Quantcast

Details

  • Last Online: 1 hour ago
  • Gender: Female
  • Location: Tornado Alley
  • Contribution Points: 219,694 LV90
  • Roles: VIP
  • Join Date: August 24, 2019
  • Awards Received: Finger Heart Award110 Flower Award391 Coin Gift Award13 Reply Goblin Award2 Lore Scrolls Award4 Drama Bestie Award2 Comment of Comfort Award5 Hidden Gem Recommender7 Gaslight, Gatekeep, Girlboss1 Clap Clap Clap Award7 Wholesome Troll1 Free Range Tomato1 Notification Ninja1 Mic Drop Darling2 Emotional Bandage3 Reply Hugger5 Soulmate Screamer3 Big Brain Award9
The Fatal Flying Guillotines hong kong drama review
Completed
The Fatal Flying Guillotines
4 people found this review helpful
by The Butterfly
Mar 27, 2022
Completed
Overall 6.5
Story 6.5
Acting/Cast 7.5
Music 6.5
Rewatch Value 5.5
This review may contain spoilers

I was born to be cruel you fool!

Carter Wong gives mama’s boys a good name when he takes on Chen Sing’s flying guillotine wielding baddie. Decapitations and amputations come steadily at the hands of kung fu’s most bizarre weapon.

The plot is thin and has numerous confusing plot developments, many never explained. The basic structure of the story is that Carter must go to the Shaolin monks to borrow a mystical healing handbook to save his ill mother's life. In order to gain access to it he has to fight his way through three levels of shaolin fighters. When he ultimately succeeds, he and the monks are betrayed. In order to retrieve their special book stolen by the 4th Prince who has grand ambitions they are set on a collision course with the master of the guillotines.

The guillotines and other secret weapons as well as hand to hand combat are employed to deadly ends. Some fight scenes are better than others, many including a healthy dose of wire-fu. Carter Wong wasn’t as stiff in this movie as he has been in some. Chen Sing always makes for a compelling bad guy, even in a bedraggled gray wig and beard.

The Fatal Flying Guillotines looked like it had been mostly remastered. Even at that there were scenes which went from clear and wide screen to grainy full screen images. The cinematography was pretty decent for the budget and era. Much of the fighting took place outside in some very nice scenery.

Guillotines kept the action going almost non-stop with double and triple crosses all in the name of gaining the knowledge of the spinning weapons. Many kung fu films suffer from an abrupt ending, and The Fatal Flying Guillotines was no exception, but not as bad as some. Overall, it was an entertaining 1970’s kung fu film, though maybe not the strongest of the guillotine movies.

(March 25, 2026-bumped my score down .5, mainly due to filming issues and the narrative problems. I'd rank it fourth in the 1970's four Guillotine films, right after Jimmy Wang Yu's Master of the Flying Guillotine).

Trigger Warnings: Decapitations and severed limbs, eye gouging. Also, snakes.
Was this review helpful to you?