Meng hu xia shan (1973) Poster

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6/10
THE RAGE OF WIND - rare martial arts film with Chen Sing as the hero
BrianDanaCamp30 April 2005
THE RAGE OF WIND (1973) is an early work from Ng See Yuen, a producer-director who later gave us such exemplary kung fu films as SECRET RIVALS, INVINCIBLE ARMOR and RING OF DEATH. It's not a polished work at all and features some unusually sloppy cinematography and is available to us only in a poor-quality DVD edition from World Video offering a full-frame English dub and one of the scratchiest prints I've ever seen offered on a legit release.

Still, it's a film that holds some interest for kung fu fans. For one thing, it's a rare case of perennial kung fu villain Chen Sing (HEROIC ONES, LEGENDARY STRIKE) playing a good guy, in a 20th century setting no less. For another, he has a white American wife (played by Irene Ryder), who has returned with him to his home village in 1930s China after he married her in the U.S. where he had some success as a boxer. The wife is quite a forceful character in her own right and is always at her husband's side, an equal partner in the marriage. Normally known for his evil grinning in kung fu films, Chen is quite the romantic lead here, regarding his wife with tenderness and affection. No one in the village seems at all fazed by Chen's marriage to an American and they seem to accept his wife as one of their own. (Soon after arriving, she trades in her American fashions, which seem curiously 19th-century in style, for Chinese garb and hairstyle, which actually suit her quite well.)

The plot is the standard one of Chinese villagers-vs.-wicked Japanese occupiers. After Chen's return home, the local fishermen look to him for help in opposing the Japanese, but he's reluctant to use violence, bearing shame for having killed a man in the ring in America, and seeks to negotiate with the Japanese boss, played by Yasuaki Kurata. The action consists basically of escalating Japanese abuses which finally push the hero into a position of having no choice but to fight. In the last 20 minutes, Chen lets loose a ferocious display of Chinese boxing against his karate-practicing Japanese opponents. It helps a great deal that two such capable performers as Chen and Kurata handle most of the fighting chores. Kurata was a skilled Japanese performer/martial artist who played Japanese roles in dozens of Hong Kong kung fu films, including three memorable non-villain roles: SHAOLIN CHALLENGES NINJA, LEGEND OF A FIGHTER and FIST OF LEGEND. (He also turned up in 2003 in the female-themed action thriller, SO CLOSE.)

While the poor quality of the available DVD edition is an obstacle to one's enjoyment of the film, it's still recommended to fans of Chen Sing and Yasuaki Kurata and those whose interest is piqued by the unique multicultural mix of Chinese, Japanese and American characters in a Hong Kong martial arts film.

On the subject of kung fu heroes having foreign wives, I remember Gordon Liu having a Japanese wife in SHAOLIN CHALLENGES NINJA (HEROES OF THE EAST, 1979) and Jet Li living with a Japanese girlfriend in FIST OF LEGEND (1994), but I don't think I've ever seen a kung fu hero in a Hong Kong film with an American wife in China before.

The music score is patched-together from all sorts of other soundtracks including Isaac Hayes' SHAFT and dollops of Ennio Morricone.
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4/10
Unjust fish taxes? Time to punch, kick and grunt!
Aaron137528 May 2020
I saw this film as Ninja Warlord so who knows what the true motives of the Japanese were in this film. Could have been taxes and such, but then again maybe not. The people who dub this films can sometimes make these films into something else entirely. Though it is, I believe, definitely Chinese versus Japanese with the Japanese being the bad guys, so definitely a Chinese film.

The story, the version I saw, has a small village under siege from the Japanese who are raising taxes on fish and imposing their will upon the villagers. However, things will soon change as a man who was from the village and was a boxer in the states has returned home and he killed a man in the ring! Honestly, don't ask me to place when this film takes place as I have no idea. Well the leader of the Japanese is friendly enough at first to the boxer, but he is bad and soon the hero will have to use his fists, something he swore he would never do again, to bring a little justice to the village!

Not sure why they decided to title this film, Ninja Warlord, here in the United States as the leader of the Japanese looks nothing like a ninja and acts nothing like a ninja. Just walks around in a white suit and wearing a black and red cape while his cronies wear Hawaiian shirts. All is cool though as we get several fights and that is what you want to see in a film such as this!

So, it was not great, but it was entertaining as I prefer to watch something as insane as this film to something boring. The fights are not the best, but they are funny as the folly guys in these films always make the most insanely loud noises from a simple punch! If they were swinging hard enough to make those sounds, the opponents skulls would like explode! That is the fun of watching these movies as well as the bad dubbing, combine the two and you may not have an award winning picture, but at least you have a fun one!
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7/10
Classic basher action from 1973
gorthu19 April 2009
Warning: Spoilers
During the time of the Japanese invasion in China, Yasuaki Kurata stars as a Japanese who has taken control of a small fishing town. Pretty basic story here, but well done. Chen Sing plays the hero, and his wife is played by Irene Ryder, an American. He went to America and became a boxer, but after killing a man he has decided to give up boxing and move back to his home town in China. Now he has to stop the Japanese and that's as far as the story goes. Some great fights at the end make this worth watching. Kurata and Chen Sing made a lot of movies together, and this is one of their best. The final fight on the beach is just about as good as basher action gets. Yukio Someno has a great role playing Kurata's top man, and Jimmy Lee and Bruce Leung Siu Lung have an awesome cameo where they show up to fight Kurata. Kurata- "what do you want with me?" Jimmy Lee- "TO KILL YOU!!!".
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