At this moment, when I am reviewing this film, it has been rated by six people. Yeah, I'm seventh. So funny. It's like wandering into a clearing on which no man has stepped. Well, or at least not more than six pairs of legs for the entire existence of the glade. Given that I can't see who the six are, I think they're probably Siu Hung Cham, Chien Keng Chen, Alai Chui Chung San and the rest of Chunggi and Changi. Who else can watch this movie? Only the one who starred in it. And me. Why am I writing a review of such a little-known creation? Movies are like people, they want to be visited and interested.
The film in Chinese and Taiwanese is beautiful. The plot in brief: “psh” “psh”, “psh”, “we underestimated him, he is a good fighter”, “psh” “psh” “psh”, “psh”, the end. Actors play in such a way that rolls a stinging tear: everyone wants to give an Oscar. The script is excellent. You can also learn a lot about Chinese communication. For example, in order for your interlocutor to hear you better or understand you faster, you need to poke your index finger in his direction, apparently sending energy straight into his ear. In the movie, everyone points their fingers at each other. Gesticulation is very rich. Maybe in Chinese acting universities and pass the entrance exam: came up, pointed a finger at the admissions office with the words: “the crow once Mao sent a bag of rice...” and all, received a certificate for filming in Chinese films of the 70s.
Seriously, the script was written by a child in an adult’s body. Some scenes do not make sense at all, and the only explanation is that pieces of film have disappeared from old age, because there is no logical explanation for these scenes. There's a lot of fighting there. That's too much. The last 30 minutes of the movie, the fight never stops for a minute. Half an hour of continuous kung fu. The kung fu you're really tired of.
Anyway, a Chinese fighter. The acting game is appropriate, realism is appropriate, the script, the music, in general the logic of what is happening too. Of the recognizable people here is only Bolo Yong, who was then still Jan Si. He's young and has a mustache. Plays the main villain, but at the behest of an unintelligent screenwriter receives toumaks from the main character by the 20th minute of the film, from which the intrigue of their confrontation dies, not having time to properly originate. One of the conveyor films about kung fu.
4 out of 10