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Long quan she shou dou zhi zhu (1979) Online

Long quan she shou dou zhi zhu (1979) Online
Original Title :
Long quan she shou dou zhi zhu
Genre :
Movie / Action / Adventure / Drama
Year :
1979
Directror :
Tso Nam Lee
Cast :
Tao-Liang Tan,Don Wong,Yi Chang
Writer :
Chien-Chi Chang,Hsin Yi Chang
Type :
Movie
Time :
1h 30min
Rating :
6.1/10
Long quan she shou dou zhi zhu (1979) Online

Police Captain, Dragon Leg calls on the services of a known felon and playboy, Snake Fist, to help him infiltrate a gang of Mongolian arms dealers led by the Deadly master of the Spider Fist. Top notch action form the master blaster Lee Tso Nam.
Credited cast:
Tao-Liang Tan Tao-Liang Tan
Don Wong Don Wong - (as Wang Tao)
Yi Chang Yi Chang - Master Sung
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Chung-Kuei Chang Chung-Kuei Chang
Hung-Ki Chang Hung-Ki Chang
Ming Che Ming Che
Cheng Chen Cheng Chen
Jen Chen Jen Chen
Hou-Chiang Chi Hou-Chiang Chi
Lu Chin Lu Chin
Ming-Ching Chou Ming-Ching Chou
Hsing Nan Ho Hsing Nan Ho
Chang-Wen Hsieh Chang-Wen Hsieh
Han Hsieh Han Hsieh
Chen-Peng Kao Chen-Peng Kao


User reviews

Love Me

Love Me

CHALLENGE OF DEATH (1978) is a made-in-Taiwan kung fu film that served as a follow-up to THE HOT, THE COOL AND THE VICIOUS (1976) reteaming its director, Lee Tso Nam, and two stars, Wong Tao and Tan Tao Liang, who play, again, friendly enemies who become allies in the course of a complicated sequence of events. Set in early 20th century China, the plot has to do with a search for an elusive broker supplying weapons to regional warlords during a period of civil war. It's colorful and exciting and features a lively cast of expert performers.

Wong Tao plays a gambler whose ex-girlfriend is an intermediary between the warlords and the weapons supplier. Tan Tao Liang (billed as Delung Tam, a misspelled version of his usual English name, Delon Tam) again plays a policeman named Captain Lu and forcibly enlists Wong in tracking down the supplier by jailing him on trumped-up charges involving a tryst with an under-age girl. Wong is a snake fist expert, while Tan is a dragon fist specialist (and high-kicker) and the two have a serious bout at one point before becoming allies. After much back-and-forth, the two realize they have a common enemy in the mysterious Master Sung (Chang Yi), a renowned spider fist practitioner. To beat him, the two heroes must team up and practice different strategies for overcoming his snake fist techniques.

The film opens with a pre-credits demonstration of dragon, snake and spider fist moves by the three stars. There are plenty of fights sprinkled throughout the film, although few are long enough to really showcase the stars' talents until the final battle in which the two heroes take on the lead villain (the underrated Chang Yi).

The film, shot on location and in a handful of cramped studio sets, never comes close to the visual finesse of a Shaw Bros. film, but the story moves along well, the characters and their relationships are quite interesting, and the performers are all fun to watch. It's not quite as packed with incident as its predecessor, THE HOT, THE COOL AND THE VICIOUS, but it's a worthy member of that group of late 1970s Taiwan-shot kung fu films that gave us such able performers as Delon Tam, Wong Tao, Chang Yi, John Liu, Hwang Jang Lee, Tommy Lee and Jimmy Lee.
Jeb

Jeb

Lee Tso Nam, the kung fu director who brought us THE HOT, THE COOL & THE VICIOUS, is the man behind this Taiwanese-made follow-up that features not one, not two, but three hard-hitting martial arts stars in its cast. It's also a film that showcases three differing styles (dragon, snake, and spider) which immediately adds interest for this viewer. The American title is CHALLENGE OF DEATH, but I prefer DRAGON AND SNAKE IN THE SPIDER'S WEB, which is a title that has it all.

In terms of the staging, it's a routinely ordinary production, with a couple of rivals forced to team up as they track down some arms dealers. The plot is a light piece of fluff with a few average fight scenes mixed up with some of the typical lowbrow comedy and cross-dressing shenanigans familiar from this genre. The two stars are the unlikely-named Delung Tam and Don Wang, each of them proficient in a single style, while the villain of the piece is regular kung fu star Chang Yi, whose spider technique seems to be heavily indebted to Spider-man!

As is inevitably the case with these films - you could even put money on it - by far the best part of the production is the final extended two-on-one fight scene. It's set in a wood and features all manner of aerial acrobatics and power moves, and by itself serves as a fitting showcase for the three styles mentioned in the title. The cheesy, super-power fighting techniques bring to mind the later excesses of the ninja action genre. A shame the rest of the film couldn't match this high point.
Gindian

Gindian

CHALLENGE OF DEATH opens with the three stars demonstrating their respective martial arts: the high-kicking Tao Liang Tan balances himself atop what looks like tree trunks while going through his Dragon Fist moves; Don Wong slithers through a maze of lit candles, extinguishing some of them with his Snake Fist strikes; and Yi Chang as Sung uses his "webbing" to become airborne doing his sinister Spider Fist technique(s). "Security Corps" agent Lu (Tan) is sent after the girlfriend of Wang Tao (Wong), Wu Chin Wa, who happens to be an illegal arms dealer. Tan arrests Wong, a self-styled "Don Juan," For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge. Wong agrees to help Tan if Tan will help HIM get $100 for his uncle's orphanage. Tan agrees and in a genuinely funny scene, dresses up as Wong's toothless hag of a wife when the two enter a gambling den (some of Tan's teeth are blacked out, and he looks pretty goofy). Tan's high-pitched harpie voice becomes noticeably deeper after he and Wong best some thugs bent on recovering their casino's losings: "Husband," Tan shouts: "It's getting late! We'd better go!" Taking it all in stride, Wong agrees and they leave the scene of the crime. Tan and Wong make a great team (both as their "true" characters and as the "husband and wife" team). It's an uneasy alliance, and they square off before agreeing to fully cooperate with one another. The Hits hit the fan when Tan takes out Sung's top henchman in an excellent display of kicking and acrobatics. Wong is wounded by Sung (the wound appropriately resembles a spider's bite) before Tan tests Sung (losing his C.O. in the process) and getting injured himself. Tan and Wong work together to figure out a way to overcome the sinister Sung and the final showdown is well worth seeing. An outstanding movie from director Tso Nam Lee, and a solid ten in my book.
Dianazius

Dianazius

Actors Dorian Tan, Don Wang, and Chang Yi are all very good but unfortunately director Lee Tso-nam did this by the numbers (unlike his very good The Hot, The Cool and the Vicious (1976) and Eagle's Claw (1977)), and the sum is not as good as its parts. Dorian Tan and Don Wang would appear together again in the much better Lee Tso Nam's classic Fatal Needles vs. Fatal Fists (1980).

The woman who plays the courtesan Wu Chin Wa is not named on my Tai Seng DVD but has a wonderful dress sense and two rather stylish Mongolian? attendants, one of whose hats could have been used very effectively in the fights. I kept thinking Dorian Tan would do the same with the long white scarf he wears throughout the movie, but it seems to have been just for show.

The fights are good with Dorian using Dragon's Claw (and some very good kicking) and Don Snake Fist. I presume Chang Yi's Spider Fist is just an invention but it is fun to watch (with his Dracula like cape) and very effective. It takes the two 'heroes' to beat him in the end.

This film is not very believable but is worth watching at least once.