Nan xia Zhan Zhao (1975) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
3 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
kind of corny
Big Bo26 July 2000
This film is typical of the genre. Usual mediocre cinematography combined with sometimes brilliant acting and otherwise cheesy fx. The English dubbing is particularly funny as some of the translation ends up with ghastly puns and one liners. Good for some laughs.
1 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Diverse and imaginative fights
ckormos125 January 2020
Four guys in red and the leader in blue have stolen some pearls and are walking through some volcanic looking areas to avoid the main roads and mostly Chan Chao (Tien Peng) but he has already found them. The guy in blue seems to have escaped and is on a ferry boat crossing a river but Chan Chao is the other passenger. He surrenders then surprises him with a poison needle and Chan Chao falls in the water. Blue guy reports back to Chen Hung-Lieh. He has a problem with his wife in that she married him but won't put out because she loves Chan Chao. Chan Chao ends up rescued by a boat man and his pretty daughter but he has a job to do and leaves her. It gets complicated with a second lead character. Eventually Chan Chao arrests Chen Hung-Lieh and marches him off to the capital but encounters many fights along the way.

The fights are of note because they are quite diverse and imaginative. There are strange fighters, even strange creatures, weird weapons and much use of wire work with the strange weapons. There are even some comedy fights so nothing gets boring in the movie from start to finish. I rate it a notch above average for the fights and good pacing. I consider the current 7.6 rating on IMDB too much though.

My copy is a digital file that plays on a HDTV as VHS square size with dual hard subtitles that are cut off on both sides. This movie must have been a major production in 1975 based on the credits and production values yet it never was released beyond China and Taiwan in theaters or DVD. It may have been on laser disk in Hong Kong but I can't confirm. It otherwise only came out as a fan project around 2011. There is a wide screen version available but I don't have it. It is available only from other collectors.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Trashy and frenetic
Leofwine_draca18 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
A somewhat frenetic Taiwanese slice of martial arts mayhem with a mystic angle. As usual with these films, it begins with various characters strolling through the countryside when they're ambushed and waylaid and have to fight for their lives. Lots of natty red full-body costumes are on show here, but the dense plotting is almost impenetrable to the modern Western viewer. The picture quality of the version I watched was terrible given this film's rarity. Tien Peng, aka Roc Tien, directs and bags himself the lead role. Later, the plot simmers down and becomes a running battle with a zombie villain called a "blood absorbing corpse", which is cheesy but pretty cool to watch.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed