Posts Tagged ‘Taiwan’


War God

August 10th, 2011 | article by | 3 Comments »
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Original Title: Zhan Shen   a.k.a. The Big Calamity (Da Zai Nan)
Year: 1976   Company: Xinghua Pictures / Prince Pictures   Country: Taiwan   Runtime: 85′
Director: Chan Hung-Man   Writer: Lam Ching-Gaai   Cinematography: Lai Man-Sing, Lam Chi-Wing, Wong Shui-Cheung    Music: Wong Mau-Saan   Cast: Gu Ming-Lun, Tse Ling-Ling, Cindy Tang Hsin, Chan Yau-San   Choreography: Ho Ming-Hiu    Special Effects: Koichi Takano   Producer: Fu Ching-Wa

Poster for War God under its alternative Chinese title The Big Calamity

Pre-review note: English sources on the cast and crew of this film are practically non-existent, and the information above was gleaned from a combination of a meager HKMDB listing and a Chinese Wikipedia entry.  Accuracy is not guaranteed.

War God, alternatively known online under the unofficial titles Calamity and Guan Yu vs. the Aliens, was once among the rarest of the rare in Taiwanese fantasy, stuff the likes of which we Westerners could only ever dream of seeing in the flesh.  Like Poon Lui’s Devil Fighter and Yu Hon-Cheung’s Monster From the Sea, War God was until recently thought of as un-seeable, with only a handful of advertising images and contemporary newspaper articles arguing for its existence at all.

One can imagine my surprise, then, when a hard-subtitled rental VHS copy of War God found its way into torrent circulation, and the film once thought unobtainable practically fell into my lap!  The future is a wonderful place, my dear readers, a wonderful place indeed.

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King of Snake

September 4th, 2010 | article by | 1 Comment »
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film rating:
a.k.a. Daai Yi Wong, Daai Se Wong
(lit. Big Snake King)
company: ??
year: 1982
runtime: 88′
director: Chui Yuk-Lung
cast: Tarcy Su, Leung Sau-Geun,
Ng Fung, Danny Lee,
Paul Chang Chung, Chow Shui-Fong,
David Tong Wai, Unknown Taiwanese Actor (1)
writers: Yiu Hing-Hong
and Ng Man-Leung
special effects director: Chujio Shintaro
cinematographer: Liao Wan-Wen
Not available on home video

Once more into the breach, dear friends, once more.  Next week things will be different – honest! But every misguided quest must have an end, and the finale to my impromptu monster-palooza is a real snooze.

1982’s grammatically impaired King of Snake is perhaps best known for being purchased by Joseph Lai’s IFD Film and Arts and manipulated by Hong Kong schlock extraordinaire Godfrey Ho into the 1988 oddity Thunder of Gigantic Serpent. That film follows French super-soldier Ted Fast as he hunts down balding white villain Solomon while a girl’s giant pet snake runs amok. King of Snake doesn’t gain much from the exclusion of Ho’s material, and instead offers viewers twice the boring story stuff and half the absurd fun.

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Tsu Hong Wu

September 1st, 2010 | article by | 2 Comments »
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film rating:
a.k.a. Zhu Hongwu
company: Foo Hwa Cinema Co. Ltd.
year: 1971
runtime: 97′
director: Chui Dai-Gwan
cast: Peter Yang Kwan, Chu Jing,
Suen Yuet, Chiang Ming,
Cho Kin, Su Chen-Ping,
Ding Keung, Ng Ho
writer: Lin Yu-Yuan
special effects director: Koichi Takano
Not available on home video

I’ve been on a seemingly unstoppable giant monster kick here as of late, but after a quadruple-helping of Gamera and an ill-advised dip in the ever-more-disappointing pool of vintage Korean efforts I decided that it was time for at least something of a change of pace. On the plate for today is the 1971 Taiwanese historical fantasy Tsu Hong Wu, whose well-produced ‘Scope effects work would later be plundered for the likes of Sea God and Ghosts and The Fairy and the Devil. The title in this case refers to the Hongwu emperor Zhu Yuanzhang (the subtitles for my copy use the older Wade-Giles romanization Chu Yuan-chang), progenitor of the Ming Dynasty.

