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Cast:
Chang
Yi Tao
Kam
Kong
Pearl
Lin
Kim
Young In
Action:
Howard
Yuen
Tiger
Wang
Producer:
George
Lai
Director:
Godfrey
Ho
Score:
    
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GRANDMASTER
OF SHAOLIN KUNG FU
AKA:
Mantis Boxer ||
Mantis Fist Boxer
Year:
1982 Reviewer: Andrew
Saroch
Director/producer
and all-round criminal of film-making Godfrey Ho has been
described as the 'Asian Roger Corman' - though sometimes he is
more akin to Ed Wood. His low-budget, z-grade movies can be
found on video store shelves and in bargain basements the
world over, yet, until recently, the works of Liu Chia Liang
proved to be far more elusive. As one would expect of the
proudly-titled 'Grandmaster Of Shaolin Kung Fu', it is another
attempt by Ho to cash-in on the then popularity of the word
'Shaolin'.
The
storyline is another mixture of special techniques, training
sequences and cackling villainy, but Godfrey Ho adds his own
brand of surrealism to the proceedings - moments that make
Robert Tai look like Ken Loach. One such crazed idea has a
fighter disabled by a flying pigeon unleashed by a heinous
arch-enemy; the way the bird succeeds in doing this will not
be revealed here, but it's worth staying with the film to see.
The
chances that this could've been a 'so-bad-it's-good' film are
undermined, however, because this is occasionally competent in
its construction. That's not to say that this is ever anything
other than a schlocky piece of genre fodder though, but at
least there are instances of skill (if that's not too strong a
word) on display here. Though the fight scenes are slow and
pedestrian, especially considering it was made in the early
80s, they do indicate that a choreographer actually spent ten
minutes or so designing them - which is five minutes more than
the scriptwriter needed. 'Grandmaster Of Shaolin Kung Fu' is a
two star film in every department, but that's half a star more
than a Godfrey Ho production can usually expect.
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