Shaolin Kung Fu Mystagogue (1977)

達摩密宗血神飄 ‧ Movie ‧ 1977
Shaolin Kung Fu Mystagogue (1977) poster
N/A
Votre note: 0/10
# de Spectateurs: 9
Critiques: 1 utilisateur
Classé #99999
Popularité #99999
Téléspectateurs 0

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  • Français
  • English
  • magyar / magyar nyelv
  • עברית / עִבְרִית
  • Pays: Hong Kong
  • Catégorie: Movie
  • Date de sortie: oct. 13, 1977
  • Durée: 1 hr. 30 min.
  • Score: N/A (scored by 1 utilisateur)
  • Classé: #99999
  • Popularité: #99999
  • Classification du contenu: Not Yet Rated

Distribution et équipes

Images

Shaolin Kung Fu Mystagogue Hong Kong Movie(1977) photo

Critiques

Complété
The Butterfly
3 personnes ont trouvé cette critique utile
mars 25, 2025
Complété 9
Globalement 7.0
Histoire 6.5
Acting/Cast 7.5
Musique 6.5
Degrés de Re-visionnage 7.0

"Seems we're in for a fight" It's a kung fu movie, of course you are!

Shaolin Kung Fu Mystagogue at least lived up to its name, there was a Shaolin temple and the teacher played an important role. There were also the oft used Ming rebels, Ming prince/king and Qing bad guys with frightening weapons. No secret list this time but there was a secret scroll of Buddha’s Final Form, the ultimate technique.

The rebels are trying to covertly maneuver the Ming prince/king out of Qing territory and safely into the south. They are thwarted by the diabolical Lu Ping (few character names in this dubbed version) and Chang Yi with his “Bloody Birds.” Carter Wong and his sister Hsu Feng work to save the king and take him to safety. Much of the action takes place in the Shaolin temple where a blind teacher helps to protect both the king and the secret scroll. Deadly traps are used in the Qing prison and the Shaolin temple.

This was Chang Peng I’s first directorial effort. Time has not been kind to his movie. The film was faded with salt and pepper pocking as well as the occasional yellow and blue streaks. Unfortunately, I could only find it with English dubbing. The cast was strong which helped gloss over the weak storyline. Chang Yi with his wild gray sideburns and swirling boomerang blades that could cut down trees and cause explosions made for a sinister bad guy. How he didn’t crack up with those wild weapons is beyond me. Hsu Feng had a spear with a retractable chain and blade. Carter relied on his Shaolin kung fu techniques only lacking the 18th form. Lu Ping as "His Highness" had an impenetrable body save for his Achilles heel. Phillip Ko Fei, a competent martial artist in real life, played the traitorous monk who aided the Qings.

The action came fast and furious from beginning to end with flaming traps, daggers, poisonous gas, and spiked walls all of which challenged the fighters both angels and devils. Oh, and Lung Fei had a golden manicure to die for. If you enjoy old kung fu movies with ridiculously funny and deadly weapons, this might be one to try. As always, its graded on a curve.

25 March 2025

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Renseignements

  • Movie: Shaolin Kung Fu Mystagogue
  • Pays: Hong Kong
  • Date de sortie: oct. 13, 1977
  • Durée: 1 hr. 30 min.
  • Classification du contenu: Pas encore classifié

Statistiques

  • Score: N/A (marqué par 1 utilisateur)
  • Classé: #99999
  • Popularité: #99999
  • Téléspectateurs: 9

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