Lang tzu yi chao (1978) Poster

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6/10
a few good fighting scene's
trashgang4 October 2012
If you are collection VHS and especially Dutch VHS then you certainly will come across old kung-fu movies, martial art it is. Dragon Video is one of those VHS labels that are hunted worldwide for martial art collectors because a lot of those movies aren't available on DVD.

Doing flea markets I came across a seller who was selling a lot of kung-fu stuff and he had a shoe box full of Dragon Video DVD's. I had never seen them before and the price was very cheap.

Some were still in cellophane and I could guess that it was a VHS rip-off copied on DVD's. And it was. Not that I mind because they mostly survive the time, VHS mostly don't.

The Legendary Strike was clearly a VHS copy on DVD but it still looked great. I'm not really into martial art flicks but as I said before, VHS collecting you sometimes come across them.

What surprised me was that I could watch it the whole time without reaching for the fast forward button. It isn't that hard to follow but watch clearly the first minutes to understand what is really going on. There are a few fight scene's that are worth mentioning. Some are done even in slo-mo. There's no blood to find or even gore, a thing common in some brutal martial arts. Most collectors are searching this for Angela Mao, not uncommon in martial art flicks and you don't see women that much as a fighter. Mao was one of the first women to make that sort of break-through in the film industry, her career was impressive but didn't take that long.

The flick itself didn't became a classic but still is worth watching. It did stand the time maybe it didn't had special effects except for the flying through the air, a classic thing.

Gore 0/5 Nudity 0/5 Effects 1/5 Story 3/5 Comedy 0/5
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7/10
Not a classic, but above average story line
phillip-5831 December 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Any film with Angela Mao, Carter and Cassanova Wong in it, has a lot going for it. Ko Lung wrote a clever story line for it with lots of twists and turns that mainly work. There is good support from Kam Kong as a 'Shaolin Monk' and good to the pretty Lee Ying Ying, although only in a small role. But at the end, although it is above average, you do feel it could have been a lot better. As Brian Camp points out, Paul Chu Kong is not a strong enough lead in such company and the end fights are rather weak. Carter Wong looks great in his robes but gets to do little fighting and disappears for the middle section of the film. Cassanove Wong does a few good kicks but again is rather under used given his abilities. Angela Mao does get to show some expressions and has a couple of fights, but nothing like her best, say in HAPKIDO. I enjoyed the film, the direction and Taiewanese locations are good, but it promises more than it ever quite delivers.
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THE LEGENDARY STRIKE - clever kung fu tale about search for relic
BrianDanaCamp13 May 2002
THE LEGENDARY STRIKE (1978) is a made-in-Taiwan kung fu film that takes a simple, timeworn premise and offers enough clever variations to put its solid cast through their paces and keep jaded kung fu fans entertained without exactly breaking any new ground. The plot deals with a search for a valuable pearl, dubbed the Buddha's Relic, which is sold to an unwitting Japanese emissary by a corrupt Ching Dynasty prince who seeks to steal it back for his own purposes. The plan goes awry and the pearl winds up inside the corpse of one of the prince's henchmen who is dressed as a Shaolin monk.

A Ming rebel gets hold of the corpse and hides it, leading to an elaborate game of cat-and-mouse as the corrupt prince and other Ching officials put on plain clothes and join the hunt for the relic at an inn in the rural Chinese countryside run by a secretive man and his pretty daughter who have a network of tunnels and secret chambers hidden beneath the inn. An actual Shaolin monk seeking to return the pearl to the famed monastery allies with the prince, while a female fighter working for Korean agents enters the picture and sides with the Ming rebel.

The early scenes involving the switching of the pearl-laden corpse with that of the Japanese emissary in different coffins are quite clever and offer the opportunity for all sorts of confrontations, some quite amusing. Famous fighting femme Angela Mao, as the fighter working for the Koreans, first appears about 30 minutes in as the occupant of one of the coffins, having switched places with the corpse to throw off the pursuers. However, the scriptwriters run out of new ideas about half-way through and the film meanders to an inconclusive ending.

Mao, clad in a dramatic red costume, has a handful of good fight scenes, and her opponents include the always noteworthy kung fu stars, Carter Wong and Chen Sing, as the corrupt Ching nobles. Kam Kong puts on a good show as the Shaolin monk and familiar round-faced villain Chan Lung makes a crafty henchman. Unfortunately, the main heroic role of the Ming rebel is played by Chu Kong (THE BIG HEAT, THE KILLER), an adequate leading man but not much of a fighter. An acrobatic stunt man is an obvious fill-in for him in most long shots.

The film is shot almost entirely on picturesque Taiwan locations. Its rugged outdoor setting with varied characters converging on a single remote outpost recalls many similarly themed Hollywood westerns, except that the characters here fight with swords, fist and feet rather than guns. The western connection is further enhanced by the film's reliance on a dramatic music score, with lots of brass and a Chinese-language ballad retained on the English-dubbed soundtrack.

The film is no classic, nor does it contain the best work of Angela Mao (WHEN TAEKWONDO STRIKES), Carter Wong (THE 18 BRONZEMEN), or Chen Sing (THE MAGNIFICENT). But it is fast-paced and good to look at and rather better than average for Tai Seng's Martial Arts Theater old-school kung fu lineup, which ranges from the sublime (HITMAN IN THE HAND OF BUDDHA, EAGLE'S CLAW) to the ridiculous (72 DESPERATE REBELS, 99 CYCLING SWORDS).
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4/10
All-star fight fest
Leofwine_draca16 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
LEGENDARY STRIKE is a Taiwanese excuse for a bunch of well-known martial arts actors to appear and fight each other during the search for a missing priceless pearl. The film begins with the usual sinister officials, here played by stock villain Chen Sing and Carter Wong who plays a corrupt lord. The pearl falls into the hands of renegade monk Mars, and the story kicks off from there.

Truth be told, LEGENDARY STRIKE isn't a great movie but it does get the job done rather efficiently. There's plentiful action throughout even if it doesn't mean much, and a fast pace that means that it's never slow. Unfortunately, it's never particularly interesting either. Characters come and go but the viewer never truly cares about their fates. Angela Mao is a case in point; she doesn't appear for ages but suddenly pops out of a coffin to randomly fight here and there.

Sing and Wong are reliable villains but both have been more effective elsewhere. Mars is amusingly mistreated by the film's plot; he gets beaten and killed in an early fight scene before his body comes a key plot point in itself. Kam Kong shows up early on but randomly disappears at one point never to reappear. Unfortunately the main actor is lacklustre and the plot veers on the nonsensical throughout, while the action just isn't good enough to write home about even if there is plenty of it.
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8/10
Short positive summary
Joost_van_Steeg@Hotmail.com24 September 2003
I was a bit surprised that only a few had voted this movie, because it's a great one. The plot is differend from other old school Kung Fu movies, and the action is much better. Especially because of the great Cassanova Wong with his kicking abilities. Also the acting was quit good in comparison to a lot of other movies in the same gerne. Of course the dubbing was bad again. For me 8/10, without Carter (Casanova) Wong it would be an average movie to me.
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