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Buddhist Fist, The
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Country
: |
xHong
Kong |
| Year: |
1979 |
| Genre: |
Kung
Fu |
| Format: |
DVD |
| Running
Time: |
1H30 |
| Distributor: |
Tai
Seng |
| Date
reviewed: |
09/28/03
|
| |
|
| Producer: |
Yuen
Wo Ping |
| Director: |
Yuen
Wo Ping |
Cast: Yuen Shun YI, Tsui Siu
Ming, Yuen Cheung Yan, Simon Yuen, Fan Mui Sung, Chan
Siu Pang |
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Story:
A two ‘brothers’, one a local boy and the
other a Shaolin monk, grow up and train together. As
young men, the local boy leaves for a while, only to
find his Godfather missing upon his return. While investigating
the mysterious disappearance, he must face a number
of opponents and revelations of treachery on his path
to discovering the truth and mastering the secret of
the ‘Buddhist Fist’ technique.
Review: ‘The Buddhist Fist’ is
an old-school martial arts revenge flick with a smattering
of comedy. With Yuen Wo Ping directing, and his brothers
helping to choreograph the action, this is yet another
Yuen Clan classic, despite the fact that many fans
of the genre have probably passed this one by.
It’s flawed, so let’s get the negativity
out of the way. It’s the plot that lets Buddhist
Fist down. There is reference to a valuable Jade Buddha
statue that everybody in China wants to get their
hands on, and some superfluous search for a missing
man, but any excuse for a story is picked up and dropped
faster than an ugly baby. There is a period of about
45 minutes early on in the film where the plot seems
to be confusing, until you realise that it’s
not you that lost the plot, but the writers themselves.
As you would expect, the plot is only there to provide
excuses to start fights, but we’ll come back
to that later.
As for the cast, everybody does a sterling job,
and the characters are all beautifully cartoonish,
just as you would expect from the Yuen Clan. It’s
easy to tell even the cameo players apart, because
in the Yuen universe, everyone has a huge hairy mole,
a humpback, buck teeth, or a lazy eye. It’s
a good job, too, because characters (especially bad
guys) often come out of nowhere to provide a fight
or set-piece, and then vanish without a trace before
briefly popping up later to provide some minor exposition.
Yuen Cheung Yan, for example, pops up for ten minutes
as a gangster, hams it up gloriously, has a fight,
and then spends the rest of the movie behind the camera.
Simon Yuen Senior does the same thing, and its even
possible to spot Simon Yuen Jr as long as you don’t
blink, or have transparent eyelids like some kind
of man-fish.
This is Sunny Yuen’s (Yuen Shun Yi) movie,
though. Usually seen playing maniacal bad guys, he
is bizarrely given the role of leading man. His physical
abilities are impressive, but apart from the fact
that he now seems retrospectively typecast, he just
doesn’t have the right face to play the wide-eyed
and smiling good guy. With his big round head and
intense stare, he walks around looking like some kind
of evil boiled egg. It’s like seeing Vinny Jones
singing along with Barney the Dinosaur.
Obviously, there is Kung Fu in the film. Lots and
lots of Kung Fu. The fighting rarely stops, and it’s
dazzling from start to finish. There are no special
effects here, and only a little wirework, yet the
fighters punch, kick, grapple and contort with breathtaking
results, punctuated with moments of humour. Dull choreography
can be the death of a martial arts film, but ‘The
Buddhist Fist’ is alive and kicking, unpredictable
and inventive. Most impressive is the agility of the
older cast members, and Simon Yuen Senior’s
‘Sleepy Kung Fu’ is great. This isn’t
a movie you would see because of its story, but fans
should put this high on their list of essential viewing.
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DVD
[ NTSC , Region 0
] :
Mono audio, Letterbox widescreen. According
to sources on the internet, the widescreen image is
cropped. English, Cantonese and Mandarin Audio, but
no subtitles (?). Trailers for Miracle Fighters, Tai
Chi III, Shaolin Classics series, and Iron Monkey.
An
average transfer, with no surprises for martial arts
fans in terms of speckling, faded picture, and dark
scenes that appear very dark indeed. For the first
5 minutes there is a vertical line down the left side
of the screen.
Reviewed
by Russ Houghton
You
can purchase this DVD at : 
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| Story |
Cast |
Entertainment |
Subtitles |
Overall |
| 2 |
3 |
5 |
n/a |
3.5 |

Screenshots
provided by: Ryan Maciaszek
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| © 1999-2003 by KFC
Cinema. All rights reserved. |
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