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Wong Fei Hung and his friend are constantly having contests to see who has the better martial arts skill. After getting in trouble with their fathers, Wong Fei Hung settles down and starts to train seriously, while his friend still horses around. After his friend is hurt by a rival school, Wong goes to the school for retribution. Instead his skill is tested through a series of events which climax with him taking on a Northern martial artist. In an excellent battle of skill, he earns the respect of the rival school. Also stars Mai Te Lo and Hui Ying Hung.

Gordon Liu Chia-hui as  Wong Fei Hung
Kara Hui as  Wang Juying
Johnny Wang Lung-Wei as  Master Shan Xiong
Wilson Tong as  Master Zheng Tian Shou
Robert Mak as  Wang Yinlin
Ku Feng as  Master Wong Qiying
King Lee King-Chu as  Lu Shanhou
Chu Tit-Wo as  Master Lu Zhengfu
Hsiao Ho as  Chan
Chow Siu-Loi as  Master Zhou Tian Long

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Reviews

Leofwine_draca
1982/12/01

Once again director Liu Chia-Liang manages to pull it out of the bag with this Shaw Brothers mini-epic focused around the different styles of Chinese martial arts, particularly the gulf between northern and southern styles. By 1981 you might expect Shaw films to start becoming a little derivative and repetitive but by contrast MARTIAL CLUB is one of the freshest-feeling films I've watched from the studio.This inventive story is unlike anything else I've seen from the studio. The plot is nothing special, about three rival kung fu schools and their attempts to get one up on each other. However, MARTIAL CLUB is in reality a thematic film exploring subjects such as honour, rivalry, and chivalry and as such it becomes a mature and enthralling piece of film-making. It's the total opposite of the kind of bloody and visceral entertainment that Chang Cheh was putting out during the era, instead feeling graceful and even profound in places.Elsewhere, there's very little to dislike about any of the film's ingredients. With Chia-Liang directing and doing the fight choreography, the action is admittedly spectacular and never repeats itself. There are the usual one-on-one and one-on-many duels and bouts and one great riotous moment in a theatre that reminded me of similar greatness in the likes of JASON BOURNE; Chia-Liang certainly know how to direct chaotic action well. Inevitably the best stuff is saved for the climax with the alley fight perhaps being one of the greatest Shaw Brothers action scenes ever.The cast is also exemplary. Gordon Liu does his erstwhile hero bit very well, convincing as the headstrong youth. Kara Hui impresses yet again as his rival and it's hard to take your eyes off her whenever she's on screen. Hsiao Hou is excellent in support and the likes of Ku Feng round out the cast nicely. However, by far the best actor in the whole thing is Wang Lung Wei in an excellent turn as a true martial arts expert. Lung Wei is so often cast as a stock villain and his honourable turn here sees him playing a good guy for once and he's absolutely brilliant in it; his character dominates the story and he gives the performance of his life. He really makes you wish he could have played more than stock villain types all the time.

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poe426
1982/12/02

What starts out as a friendly lion dance soon turns ugly. Before you know it, kung fu experts Huang and Yinlin have decided to test their rspective skills- against someone OTHER than each other... Whoever scores the most punches the fastest, wins. Both men conspire with strangers to win, but the end result is a draw. Zhou then beats them both. The next day, after a brief interlude in a brothel, Yinlin is injured by a powerful fighter, Shan Xiong, who refuses to take a dive. Juying, Yinlin's sister, blames Huang. All of this leads to a close-quarters confrontation in the narrow confines of "Zig-zag Lane." Gordon Liu is as deft at comedy as he is drama or melodrama, and MARTIAL CLUB allows him to run the gamut. A solid seven.

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Chung Mo
1982/12/03

This is a small wonder from the canon of Liu Chia Liang. The martial arts are absolutely excellent and the only reason that this isn't as well known as 36th Chamber or Dirty Ho is the story. The film is about three kung fu schools in Guangdong and the efforts of the "evil" school to disrupt and discredit the two "good" schools. A lot of yelling and fighting goes on but no-one is killed. The film is lighthearted with little of the seriousness of 36th Chamber or other films. Also, the film sort of stops with out much of a resolution.The director appears at the beginning to give the audience a little lesson about the etiquette of Lion Dancing. The rest of the film he spends behind the camera directing some of the most chaotic fight scenes I've seen. The scene in the theater is unbelievable at times. There is so much going on it's hard to focus. Liu Chia Hui, Kara Hui and Wang Lung Wei dominate the film with their martial skills. Usually playing a villain, Wang Lung Wei is great as a northern Chinese Kung Fu master who is being used by the bad kung fu school. His intensity is unusual among his cohorts at the Shaw Bros. studios. It shows that he was an actual kung fu master outside the movie set.A slow start with a lion dance is the only real problem. After that, it's a great kung fu film. The final dual in an alley is an absolute classic.

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airfirehorse (traveler777x)
1982/12/04

The fight scenes between Liu (student) & Wang (instructor) are just plain beautiful, especially at the end. This is the only movie I know of where Wang Lung Wei could be considered a "good guy".

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