Ten Tigers from Kwangtung

广东十虎与后五虎 ‧ Movie ‧ 1980
Ten Tigers from Kwangtung poster
7.4
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Ratings: 7.4/10 from 9 users
# of Watchers: 29
Reviews: 1 user
Ranked #99999
Popularity #99999
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The movie involves two stories concerning the original Ten Tigers and their future disciples. The film opens with Tung Chi and his nephew, Liang Seo Hu, pursuing the disciples to take revenge for General Liang, who was the father of Liang Seo Hu, and who was also Tung Chi’s martial arts brother. After killing one of the disciples, Wang Chow Ming and Lin Fu Sheng tells the story of the original Ten Tigers. Anti-Ch'ing revolutionary leader Chai Min Yu is being hunted down by Manchu General Liang. He is almost caught when a masked man rescues him from death and escapes with him. The masked man is Li Jen Chiao a loyal ex-Shaolin man and the owner of a pawn shop in town. Li Jen Chiao hides Chai Min Yu in the back of his pawn shop, and sends his younger brother Tan Ming to seek the help of two other ex-Shaolin men who reside in the town, Wan Yi Ling and Su He Hu. Tan Ming is temperamental and is always getting into fights, and he starts fighting with Wan Yi Ling and Su He Hu before he explains the reason for his visit. Luckily, Li Jen Chiao is able to explain the situation in time, and the two man gladly swear their allegiance. They are also joined by loyal Shaolin brothers Wong Yin Lin and Wong Kei Ying. Beggar Su Chan, Iron-finger Chung, Chu Yu Sheng, Tieh Chow Tsan also join in the fray to assist the revolutionary in escaping and killing General Liang. In the present, an older Su Chan and Su He Hu plan a counterattack to kill Tung Chi, his brother Tung Pa, and their nephew before they can kill the remaining Ten Tigers. (Source: Wikipedia) Edit Translation

  • English
  • magyar / magyar nyelv
  • dansk
  • Norsk
  • Country: Hong Kong
  • Type: Movie
  • Release Date: 1980
  • Duration: 1 hr. 31 min.
  • Score: 7.4 (scored by 9 users)
  • Ranked: #99999
  • Popularity: #99999
  • Content Rating: R - Restricted Screening (nudity & violence)

Cast & Credits

Photos

Ten Tigers from Kwangtung Hong Kong Movie photo

Reviews

Completed
The Butterfly Flower Award1
4 people found this review helpful
12 days ago
Completed 2
Overall 7.0
Story 6.0
Acting/Cast 7.5
Music 6.0
Rewatch Value 6.0

"Don't blame me if I don't fight fair"

Ten Tigers from Kwangtung is a kung fu cult classic. It boasted an all-star cast, had non-stop kung fu action from the beginning to the end and…meh. Maybe I was in the wrong mood, but I need a little story to break up the continuous fists and kicks.

Five young Tiger apprentices are being hunted by two Qings bent on revenge. The Ten Tigers of Kwangtung had killed a general so his son and an official are looking to even the score. Though the five young men had nothing to do with with the death, if you can’t kill the one you want, then kill the one you’re with (a rif on the Stephen Stills song from 1970). The story rewinds to show how the Ten Tigers formed their rebellious band.

This cast was loaded. Ti Lung played the leader of the Ten. Alexander Fu Sheng was the annoying Tam Ming who tested the members’ skills and patience. All six Venoms eventually joined the Ten. Johnny Wang played the Qing general in an understated performance for him. Ku Feng was the rebel leader being protected by the numerical crew. Wong Lik shone as the menacing Qing official in the present who had a variety of lethal weapons hidden on his person and wasn’t afraid to fight dirty. “Don’t blame me for not fighting fair.” The always maligned Qings lost their head when confronted with the Venoms and learned that a spear will go through two as easy as one.

Fair warning, this was a Chang Cheh film which meant the blood spewed freely and forcefully. Many of the fighters were stuck in bad Bruce Lee wigs with pigtails awkwardly tacked on. The dubbing was atrocious, lips and dialogue didn’t always match up. That often happened when scripts were written on the fly and the actual dialogue was dubbed in later, but seemed rather egregious in this bigger budget flick. I recognized several of the sets which hadn’t been demolished in previous CC movies serving as murder scenes in this one.

The martial arts choreography was okay and standard for the time in the flashbacks, though some of the action bordered on kung fu posing. Fortunately, Phillip Kwok and Lu Feng could be counted on to bring the acrobatic charm. Ti Lung and Johnny Wang had a battle with a weapon I’d never seen before—a mermaid cudgel. During the present, the youngsters’ fights against Wong Lik and Chen Shu Chi in the final 30 minutes were the fastest and most creative.

Ten Tigers from Kwangtung would have benefited from some white space on the page to give the viewers a mental breather from the constant kung fu. Despite my complaints, it was fun to see this festival of favorites in one film. And it gave several smaller players with skills who were often relegated to bit roles time to shine. I wasn’t as crazy about this film as kung fu film aficionados tend to be, but if you enjoy these old films, it’s one to try. As always, I grade kung fu flicks on a curve.

22 August 2025
Trigger Warnings: Dismemberments and lots of spewing blood.

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Details

  • Title: Ten Tigers from Kwangtung
  • Type: Movie
  • Format: Feature Film
  • Country: Hong Kong
  • Release Date: 1980
  • Duration: 1 hr. 31 min.
  • Content Rating: R - Restricted Screening (nudity & violence)

Statistics

  • Score: 7.4 (scored by 9 users)
  • Ranked: #99999
  • Popularity: #99999
  • Watchers: 29

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