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The Iron Man

January 18th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a. Tie Han
company: Lee Ming Film Company
year: 1974
runtime: 86′
countries: Taiwan
director: Cheung Yat-Woo
cast: Jimmy Wang Yu, Lung Fei,
Cheung Lee-Man, Sit Hon,
Chow Chung-Lim, Han Chiang,
Yu Chung-Chiu, Tsai Hung
writer: Cheung Yat-Woo
action director: Leung Siu-Chung
cinematographer: Chen Yu-Pu
original music: Chow Leung
not on home video in the USA*

Plot: Chin (Wang Yu), whose family was killed and left hand cut off by brutal Japanese general Fang Woo (Lung Fei) during the occupation of China in World War II, travels to Japan to seek revenge.


The Iron Man was an odd film for action star and Wtf-Film favorite Jimmy Wang Yu, here looking to move beyond his popular one-armed personas (as seen in the Shaw Brothers One Armed Swordsman efforts and the independently produced One Armed Boxer) while retaining his popular underdog hero image.  The result was a compromise that offered Wang Yu’s character of surmountable disability while allowing him to remain bodily intact, more or less.  Whether or not The Iron Man was any sort of popular success is beyond me (Wang Yu would return to one-armed-dom with the inimitable Master of the Flying Guillotine just two years later), but that doesn’t much matter in retrospect.

What does matter is whether or not The Iron Man is worth watching, and the answer to that is a whole fistful of yes!

Things begin with a fine sepia toned flashback in which young Chin and his family are brutalized by a mean Japanese general after two family friends turn traitor and rat Chin’s father out as a member of the Chinese resistance.  General Fang Woo is none too pleased to find out about this, and takes to shooting, raping, and maiming his way through the family.  Once all is said and done only young Chin is left standing, a bloody stump in the place of his left hand.  The child survives and trains in the martial arts (a sequence that takes up all of two shots that play behind the opening credits, which amusingly list the star as Jimmy Wong Yu) then travels to Japan to give the baddies their just and appropriately violent deserves.


The basic plot for The Iron Man is a reversal of that of Knight Errant the year before, with Wang Yu taking over the place of the child wronged and out for revenge.  The one-handed element of the story acts as a springboard for Wang Yu’s noble revenge more than anything else, as he spends the rest of the film with a prosthetic replacement in a black glove.  It’s easy to forget he ever lost his hand at all (especially when the prosthesis unexpectedly moves!).  The plot point only arises again when the time inevitably comes for Wang Yu to reveal his identity to his nemesis Fang Woo.

Fang Woo himself is a cookie-cutter villain for those familiar with the Wang Yu universe – a back-stabbing and cruel Japanese man with a secret weapon (poison darts shot from a cigar holder in this case) and seemingly endless droves of minions at his disposal.  This is another in the long history of Chinese films in which a resentment of the Japanese is espoused and explicitly linked to the atrocities of World War II – it doesn’t take a huge stretch of the imagination to link the rape, murder, and dismemberment of the opening flashback to the horrors of Nanking.

What’s really interesting about The Iron Man, as far as post WWII Chinese-Japanese relations are concerned, is what it does with the concept.  Wang Yu’s tracking down of Fang Woo leads him to an unlikely romantic entanglement with a young Japanese woman (whom Fang Woo, naturally, demands to have as his own), an entanglement Wang Yu refuses to accept for much of the film (“I hate all Japanese!”).  But Wang Yu’s character grows as the film progresses, and comes to realize that not all of the Japanese were responsible for his personal ills.  The young woman with whom he involves himself could very well be seen as an embodiment of the peaceful Japanese society that emerged out of the ashes of the last world war, one far removed from the militant imperialism of the past generation.

