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Return
To 36th Chamber of Shaolin
 |
|
Country
: |
Hong
Kong |
| Year: |
1980 |
| Genre: |
Kung
Fu |
| Format: |
DVD |
| Running
Time: |
1h
35 |
| Distributor: |
Celestial |
| Date
reviewed: |
02/18/06 |
| |
|
| Producer: |
Run
Run Shaw, Mona Fong |
| Director: |
Lau
Kar-Leung (aka Lie Chia-Liang) |
Cast: Gordon Liu, Lung Wei Wang,
Ching Ching Yueng, Kara Hui |
|
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|
Story:
A young conman named Chou Jen Chieh (Gordon Liu) pretends
to be the famous Shaolin monk San Te in order to scare
corrupt bosses into treating their workers fairly. When
the bosses uncover Chieh as a fraudster, he decides
to join Shaolin monastery for real. He cons his way
into the temple, but the abbot turns out to be the real
San Te, who has recognised great potential in the young
trickster.
Review: After the success of the classic
36th CHAMBER OF SHAOLIN, Shaw Brothers took the sequel
in an interesting direction. Gordon Liu doesn’t
play San Te, as he did in the first movie, but instead
plays a young conman who pretends to be San
Te, and in doing so has a similar adventure, working
his way through the Shaolin training, before returning
to his home to right wrongs.
RETURN TO THE 36th CHAMBER OF SHAOLIN also happens
to be the best movie about Scaffolding ever. Probably
the only movie about scaffolding ever, the film takes
contemporary Hong Kong’s unique use of bamboo
scaffolding on its sky scrapers as inspiration for
the story. Our hero is allowed to stay at the Shaolin
temple, and is instructed to scaffold the monastery,
which takes him over a year. During this time, he
watches the monks below practise, and he builds his
own versions of their training devices from bamboo.
The first movie was all about the training regimes,
and its sequel is no different. All manner of inventive
and punishing devices are used to teach the monks
how to defend themselves. This emphasis on training
leads to a strange phenomena – this is a kung
fu film with only one fight! This should make for
dull viewing, but it doesn’t. The characters
are so likeable, the story so engaging and the whole
thing is just so much fun that it doesn’t matter.
When the final confrontation happens, it is a rewarding,
expertly choreographed and executed battle which converts
the hero’s years of working with bamboo into
fluid and creative staff fighting, incorporating the
use of benches and raised scaffold platforms.
Much like the first film, it hangs upon the performance
of Gordon Liu, who as usual, is fantastic. Given a
chance to flex his comedic and physical muscles, he
obviously has a screen presence and ability on a par
with the likes of Jet Li, Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan,
and frankly, it still baffles as to why he has not
gained such recognition amongst mainstream Western
audiences. Maybe it’s just a matter of luck.
There is, however, a monumental stupidity within the
plot. Years of Shaolin training amounts to no spiritual
enlightenment for the hero, and no inner peace or
vengeance of a dead master. In fact, Chieh is thrown
out of the monastery, rather than rewarded for his
ingenuity. Our hero merely beats the crap out of his
former boss, and guarantees a pay rise for his former
workmates. I would love to have the guy working as
my union representative, but it seems a lot of effort
to go to. Casting this matter aside, it boils down
to one thing – is this a good film? The answer
is ‘yes’. |






|
DVD
[ NTSC , Region 3
] :
Anamorphic Widescreen 2.35:1 presentation. Mandarin,
Cantonese stereo soundtrack. English, Chinese, Indonesian
subtitles. The picture quality is excellent. Celestial
are breathing new life into the Shaw titles. The extras
include Trailers for this and other attractions, production
notes and an interesting 15 minute documentary about
the film and the use of scaffolding as an inspiration
for the action, which features interviews with Gordon
Liu.
Reviewed
by Russ Houghton
|
| Story |
Cast |
Entertainment |
Subtitles |
Overall |
| 4 |
4 |
5 |
4 |
4 |

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| © 1999-2005 by KFC
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