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Peacock King

Original title: Hung cheuk wong ji
  • 1988
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
486
YOUR RATING
Eddy Ko, Chia-Hui Liu, and Biao Yuen in Peacock King (1988)
ActionAdventureFantasyHorror

Two magically powerful monks are sent on a quest to fight the King of Hell.Two magically powerful monks are sent on a quest to fight the King of Hell.Two magically powerful monks are sent on a quest to fight the King of Hell.

  • Directors
    • Ngai Choi Lam
    • Biao Yuen
  • Writers
    • Izô Hashimoto
    • Heung Sang Kong
    • Makoto Ogino
  • Stars
    • Biao Yuen
    • Hiroshi Mikami
    • Narumi Yasuda
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    486
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Ngai Choi Lam
      • Biao Yuen
    • Writers
      • Izô Hashimoto
      • Heung Sang Kong
      • Makoto Ogino
    • Stars
      • Biao Yuen
      • Hiroshi Mikami
      • Narumi Yasuda
    • 12User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos61

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    Top cast24

    Edit
    Biao Yuen
    Biao Yuen
    • Kôngquè
    Hiroshi Mikami
    Hiroshi Mikami
    • Kujaku
    Narumi Yasuda
    • Saeko Kazama
    Gloria Yip
    Gloria Yip
    • Ashura
    Siu-Fung Wong
    Siu-Fung Wong
    • Raga
    • (as Siu-fung Wong)
    Ken Ogata
    Ken Ogata
    • Jikû Ajari
    Eddy Ko
    Eddy Ko
    • Jigume
    Chia-Hui Liu
    Chia-Hui Liu
    • Kubira
    Tonpei Hidari
    • Satô
    Ken Boyle
    • Archeologist…
    Hong Li
    • Kaimashôgejin
    Takatoshi Takeda
    • Cop
    Hirokazu Yamaguchi
    • Cop
    Jun-Chiu Chiu
    • Taxi Driver
    Kuo Hua Chang
    Kuo Hua Chang
    • Kubira's Soldier
    Yiu-Sing Cheung
    • Kubira's Soldier
    Yamson Domingo
    • Kubira's Soldier
    Siu Tak-Foo
    Siu Tak-Foo
    • Kubira's Soldier
    • (as Foo Siu)
    • Directors
      • Ngai Choi Lam
      • Biao Yuen
    • Writers
      • Izô Hashimoto
      • Heung Sang Kong
      • Makoto Ogino
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    6.1486
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    Featured reviews

    4paul_m_haakonsen

    Watchable, but not a great movie...

    I sat down here in 2021 to watch the 1988 movie "The Peacock King" (aka "Hung cheuk wong ji") without ever having heard about the movie, much less knowing about its existence. But a chance presented itself for me to watch it, so of course I took the opportunity, especially with this being a Hong Kong movie.

    Plus, the movie also had Biao Yuen on the cast list, so I thought that I would at least be sitting down to watch something adequately entertaining.

    Turns out that "The Peacock King" wasn't particularly entertaining. Sure, it was watchable, but it was hardly an alluring movie, nor was it a particularly enjoyable movie.

    The movie faltered with a less than mediocre storyline and having characters that were particularly bland - if not downright pointless at times. So it was hard to submerge myself fully into the story and enjoy it.

    It should be said that the pacing of the movie was fair enough, but the storyline just didn't really bring enough contents to the table to make it full-out appealing and interesting.

    If enjoy Hong Kong movie, then "The Peacock King" is not the best that the Hong Kong cinema has to offer. And taking the movie's age into consideration, then there are far more enjoyable movies from the late 1980s available.

    My rating of "The Peacock King" lands on a less than mediocre four out of ten stars.
    3sarastro7

    Disappointing

    If you watch this movie to get some kung fu action out of Yuen Biao, you'll be pretty disappointed. Except for a couple of evasive flips and spins here and there, the is only one fight sequence in this movie, and it comes about an hour into it. This is a supernatural tale, neither funny nor scary, but with lots of pretty bad special effects.

    The story is unclear and messy; yet another example of the fact that Hong Kong commercial cinema has never discovered the importance of a clear plot. Action, helpless women and funny effects seem to be all they think the audience wants.

    Also, an already weak story is completely destroyed by the horrid English subtitles. Why can't they get someone who actually knows the language to at least rephrase the subtitles into something that makes sense? My theory is that the English subtitles are not for Western audiences at all, but for those Asians who happen not to speak Mandarin or Cantonese or any of the other five Asian languages this DVD was subtitled in.

