IMDb RATING
6.6/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
A Chinese soldier in an ancient civil war flees the battlefield and gets caught up in a fantastical quest to save the world from evil.A Chinese soldier in an ancient civil war flees the battlefield and gets caught up in a fantastical quest to save the world from evil.A Chinese soldier in an ancient civil war flees the battlefield and gets caught up in a fantastical quest to save the world from evil.
- Awards
- 5 nominations total
Fung Hak-On
- Evil Disciple
- (as Hark-On Fung)
Kuang-Li Hsia
- Chi Wu-Shuang
- (as Kwan-Li Shen)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
6.63.2K
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
This is a freaky bit of fun
This film illustrates the major difference between Western and Eastern fantasy films. A western version of this same film would attempt for some level of realism, some element of grittiness and angst. This film ignores realism entirely. Hey, its a fantasy already! Swordsman and monks float and dive in aerial battle, an old man's eyebrows are deadly weapons, whole armies of guys in brightly colored uniforms run about attacking each other for very poorly explained reasons, and blue eyed jawa clones swoop about the inside of evil temples. Although the ending is almost unintelligible, the first hour of the film is just one cool scene after another. The editing of this film would certainly make an epileptic have a seizure, but after five minutes you stop caring about the plot and dialogue and just start enjoying the wacky surreal action. I wish I could see this one on the big screen.
Wacked-out, rainbow-hued fun from Hong Kong
This eye-popping, special-effects-laden Asian fantasy is a real feast for the eyes. It stars Yuen Biao as a soldier who, fed up with the constant and seemingly pointless civil war, deserts his platoon only to find himself caught in another battle. He escapes the battle by falling off a cliff, but descends unharmed into a cave, where he is rescued from an attack by glow-eyed flying demons by a fantastic warrior with a magical flying sword. He goes under the tutelage of the warrior, who is reluctant to take on a new pupil. What follows, words cannot aptly describe. Suffice it to say, it's an absolutely frenzied mix of action, special effects and bizarre, magical occurrences. The action is non-stop and the editing is laser-paced. I was absolutely exhausted by the end of the film. The cast is likewise first-rate. I was impressed especially by Sammo Hung in a dual role: as Yuen Biao's soldier buddy, and as Long Brows, the ancient priest who holds the Blood Monster at bay using his "sky mirror" and magical extending beard and eyebrows...You'd have to see it to understand. Suffice to say that there's many moments in this film that will have you thinking, "I have no idea what's going on, but it sure *looks* cool." Trust me, you won't be able to tear your eyes from the screen.
Colorful, energetic Hong Kong action fantasy from director Tsui Hark
Set during a feudal period with many warring clans, Yuen Biao stars as a young warrior who deserts his army and , after falling off of a cliff, finds himself in a magical land in the middle of its own war. The forces of Good, lead by the ancient sorcerer White Brows (Sammo Hung), are at odds with the forces of Evil, lead by the Blood Demon (Corey Yuen). Biao teams up with a group of heroic warriors, including Adam Cheng and Brigitte Lin, to help defeat the evil menace.
Filled with bizarre characters (White Brows fights with his extendable eyebrows!) and dazzling, if primitive, special effects, this film is a non-stop feast for the eyes. It maintains a light tone for the most part, and the choreography, which utilizes a lot of "wire-fu", is spectacular. It has a low budget (for American audiences, anyway) can-do feel, and a lot of the effects are done with in-camera trickery that is quite clever.
The script is convoluted, the way a lot of kung-fu epics are, and there are times when you aren't quite sure who is who and what is what. Some of this I blame on the DVD I watched, a poor quality edition from a Chinese distributor, with a shoddy English-dubbed audio track. If someone were to put this out on a re-mastered Blu Ray, I would buy it in a second. Highly recommended for martial arts fans, and fans of weird world cinema.
Filled with bizarre characters (White Brows fights with his extendable eyebrows!) and dazzling, if primitive, special effects, this film is a non-stop feast for the eyes. It maintains a light tone for the most part, and the choreography, which utilizes a lot of "wire-fu", is spectacular. It has a low budget (for American audiences, anyway) can-do feel, and a lot of the effects are done with in-camera trickery that is quite clever.
The script is convoluted, the way a lot of kung-fu epics are, and there are times when you aren't quite sure who is who and what is what. Some of this I blame on the DVD I watched, a poor quality edition from a Chinese distributor, with a shoddy English-dubbed audio track. If someone were to put this out on a re-mastered Blu Ray, I would buy it in a second. Highly recommended for martial arts fans, and fans of weird world cinema.
Breathtaking Visual, the story is too much muddled, according some hearsays this one was the forerunner of the Big Trouble in Little China!!!
The young director Hark Tsui grew up dreaming to be a filmmaker since tender age, then he went to Texas to study, returning aftermaths at Hong Kong making several independent short movies, soon he was invited by major Hong Kong's studio to do a boldest project, his crew were sent to Japan to learn Japanese's special effects, whereof he found it outdated, thus the studio managed to contract foreign VfX's experts from America to aid him in this picture which took a year to be finish.