This is far more thoughtfulness than I’m accustomed to in a low budget martial arts effort, but rest assured that The Iron Man knows that it’s an action picture first and foremost.  There’s no shortage of hand to hand combat here (none of the minions in these films seem allowed to own firearms), and its of a higher caliber than one generally expects from a lower rung Wang Yu effort.  Action director Leung Siu-Chung (The One-Armed Magic Nun) keeps the choreography smooth and professional even as those lovable old-school foley effects threaten to spoil the illusion.


While Cheung Yat-Woo (The Thunderbolt Fists) is credited as both writer and director, it’s obvious from the start that Wang Yu himself was in control of most aspects of the production.  As such, similarities between The Iron Man and Wang Yu’s other work are plentiful, including primary-colored expositional flashback bits just like those on display in the later Master of the Flying Guillotine.  Wang Yu took great care in his work, wisely realizing that he wasn’t just selling his films to the public, but himself as well.  Though he worked with any number of producers, writers, and directors in his prolific post-Shaw Brothers career he managed to maintain a consistent level of quality through it all.

A big part of that consistency lies with the actors Wang Yu worked with so frequently.  Lung Fei (Master of the Flying Guillotine, Savage Killers, Knight Errant) is on board, once again playing the villain.  Sit Hon (Master of the Flying Guillotine, Knight Errant) gets a bigger role than is the norm, playing a gambling-addicted brother who nearly ruins the life of Wang Yu’s love interest before taking a noble turn.  Tsai Hung (The One Armed Boxer, Knight Errant, Tsu Hong Wu) is present as well, here playing one of Wang Yu’s father’s traitorous friends.  Familiar faces are a big part of the appeal of these films for me, and reviewing a Wang Yu picture feels more like spending an afternoon with old friends than work.

Of course, a Wang Yu film wouldn’t be worthy of its namesake without the trademark ridiculousness the man is known for, and The Iron Man has plenty to spare.  The highlight has to be the battle between hero Chin and a gang of motorcyclists who appear out of nowhere to aid Fang Woo during the final confrontation.  Other notable moments include Chin’s knife-edge exposé of a cheating casino boss and the sneaky murder plot of Chin’s love interest’s blind sister.  There’s a raunchy edge to the proceedings as well.  It’s the first Wang Yu film I’ve seen that can list bare breasts (brief as their revelation may be) among its assets, though viewers will have to contend with some uncomfortable close-ups of Sit Hon’s sex-face to see them.

It’s a pity The Iron Man isn’t better known or more readily available, but that’s just the nature of the beast.  The Iron Man is out there, even if it takes a little work to track it down, and well worth the effort it may take to see it.  Highly recommended.

* Not that I can tell, at least.  This release of a film of the same title on Amazon.com seems to be for something else entirely, Young Hero of Shaolin II under the Iron Man title, though the Amazon details obviously originate with the Wang Yu film.  The only official home video release of the film anywhere that I’m aware of is from Hong Kong outfit Ocean Shores Video, which is long out of print but crops up on eBay from time to time.





The Merciful Buddha

January 16th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a. A Mi De Dao
company: Lin Hop Production Company
year: 1979
runtime: 92′
country: Taiwan
director: Tyrone Hsu Tien-Yung
cast: Chin Lung, Au-Yeung Ling-Lung,
Kao Yuen, Lung Tien-Hsiang,
Chang Chi-Ping, Wong Fei,
Chi Yuk-Sang
writer: Tyrone Hsu Tien-Yung
and Kuk Yun
cinematographer: Cheung Tak-Kon
original music: Wong Mau-Saan
not on home video in the USA

Plot: A lucky shape-shifting stone monkey escapes the village it brings good fortune to just before a major disaster destroys it.  It is captured in a bottle by two thieving practitioners of the dark arts, who use it to strike it rich.


