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Peacock King

Originaltitel: Hung cheuk wong ji
  • 1988
  • 1 Std. 26 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,1/10
485
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Eddy Ko, Chia-Hui Liu, and Biao Yuen in Peacock King (1988)
AbenteuerActionFantasieHorror

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuTwo magically powerful monks are sent on a quest to fight the King of Hell.Two magically powerful monks are sent on a quest to fight the King of Hell.Two magically powerful monks are sent on a quest to fight the King of Hell.

  • Regie
    • Ngai Choi Lam
    • Biao Yuen
  • Drehbuch
    • Izô Hashimoto
    • Heung Sang Kong
    • Makoto Ogino
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Biao Yuen
    • Hiroshi Mikami
    • Narumi Yasuda
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,1/10
    485
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Ngai Choi Lam
      • Biao Yuen
    • Drehbuch
      • Izô Hashimoto
      • Heung Sang Kong
      • Makoto Ogino
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Biao Yuen
      • Hiroshi Mikami
      • Narumi Yasuda
    • 12Benutzerrezensionen
    • 15Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos61

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    Topbesetzung24

    Ändern
    Biao Yuen
    Biao Yuen
    • Kôngquè
    Hiroshi Mikami
    Hiroshi Mikami
    • Kujaku
    Narumi Yasuda
    • Saeko Kazama
    Gloria Yip
    Gloria Yip
    • Ashura
    Siu-Fung Wong
    Siu-Fung Wong
    • Raga
    • (as Siu-fung Wong)
    Ken Ogata
    Ken Ogata
    • Jikû Ajari
    Eddy Ko
    Eddy Ko
    • Jigume
    Chia-Hui Liu
    Chia-Hui Liu
    • Kubira
    Tonpei Hidari
    • Satô
    Ken Boyle
    • Archeologist…
    Hong Li
    • Kaimashôgejin
    Takatoshi Takeda
    • Cop
    Hirokazu Yamaguchi
    • Cop
    Jun-Chiu Chiu
    • Taxi Driver
    Kuo Hua Chang
    Kuo Hua Chang
    • Kubira's Soldier
    Yiu-Sing Cheung
    • Kubira's Soldier
    Yamson Domingo
    • Kubira's Soldier
    Siu Tak-Foo
    Siu Tak-Foo
    • Kubira's Soldier
    • (as Foo Siu)
    • Regie
      • Ngai Choi Lam
      • Biao Yuen
    • Drehbuch
      • Izô Hashimoto
      • Heung Sang Kong
      • Makoto Ogino
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen12

    6,1485
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7phillip-58

    Underrated fantasy film

    A lot of people seem to misunderstand this type of film. It is fantasy, based on a famous Japanese Manga and various Japanese legends. It was very popular in Japan (making a huge star of Gloria Yip in this her first film), average in HK and poorly received in the rest of the world. Glad as I am to see it in such a good print I was surprised HK Legends released this film above others (like Pedicab Driver, still not released). It is not a straight kung fu film and to expect protracted one on one human fight scenes is to miss the point of such a film. Enjoy it for what it is, fantasy with reasonable (for the time) special effects and Yuen Biao as an actor.
    8ebiros2

    Best collaboration between HK and Japanese cinema

    This was one movie where acting of Hong Kong actors and Japanese actors interaction went extremely smooth. Usually in HK movie made in Japan have HK actor doing lion share of the dialog, and Japanese actors are relegated to small roles where they speak only few simple Japanese words. Not this movie. It's amazing that the actors just went playing their role as if it was done in their native language, and somehow it all looked natural.

    When you look at this movie its really difficult to tell who's the Japanese actor and who's from Hong Kong. Genetically, all Asians must be pretty close to one another.

    In Cantonese version Yuen Bao is the main character, but in the Japanese version Hiroshi Mikami is the main character. They wrote the script very cleverly that the two characters are interchangeable.

    Based on a comic by Makoto Ogino, Peacock King, or Kujyaku Oo is a good translation of the original comic into a movie. The original comic's ordinary person, or situation suddenly morphing into a demonic entity is also translated well into this movie.

    I liked Narumi Yasuda's acting as a department worker suddenly finding herself embroiled in the world of Vajirayana Buddhism vs demons of the underworld.