Zu Warriors from the Magic Mountain had a huge budge, therefore some famous Chinese actors were contracted for briefly period of time for a day, meanwhile the main newest fixed cast had to acting full time often lead to exhaustion due longest day-journey, the plot is based in Chinese folklore over a younger Chinese warrior that gets in touch with the several Chinese Prince, Princess, of heaven and the underground, to keep the peace they must help those semi-gods to uphold the harmony on the surface, this movie has a breathtaking multi-colors visual and special effects added by outstanding lightning-fast cuts between the takes, mostly of them the viewers stay puzzled about synchronicity of the long sequences.
Otherwise the plot is too much confused, letting the audience lost over so fast shot built in with too much talking disallowing a proper insight over the storyline, aside Hark Tsui be a genius he didn't get a correct assembly due each take didn't match with next, then the picture stayed mind-blogging most of time, letting the audience trying figures out over such muddled story, nothing makes sense at all.
According some hearsays this one was the forerunner of the upcoming "Big Trouble in Little China" indeed there are many commonality between them, whence the American feature was intelligible!!
Thanks for reading.
Resume:
First watch: 2023 / Source: DVD / How many: 1 / Rating: 7.
Zu Warriors from the Magic Mountain had a huge budge, therefore some famous Chinese actors were contracted for briefly period of time for a day, meanwhile the main newest fixed cast had to acting full time often lead to exhaustion due longest day-journey, the plot is based in Chinese folklore over a younger Chinese warrior that gets in touch with the several Chinese Prince, Princess, of heaven and the underground, to keep the peace they must help those semi-gods to uphold the harmony on the surface, this movie has a breathtaking multi-colors visual and special effects added by outstanding lightning-fast cuts between the takes, mostly of them the viewers stay puzzled about synchronicity of the long sequences.
Otherwise the plot is too much confused, letting the audience lost over so fast shot built in with too much talking disallowing a proper insight over the storyline, aside Hark Tsui be a genius he didn't get a correct assembly due each take didn't match with next, then the picture stayed mind-blogging most of time, letting the audience trying figures out over such muddled story, nothing makes sense at all.
According some hearsays this one was the forerunner of the upcoming "Big Trouble in Little China" indeed there are many commonality between them, whence the American feature was intelligible!!
Thanks for reading.
Resume:
First watch: 2023 / Source: DVD / How many: 1 / Rating: 7.
Certainly one of the most entertaining martial arts pictures.
"Zu Warriors" certainly pushed wuxia to its limits; it has such a relentless air of enthusiasm, especially given its limited budget, that its incredibly easy to dismiss any faults it does have just because of its overwhelmingly extravagant nature. Its glorious, vivid production design and intentionally camp attitude makes it very difficult not to be totally drawn into its colourful images while completely forgetting the film has a plot.
Tsui Hark has included just about everything in this one. The special effects may not be up to much but that is a sideline; the wonderful swordplay starts almost immediately and the films rarely lets up as it jumps from one operatic martial art display to another, helped by an impeccable cast featuring iconic stars such as Sammo Hung and Brigitte Lin.
Unfortuantly it still took some work before films of this sort were appreciated in the west. Despite the efforts of John Carpenter, it still took over a decade and Crouching Tiger to truly bring this wonderful form of entertainment to the masses. There's only so much praise you can give a film before saying it has to be seen to be appreciated fully. This is certainly a landmark in wuxia and an essential showpiece of Hong Kong action at its finest. (A testament to this is the fact the DVD has a Bey Logan commentary.)
Tsui Hark has included just about everything in this one. The special effects may not be up to much but that is a sideline; the wonderful swordplay starts almost immediately and the films rarely lets up as it jumps from one operatic martial art display to another, helped by an impeccable cast featuring iconic stars such as Sammo Hung and Brigitte Lin.
Unfortuantly it still took some work before films of this sort were appreciated in the west. Despite the efforts of John Carpenter, it still took over a decade and Crouching Tiger to truly bring this wonderful form of entertainment to the masses. There's only so much praise you can give a film before saying it has to be seen to be appreciated fully. This is certainly a landmark in wuxia and an essential showpiece of Hong Kong action at its finest. (A testament to this is the fact the DVD has a Bey Logan commentary.)
Did you know
- TriviaAmerican filmmaker John Carpenter has stated that Zu: Warriors from the Magic Mountain (1983) was an influence on his 1986 film Big Trouble in Little China (1986).
- GoofsDuring many of the actors stunt scenes or where there are arrows flying around, you can spot the cables used by the sfx team.
- Alternate versionsThe international English language version, Zu Time Warriors, includes a 25-min. wraparound filmed in Canada with Yuen Biao as a modern day fencing champ transported via his dreams while in a coma to the Oriental fantasy setting of the film and awakening from the coma at the end. The Chinese version was released prior to this filming despite director's wishes.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Best of the Martial Arts Films (1990)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Warriors from the Magic Mountain
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content