The Merciful Buddha is just one out of the teaming multitude of odd low-budget Taiwanese period fantasies produced from the late 1970s onwards, and a particularly boring one at that (especially when compared to off-the-wall craziness like Thrilling Sword or War of the Wizards, both to be reviewed here shortly).  It’s not that the film doesn’t have weirdness to offer – there’s quite a bit of it, in fact, most of which will be revealed here in due course.  It’s just that said weirdness is too easily lost in the brick-dense melodrama that surrounds it.

The proceedings get off to a promising enough start, with an extraordinarily brief bit of kaiju-emulation.  The giant stone monkey overlooking a village decides that it’s had quite enough of this living-in-a-mountain business and escapes, briefly threatening to destroy a reasonably constructed period miniature.  Instead it shrinks to the size of a young chimpanzee (switching from a man-in-suit to, surprise surprise, a young chimpanzee) and lets an explosion of unknown origin do the work for him.  Either way, the miniature is left a fiery ruin, the giant monster fan in me satisfied, if only momentarily.

Aside from a reverse shot of the stone monkey taking its rightful place back atop a mountain at the end of the story, the rest of The Merciful Buddha is woefully monster free.  The focus is on a pair of thieves, who use the escaped stone monkey as their own special sort of get rich quick scheme.  They force the creature to shape shift into a black bear that, in turn, roams around town stealing everyone’s prized possessions.  The pair get richer and richer while those around them grow poorer and poorer – needless to say, something’s gotta give.

Eighteen years pass and a young fairy woman miraculously born just before the stone monkey escaped is on the hunt for her long lost mother, whom she hasn’t seen in the years since her village was destroyed.  Helping the young woman is a young man, raised by the two thieves after they, unbeknownst to him, killed his statesman parents.


From there the story is relatively predictable.  The young man discovers his adopted paretns’ thieving ways and sets out to make things right, stealing all their accumulated riches and dispersing them to the poor.  The two thieves soon turn on each other – one kills the other after he is caught trying to steal what little treasure is left behind.  The other is poetically slaughtered by a flock of sparrows in a bit of heavenly retribution (the man had previously prayed to Buddha, agreeing to a death by sparrow flock if he didn’t change his greedy ways).  The young fairy woman eventually finds her mother and ascends, along with her elderly father and newfound lover, to heaven.

The Merciful Buddha is more a period melodrama with fantasy trappings than an out-and-out fantasy picture, though its story is punctuated with typically bizarre elements of the genre (at least as it exists in mainland Asia).  The nature of the two thieves is revealed to the young man by, of all things, a horse with a human head that can see through time, and the end ascension shows the cast walking up to heaven on a rainbow.  The young fairy woman frequently exercises her fairy powers, most amusingly to convince a pair of hoodlums to slap themselves silly, and she is protected by an immortal who likes to exercise his own magical slapping powers.  It’s fun, to be sure, but not enough to keep the picture interesting as a whole.

Writer / director Tyrone Hsu Tien-Yung had seen reasonable success as a martial arts director for years before The Merciful Buddha went into production, and it’s a pity that the few hand-to-hand fights to be had here are so fleeting.  His handling of the drama is pretty dull all around – I doubt this was one of the high points of Tien-Yung’s (The Red Phoenix) career.  Other elements of the production are pretty standard.  Wong Mau-Saan provides the so-so score while an uncredited special effects crew does the best it can with the budget provided.

Though fun at times, The Merciful Buddha as a whole is average at best and dull at worst.  Given the relative difficulty to be had in tracking it down, genre enthusiasts are encouraged to spend their time hunting for more worthwile efforts.  Not recommended.




