- SoundtracksBeat
(theme of the Masters of the Five Fists)
Performed by Kitaro
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Meister aller Klassen 2
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content








