An exotic and legendary battle between the forces of good and evil comes to life when the celebrated disciples of the Shaolin Temple fight against the evil followers of China's Manchu rulers... Read allAn exotic and legendary battle between the forces of good and evil comes to life when the celebrated disciples of the Shaolin Temple fight against the evil followers of China's Manchu rulers.An exotic and legendary battle between the forces of good and evil comes to life when the celebrated disciples of the Shaolin Temple fight against the evil followers of China's Manchu rulers.
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the fires of hell
It's not that there isn't humor here; but it is a purely human humor, as with the aged Buddhist priest at the beginning who somehow manages a quick feel of the nubile young prostitute while hiding in a bundle of straw. But this is just as humans are, not even Buddhist priests can be saints all the time.
When irony is at last introduced into the film, it is the nastiest possible, emanating from the 'abbot' of Red Lotus Temple, who is a study in pure nihilism such as has never been recorded on film before. He is the very incarnation of Milton's Satan from "Paradise Lost": "Better to rule in Hell than serve in heaven!" And if he can't get to Satan's hell soon enough, he'll turn the world around him into a living hell he can rule.
That's the motif underscoring the brutal violence of much of the imagery here: It's not that the Abbot just wants to kill people; he wants them to despair, to feel utterly hopeless, to accept his nihilism as all-encompassing reality. Thus there's a definite sense pervading the Red Temple scenes that there just might not be any other reality outside of the Temple itself - it has become all there is to the universe, and the Abbot, claiming mastery of infinite power, is in charge.
Of course, fortunately, the film doesn't end there. Though there are losses, the human will to be just ordinarily human at last prevails. (If you want to know how, see the film!) Yet there is no doubt that, in viewing this film, we visit hell. Hopefully, we do not witness our own afterlives; but we certainly feel chastened by the experience - and somehow better for it over all.
Unique martial arts flick from Ringo Lam
Another 'Fong Sai Yuk' period period piece whereas most of the action takes place in the "Red Lotus Temple" similar to tombs the Indiana Jones does his adventures in except that the person who lives in this one pretty much may also be the one who build and designed it. Anyways, cult martial art figure baddie has main objective was to capture and destroy all the Shaolin Temples before making their pupils/ students to work as slaves for the "Red Lotus Temple" showcasing folk lore hero Fong Sai-yuk at beginning stages attempting to run away from being captured along with his Shaolin teacher but are eventually captured. Wires was used for the fights at the early stages but not so much as the film progresses.
Excellent mix of 90's style wire-fu and heavy duty violence
The story is very simple, Fong and his Shaolin brothers are captured by a crazed maniac general and imprisoned in the Red Lotus temple which seems to be more of a torture chamber then a temple. The General has a similarity to Kurtz in Apocalypse Now as he spouts warped philosophy and makes frightening paintings with human blood.
The production is very impressive and the setting is bleak. Blood is everywhere. The action is very well done and mostly coherent unlike many HK action scenes from the time. Sometimes the movie veers into absurdity or the effects are cheesy but it's never bad enough to ruin the film.
Find this one, it's one of the best HK kung fu films from the early nineties. Just remember it's not child friendly.
Did you know
- TriviaNot related to the previous two Fong Sai-Yuk movies with Jet Li. Even if this was released only a year later and has some of the same style of comedy and martial arts action.
- Quotes
Elder Kung: I was once an illustrious and celebrated general. Always loyal to my emperor. One day I discovered a lot of white hair, and I knew that all men must die. Even the rich and famous endure the same fate. And so the clever know we better have fun. I aim to go all out. Even if inhumane, I will push everything to the limit. And so I was reassigned to Red Lotus Temple. Here, I am the law! Beyond law! Beyond the gods! Beyond even the emperor himself! Here, I am higher than god! Hahahahahahaha!
- ConnectionsRemake of Temple of the Red Lotus (1965)
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- Destruction of the Red Lotus Temple
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