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
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Featured reviews
Tsui Hark's Energetic Action Fantasy
Hark's action fantasy 'Xin Shu Shan Jian Ke' is a whole lot of fun. Needless to say one can expect lots of extravagant martial arts action sequences which are well choreographed (but some of them are so long that they tend to drag a little). The movie is loaded with special effects and even though they don't look as refined as movies of today, they're still fun to watch. The sets don't look particularly authentic but they hold a certain appeal and I like the way they appeared. The story isn't told in the traditional fashion and at some points question marks will appear in the mind but there's always something happening to keep the viewer engaged. Yuen Biao and Sammo Hung are simply great as they infuse humour and energy into their roles. Energetic, funny, bizarre, wacky, magical...these are just a few words that describe Tsui Hark's 'Xin Shu Shan Jian Ke'. Forget the abysmal 2003 remake. This is where the real fun is.
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studio to do a boldest project, his crew were sent to Japan to learn Japanese's special effects, whereof he found it outdated, thus the studio managed to contract foreign VfX's experts from America to aid him in this picture which took a year to be finish.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.
The films which finally woke up the West
If you are a fan of Hong Kong action films and you haven't seen this i would suggest you track a copy down right now.
As an opening paragraph it sums up the importance of this landmark title. Conceived by its' makers as a production to rival Western films for technical (behind the camera) as well as beating them technically in front as well.
Although it fails to rival the level of sophistication with its' effects (due to bane of all Hong Kong films, its' limited budget)to match those of Hollywood films of its' time is irrelevant, it looks and feels so Far Eastern as well as using cutting edge (for 1982)it is simply unique.
The story is set in mythical times in China, where constant wars threaten to consume everyone, soldier or otherwise. One such soldier (ably played by Yuen Biao) manages to alienate himself from his commanders and ends up getting lost in the mystical region of Zu, fabled for its' magic mountain.
He becomes embroiled in a quest to find a pair of magical swords to kill a blood demon which threatens the whole of humanity. The blood demon draws its' power from pain and suffering and there is enough in the world to allow it to destroy all mankind.
The film contains so much energy, unparallelled visual flair and a cast which has the skill and experience to make it all work. The directors' vision and imagination are easy to see and appreciate, if you take the time to look. It is too easy to watch the action and miss the subtleties. It is a film which is difficult to describe, but unforgettable once watched.
As an opening paragraph it sums up the importance of this landmark title. Conceived by its' makers as a production to rival Western films for technical (behind the camera) as well as beating them technically in front as well.
Although it fails to rival the level of sophistication with its' effects (due to bane of all Hong Kong films, its' limited budget)to match those of Hollywood films of its' time is irrelevant, it looks and feels so Far Eastern as well as using cutting edge (for 1982)it is simply unique.
The story is set in mythical times in China, where constant wars threaten to consume everyone, soldier or otherwise. One such soldier (ably played by Yuen Biao) manages to alienate himself from his commanders and ends up getting lost in the mystical region of Zu, fabled for its' magic mountain.
He becomes embroiled in a quest to find a pair of magical swords to kill a blood demon which threatens the whole of humanity. The blood demon draws its' power from pain and suffering and there is enough in the world to allow it to destroy all mankind.
The film contains so much energy, unparallelled visual flair and a cast which has the skill and experience to make it all work. The directors' vision and imagination are easy to see and appreciate, if you take the time to look. It is too easy to watch the action and miss the subtleties. It is a film which is difficult to describe, but unforgettable once watched.
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.)
Kooky McNutty
I've got to say, this movie delivered exactly what I thought it would when I bought it. And I bought it simply on the strength of the box and how it said something really good about Tsui Hark. Ever since I have unfailingly watched any Tsui Hark movie that has come across my path. I love this movie. It's goofy in the extreme and at many points simply doesn't make sense. Maybe it's because I've been brainwashed by too many episodes of Mystery Science Theater 3000, but I love cheesy movies. The fight scenes are excellent, the scenery is superb and the story is spellbinding, (there I think I've but exhausted my list of critic cliché adjectives). It's especially good to watch if you're an enhancement smoker.
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)
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- Warriors from the Magic Mountain
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