A band of killers from an ailing kung fu and magic society are sent on a manhunt for a former member of the society, whose bad mouthing threatens its existence.A band of killers from an ailing kung fu and magic society are sent on a manhunt for a former member of the society, whose bad mouthing threatens its existence.A band of killers from an ailing kung fu and magic society are sent on a manhunt for a former member of the society, whose bad mouthing threatens its existence.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Liu Chia-Yung
- Lei Ying
- (as Chia-Yung Liu)
Kara Ying Hung Wai
- Fang Shao-Ching
- (as Kara Hui)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
Plot jumbled Kung Fu Extravaganza!
Liu Chi Liang stands as the best kung fu director ever. As a kung fu master himself, he gives the films a unique perspective on the fighting arts. The fight scenes are the best combination of actual martial art ability, choreography, camera work and crazy effects you can get. Maybe Stephen Chow comes close. Watching Liu Chia Liang and his protégés at work is sublime.
That said, this film is a mixed bag. The opening 10 minutes are choppy and confusing. The film changes course for about 20 minutes to give Alexander Fu Sheng two elaborate comic scenes. The characters are about as shallow as you can get until 3/4 of the way into the film. In addition, the film ends very abruptly. The whole thing seems a flimsy excuse to stage fight scenes. But the fight scenes, what you get! Nearly every fight scene is amazing.
Liu Chia Liang, his brother and Liu Chia Hui are in full power here. The finale gives us the two brothers in an extended fight with the title weapons. If you can get the Celestial Films DVD, I suggest watching it on the largest screen you can find. Otherwise you'll miss the intricate moves of these two. The English dub is terrible, avoid if possible.
If you want a better plot try the director's 36th Chamber or Dirty Ho. If it's a fighting extravaganza you want, here it is.
That said, this film is a mixed bag. The opening 10 minutes are choppy and confusing. The film changes course for about 20 minutes to give Alexander Fu Sheng two elaborate comic scenes. The characters are about as shallow as you can get until 3/4 of the way into the film. In addition, the film ends very abruptly. The whole thing seems a flimsy excuse to stage fight scenes. But the fight scenes, what you get! Nearly every fight scene is amazing.
Liu Chia Liang, his brother and Liu Chia Hui are in full power here. The finale gives us the two brothers in an extended fight with the title weapons. If you can get the Celestial Films DVD, I suggest watching it on the largest screen you can find. Otherwise you'll miss the intricate moves of these two. The English dub is terrible, avoid if possible.
If you want a better plot try the director's 36th Chamber or Dirty Ho. If it's a fighting extravaganza you want, here it is.
10bickeler
Classic Must see
Anyone who has reviewed this movie and stated the plot is stupid has no knowledge of 19th century China. In fact during the Boxer Rebellion these "Boxers" believed through rituals they could make themselves impervious to firearms. No I am not making this up and neither did Chia-Liang Liu and while he exaggerated and had fun with it for comedic values he was making an historical notation. The Martial Arts in this movie are exceptional and so is the outrageous humor instilled in this movie. Not only did he poke fun at the Boxers but also many of the Martial Arts movies of the 1970s that went a little overboard with the magical Kung Fu element. And all in the same breath showed the usage of almost every weapon used in Chinese Martial Arts. The talent in this movie speaks for itself aside from Liu and his brothers there is Fu Sheng, Hou Hsiao and the sweet Kara Hui. They don't make Martial Arts movies this original or good anymore either with all the Ip Man clones and CGI epics not even close. All I can say is Chia-Liang Liu you are sorely missed.... And the point is no amount of skill will help you dodge a bullet!
Best Kung Fu Movie Intro
This movie has one of the best introductions of any film I have ever seen. The introduction shows a woman demonstrating several weapons of Kung Fu while sinister music plays. By demonstrating, I mean killing several men with these deadly weapons of Kung Fu! This movie has great style and creativity throughout. The story line is actually good, but might take several viewings to really understand what is going on.
Like others have said, it is not really a serious martial arts film, but it is one of my favorites nonetheless. You cannot beat the sinister music/introduction sequence in the beginning of the movie. That is worth watching alone. If you are a fan of Chinese Super Ninja, you will also like this movie.
Like others have said, it is not really a serious martial arts film, but it is one of my favorites nonetheless. You cannot beat the sinister music/introduction sequence in the beginning of the movie. That is worth watching alone. If you are a fan of Chinese Super Ninja, you will also like this movie.
redressing the balance
The earlier comments give an unfair slating to what is an enjoyable film.The gaffes are obvious , (in such films as this the 1st class director Liu Chia Liang, was redefining the kung fu film , after the earlier swordplay flicks, and bruce lee's seminal movies, this film is set in late Ching dynasty China.) This is a film of rare quality , combining humour , a reasonable plot and some displays of great martial artistry, such as are no longer found in but a handful of films. The choreography is excellent, (only Sammo Hung at his best approaches Liu 's ability to film a fight with loving care for displaying technique)This film also benefits from the presence of the charismatic Fu Sheng and the Multi talented Hui Ying Hung. The special effects are cheap , but cheerful.(the previous reviewer seems to have missed that the purpose of all the bladed cloaks etc. was to show that tricks are no substitute for skill, skill no defence against bullets ... A classic of Kung Fu cinema
A good kungfu movie if you can get past some details...
This is a great kung fu movie once you get the opening done with. The storyline is fairly confusing in the beginning, but that passes with time. The fight scenes are neat to watch, but they get exponentially better as time goes on. The fight with Gordon Liu (36th Chamber) is good and the final fight WAS FANTASTIC! This isn't a movie to sit down and watch for the stimulation. The character development isn't as good as FIVE VENOMS, or SWORDSMAN II, but it's fair. The weapons fighting is just unbelievable in the last fight scene. All in all, if you are a fan of kung-fu movies, get around to checking this one out. The three-section-staff work is even better than in 36th Chamber.
Did you know
- TriviaChia-Liang Liu: [martial arts demonstration] Opening credits show a demonstration of martial arts against an empty backdrop.
- Alternate versionsThe 1987 UK video suffered extensive cuts of over 5 minutes and lost all footage of Japanese throwing stars and nunchaku used in the fight scenes.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Knockaround Guys (2001)
- How long is Legendary Weapons of China?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Shi ba ban wu yi
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 49m(109 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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