Knight Errant

January 11th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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postera.k.a. Ying Xiong Ben Se
company: First Films
year: 1973
runtime: 89′
country: Taiwan
director: Ting Shan-Hsi
cast: Jimmy Wang Yu, Yasuaki Kurata,
Lung Fei, Shan Mao, Got Siu-Bo,
Eddy Ko Hung, Ngai So, Tse Gam-Guk,
Sit Hon, Blacky Ko Sau-Leung,
Cheung Yee-Kwai, Ng Tung-Kiu
writer: Ting Shan-Hsi
cinematographer: Chi Bun Lin
original music: Fu Liang Chou
disc company: Pathfinder Pictures
release date: May 3, 2005
retail price: $14.98
disc details: Region 1 / NTSC / single layer
video: interlaced / 2.35:1 / anamorphic
audio: Dolby Digital 2.0 (English, Mandarin)
subtitles: English
order this film from Amazon.com

Plot: Taxi driver Lin Huo-Shan (Jimmy Wang Yu) must defend his family after the three sons of a dead captain in the former Japanese Imperial Army arrive in Taiwan with revenge on their minds.

Everything I needed to know about this low budget brawler I learned from its German theatrical trailer.  Firstly, the ever inventive German film distributors opted to re-title the picture Wang Yu – Der Karatebomber (I’m not sure what the hell karatebombs are, but put them in the title of a movie and I’m there).  Secondly, the trailer prominently features hand to hand combat between star Jimmy Wang Yu and a short old Japanese woman, combat that appears to culminate with Wang Yu running the woman over with a car.

A film that promises both karatebombs and wanton vehicular violence against elderly people?  Needless to say this reviewer had to see it.

Out on domestic DVD from Pathfinder Pictures (stateside distributors of Wang Yu’s cult hit Master of the Flying Guillotine), the film’s English release title of Knight Errant isn’t nearly so exciting, but no matter.  This little exploitationer still packs plenty of well choreographed punch.  The promised battle between Wang Yu and an elderly Japanese woman is here to be relished and is, if anything, even more amusingly absurd than the trailer for the film might indicate, but more on that later.

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From a narrative standpoint, Knight Errant is pretty standard genre fare, though its contemporary setting is a bit unusual for the time (Bruce Lee’s The Big Boss and Enter the Dragon went a long way towards popularizing non-period action).  The script by frequent Wang Yu collaborator and director Tsing Shan-Hsi (Fast Fists, The Executioner) begins with a revenge plot similar to that of the later Master of the Flying Guillotine, showing a trio of brothers wronged training to assassinate their sworn enemy, Lin Ming Chung (Ngai So).  During the war Ming Chung had helped a Japanese prisoner to escape, leading to the humiliation and eventual suicide of the three brothers’ father and mother.  Training the brothers is the nameless Lady with the Iron Fist, a brutal elderly Japanese woman whose connection to the family is unclear.

Balancing the tables on the other side is Taiwanese cabbie Lin Huo-Shan (Wang Yu), the well meaning street fighting son of Lin Ming Chung.  Huo-Shan’s sister Yueh Feng is blind and in need of a corrective operation, but the young man’s preponderance for street brawls (noble though they may be) is sucking the family’s savings dry.  Complicating matters is the arrival of the three brothers in town.  They beat Huo-Shan’s father and cousin senseless, leaving Huo-Shan no option but to take the law into his own hands and put an end to both the trio and their master.

Knight Errant‘s dramatics are of the sort parodied far and wide in the Western world.  Performances are full of hand gestures and intense facial expressions while the family dynamic at the center of the story is calculated to no so much tug as yank at the heart strings of the audience.  The lines between good and bad are clearly drawn, and any potentially questionable action on the part of the good guys (like running an old woman down with a car, for example) is rendered acceptable simply by virtue of their presumed goodness.

