Details

  • Last Online: 9 hours ago
  • Gender: Female
  • Location: Tornado Alley
  • Contribution Points: 219,529 LV90
  • Roles: VIP
  • Join Date: August 24, 2019
  • Awards Received: Finger Heart Award100 Flower Award370 Coin Gift Award13 Reply Goblin Award1 Lore Scrolls Award4 Drama Bestie Award2 Comment of Comfort Award4 Hidden Gem Recommender6 Gaslight, Gatekeep, Girlboss1 Clap Clap Clap Award7 Free Range Tomato1 Mic Drop Darling2 Emotional Bandage2 Reply Hugger5 Big Brain Award9
Life Gamble hong kong drama review
Completed
Life Gamble
4 people found this review helpful
by The Butterfly
4 days ago
Completed
Overall 7.0
Story 6.5
Acting/Cast 7.5
Music 6.5
Rewatch Value 6.5
Having watched 25 Chang Cheh films, I felt like I had a handle on his filmmaking MO. Life Gamble shook my faith in his martial worldview.

Four thieves rob an escort agency of a priceless green jade piece. Unwilling to spilt the proceeds in the future once the jade is sold, they decide to gamble for it at the infamous Golden Lion. Numerous interested parties descend on the area, all looking to either steal the jade or return it to the rightful owner. Drawn into this dangerous conflict is blacksmith Qiu Zi Yu who left the martial arts world and wants nothing to do with it.

Now as to why my faith has been shaken in Chang’s worldview. I have been annoyed on many occasions regarding the absence of female characters in his films as if half the population of the planet simply disappeared. Here there were FOUR women and just one of them was a prostitute. All were smart and capable, albeit only Xiao Hong wasn’t a criminal. There was the requisite blood bath, I stopped counting at 30 bodies, but none of the artery spewing #2 red finger paint he was famous for. And weirdly, except for Lo Meng of course, most of the men were fully dressed. Phillip Kwok had a laced-up vest but part of his ensemble was a wraparound weapon. The person who seemed more at home in a CC movie was a thief that was one pair of stiletto heels short of being a dominatrix. The muttonchop sideburns and heavy eyeshadow sported left at least part of my observations of his world intact.

The cast for this film was large meaning character development was out the window. Most characters were nefarious criminals which meant no one cared when they died. There was only a tiny handful of righteous folks trying to return the jade. Four of the Venoms made an appearance with Phillip Kwok leading the cast as the reformed blacksmith. Alexander Fu Sheng played against type as a killer for hire. Ku Feng was the constable father and Kara Hui was his investigative daughter who infiltrated the dangerous gambling den and might have found love at the same time. Most of the fighting was with weaponry both hidden and obvious.

Life Gamble involved numerous characters jockeying for allies, betraying allies, and murdering allies. No one was safe when a treasure was on the table. Few could envision a world where they would share wealth beyond their imagination. Every character went all in with their lives on the line with few living to walk away. I wish Chang Cheh would have gone all in with more capable women (not victims) in his films. In this instance he might have walked a way a winner in my view.

10 March 2026
Trigger warnings: Aside from the high body count and numerous projectile stabbings, weirdly nothing.

Venoms: The Five Venoms (1978): Phillip Kwok (Lizard), Lo Meng (Toad), Lu Feng (Centipede), and Chiang Sheng (Venom disciple). Not in this film, but part of the Venom Mob-Wai Pak (Snake) and Sun Chien (Scorpion). Not Venoms, but Johnny Wang, Ku Feng, Dick Wei, and Lam Fai Wong were also in both films.

Venom hairstyle complaint: Lo Meng's wig looked like horses had stampeded over it. Poor baby.

Random personal note: Many years ago, my friend was a flag girl for the high school marching band and I kept flashing back to their routines with the Big Bad's villainous flag bearers. They even had kicky black go-go boots ready for any halftime show!


Spoilerish note:
Lu Feng has an iron weaponized hand here and in The Crippled Avengers (1978)
Was this review helpful to you?