    Anyway, a main reason to watch this movie is Gloria Yip, perhaps the cutest Asian actress of all time. But she hardly has any lines here, nor much of anything to do - you should catch her in Flying Dagger (1993) instead, or Saviour of the Soul (1992).

    All in all, this movie really hasn't got a lot going for it. Amazingly, it spawned a sequel, Saga of the Phoenix, where the entire cast returned. I haven't seen it yet, and, truthfully, I may not bother, because it looks like it's more of exactly the same.

    Peacock King is yet another movie in which Yuen Biao is pretty much wasted. Why has he done so many bad movies? Was it just bad luck that none of them were hits, or does he actually like this kind of thing?

    My rating: 3 out of 10.
    7OllieSuave-007

    A rather fun action fantasy from Hong Kong and Japan.

    This is a rather fun little action fantasy film from Hong Kong and Japan, about two monk brothers, Kôngquè (Biao Yuen) and Kujaku (Hiroshi Mikami), separated at birth and later reunited to fight the King of Hell.

    The pacing is not really fast, but there are some engaging and entertaining scenes where Kongque and Kujaku try to blend in the modern days in Hong Kong and fight off the evil witch Raga (Siu-Fung Wong) and save their friend, Ashura (Gloria Yip). Ashura is unwittingly the apprentice of Raga and is the daughter of the King of Hell.

    There are plenty of mythical elements and magical action, though the special effects were pretty average to me. A nice good vs. evil story line nonetheless, and some decent martial arts action.

    Grade B-
    5gridoon

    Incomprehensible story, some impressive special effects

    Yuen Biao is a great, underrated martial artist, and personally I prefer to see him fighting against human opponents with his body (which he does ONLY ONCE, after a full hour, in this film) rather than weird stop-motion animated creatures with supernatural fireballs (which he does a lot more often here). The ambitious, large-scale special effects and sets of "The Peacock King" are worth seeing (even if they show their age sometimes, and they're not as good as those of the same director's "Seventh Curse"), and when the Hell King himself appears at the end, he looks pretty impressive. But the story, which has Biao as a sort of adventurer-exorcist-demon hunter who tries to prevent the end of the world with the help of his equally skilled brother, is just incomprehensible claptrap. (**)
    8ebiros2

    Best collaboration between HK and Japanese cinema

    This was one movie where acting of Hong Kong actors and Japanese actors interaction went extremely smooth. Usually in HK movie made in Japan have HK actor doing lion share of the dialog, and Japanese actors are relegated to small roles where they speak only few simple Japanese words. Not this movie. It's amazing that the actors just went playing their role as if it was done in their native language, and somehow it all looked natural.

    When you look at this movie its really difficult to tell who's the Japanese actor and who's from Hong Kong. Genetically, all Asians must be pretty close to one another.

    In Cantonese version Yuen Bao is the main character, but in the Japanese version Hiroshi Mikami is the main character. They wrote the script very cleverly that the two characters are interchangeable.

    Based on a comic by Makoto Ogino, Peacock King, or Kujyaku Oo is a good translation of the original comic into a movie. The original comic's ordinary person, or situation suddenly morphing into a demonic entity is also translated well into this movie.

    I liked Narumi Yasuda's acting as a department worker suddenly finding herself embroiled in the world of Vajirayana Buddhism vs demons of the underworld.

    World looked really peaceful and healthy in Japan around the time this movie was made. It truly was the best of times.

    Really well made movie of its kind. It's a treat to watch.

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    Related interests

    Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
    Action
    Still frame
    Adventure
    Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
    Fantasy
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Alternate versions
      The film's Japanese theatrical release (also seen on VHS and laserdisc) features over 12 minutes of additional and extended scenes missing from the Hong Kong cut, primarily focused on Hiroshi Mikami's Kujaku and Narumi Yasuda's Saeko Kazama. Some of these scenes would even be filmed with sync sound Japanese, unlike the standard-at-the-time "dubbed from start to finish" Cantonese of the HK cut.
    • Connections
      Followed by Saga of the Phoenix (1989)

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    FAQ11

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 10, 1988 (Japan)
    • Countries of origin
      • Hong Kong
      • Japan
    • Languages
      • Japanese
      • Cantonese
    • Also known as
      • Dioses contra demonios
    • Production companies
      • Golden Harvest Company
      • Toho-Towa
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 26m(86 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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