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007 008

Common for the time, the villains of Knight Errant are Japanese, a reflection of tension between that country and the Chinese (be they in Taiwan, Hong Kong, or the mainland) resulting from the occupation and atrocities of the last World War.  Interestingly, the three brothers here are not so much beastly (the fanged Okinawan of The One Armed Boxer) or conniving (the knife-wielding Win Without a Knife Yakuma of Master of the Flying Guillotine) as they are completely and utterly incompetent.  The bulk of their training consists of repeated humiliation at the hands of the Lady with the Iron Fist, and their assassination mission in Taiwan goes spectacularly awry.  The Lin family escapes their efforts relatively unscathed, with Huo-Shan’s quadruple homicide passed off by the authorities as self defense.  Little sister Yueh Feng even gets her eye operation!

Of course Knight Errant‘s drama is secondary to its action set pieces, which are every bit as plentiful as one can hope for.  The film certainly establishes Huo-Shan’s reputation as a street fighter, engaging him in half a dozen epic brawls before the bad guys even arrive.  Combat with the three brothers is surprisingly limited in comparison, totalling only two (albeit lengthy) sequences – both taking place in a lumber mill.  For sheer absurdity Huo-Shan’s impromptu car attack on the Lady with the Iron Fist takes the prize.  The old woman proves startlingly resilient, surviving being run over not one but three times, and goes so far as to hop into Huo-Shan’s trunk so that she can leap out later and fight him again!

Knight Errant offers up a host of faces that will be familiar to those who have seen other Wang Yu films.  Two of the three brothers are played by Lung Fei (perhaps best known stateside for playing the villainous Lu Ting Chu in Savage Killers, which was later re-edited into Kung Pow: Enter the Fist and his character renamed Master “Betty” Pain) and Shan Mao (Taek Won Do fighter Chin Chi Yung in The One Armed Boxer).  The other is played by Yasuaki Kurata, a rising martial arts star in his own right.  Even Sit Hon (the tournament announcer in Master of the Flying Guillotine) makes an appearance, here playing a would-be thief put in his place by Huo-Shan early on.  Lady with the Iron Fist is herbalist, martial artist, and sometimes actor Tse Gam-Guk, who would star in the hilariously named Kung Fu Mama the same year.

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The 2005 DVD from Pathfinder Pictures is generally excellent, especially after their two so-so (and never the less recommended) handlings of the much more popular Master of the Flying Guillotine.  The transfer is of an international print with English titles and is presented in 16:9 enhanced 2.35:1.  The image suffers a bit from its interlacing, but still presents with reasonable color, contrast, and detail.  The only real complaint to be had is with the unrestored image, which shows varying degrees of damage (none of which particularly bothered this reviewer) throughout.  Audio is offered up in two dubs (Mandarin or English) in 2.0 Dolby Digital stereo.  Both sound appropriately rough, replicating the low budget sound design of the production just fine.  Optional English subtitles are provided for the feature.

The disc sports a healthy little bunch of supplements, starting with a commentary track by Wade Major and Tim Cogshell of Boxoffice Magazine.  Next up is a brief interview (11′) with star Jimmy Wang Yu that appears to have been prepared for a Japanese release of the title.  A still image gallery, some text biographies / filmographies, and a faded English language theatrical trailer round out the disc.

I’m a long-time Jimmy Wang Yu fan, so it should come as no surprise that Knight Errant gets my approval.  The Pathfinder Pictures release is well produced and reasonably priced, making it an easy recommendation for those interested in the picture.  See it!

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Sea God and Ghosts

July 6th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a LONG WANG SAN TAI ZI
?? [1977] 87′
drector: Sing Yan Gam / Fu-wen Chung
cast: Chia Ling, Hsing Hsi,
cast: Chang Chi-ping, Hsi Wei Chen

Here’s something you don’t see every day – a Taiwanese martial arts and giant monster fantasy from the late 70′s, made in much the same vein as Poon Lui’s earlier and super-obscure YOUNG FLYING HERO and DEVIL FIGHTER.  The Hong Kong Movie Database suggests that the monster footage is recycled from the earlier fantasy effort TSU HONG WU from 1971, a fact I have no reason to dispute, and much of that same footage appears to have been culled for the later [and somewhat less obscure] FAIRY AND THE DEVIL as well.

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