    World looked really peaceful and healthy in Japan around the time this movie was made. It truly was the best of times.

    Really well made movie of its kind. It's a treat to watch.
    5DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: Peacock King

    This was amongst the reasons why growing up in the 80s was cool, with Hong Kong cinema at its heydays and with just about every genre that's covered. And for a kid growing up during the era, Peacock King, in my memory, was one hell of a special effects extravaganza and showing off, at the time, what the East could do with special effects that the West have already accomplished, with fantasy monsters coming to life with stop motion rubber suits and the likes, similar to films such as Ghostbusters or Clash of the Titans, which if viewed today looks dated, but still contains a lot of charm.

    Alas, The Peacock King somehow didn't withstand the test of time. A kid would have found the premise very interesting, dealing with hell's gates and a hell virgin who held the key to the destruction of mankind once she heralds the return of the hell king, and it is up to two monks to stop every conceivable devil in his or her tracks. Conveniently, given that this is a Hong Kong-Japan co-production, the location of the hell's gates happen to be in Tokyo, Hong Kong, and in Tibet, where the monks Peacock (Yuen Biao) and Lucky Fruit (Migami Hiroshi) meet by chance when they're sent by their masters Ku Fong (Eddy Ko) and Ji Ku (Ken Ogata) respectively, to stop hell virgin Ashura (Gloria Yip in her debut) chaperoned by the evil witch Raga (Pauline Wong Siu Fung) to fulfill the former's destiny.

    However the storyline if viewed today, as an adult, consists of plenty of unnecessary sub plots and loopholes, and characters who don't really serve a purpose. For instance, there's the retail store's Okada (Yasuda Narumi) who's in this film just to balance the female quotient, being more than a bother since she hangs around the monks and in my opinion seems more like a liability with her non-powers as well as potential to trip things up. Moreover, her character also presents an unlikely romance with Lucky Fruit, so there isn't really a point to get her over to Hong Kong or Tibet once the Tokyo story arc is over.

    Then there's the waste of Gordon Liu's character Kubira, a warrior sent on an assassination attempt on our heroes, if only to allow for a backstory to tell of how the two lead characters are linked together in a twist of fate, and to provide for more credible fight sequences using bona fide kung fu, balancing out the over-reliance of special effects here. But Kubira's introduction gives additional time to Ken Ogata as the latter comes to the aid of his disciple during the final act, in addition to brining a lot more unnamed characters into the fray for that increase in body count.

    Director Lam Ngai Kai may be questioned for his choice of inserting random English language music to make this truly a one of a kind international production, but really the soundtrack stuck out like a sore thumb. Some filler scenes could also be done without, since they pose a lot more unnecessary questions - an airplane shot means the heroes travel by air, but how would they pass customs with their weapons, and the bringing of a Hell Virgin as a passenger? Hmm. But I suppose such is the charm when watching it as a kid as you rarely question these points and take things at face value, in it for the many special effects shots that pepper the movie.

    And in all honesty, for that time, they were well done, with grotesque looking monsters given some air time to up the eerie quotient. Some are done for the sake of, such as Peacock's exorcising of a few critters on the streets of Tokyo, while others look really rubberized, such as the dinosaurs in the shopping centre arcade. Raga's transformation was perhaps the highlight, showing off the creativity of the filmmakers in making something really functionally ugly, while the design of the Hell King was kept quite simple - that of a giant, bald man.

    One would have expected the role of Peacock to provide a lot more visibility to Yuen Biao, but sadly this wasn't really the case. He shares screen time with Lucky Fruit's Migami Hiroshi to contrast the opposites of both men - one the relaxed joker while the other a little bit more uptight, to have to learn to cooperate with each other given an adversarial introduction, in order to combine their strengths to save mankind. Gloria Yip as the Hell Virgin also didn't have much to do here, other than to act cute when away from Raga and happen to be frolicking the Ocean Park theme park with Peacock, for him to be convinced that she's nothing but an innocent child who's ruined by Fate to do the inevitable. There's not much of a character development in any character here other than the perfunctory scenes, given that much of the 80 minutes got dedicated to battles, mostly CG enhanced rather than to showcase real moves, which is a pity.

    Revisiting Peacock King somehow marred that wonderful film that I had in my mind no doubt created by being awed as a kid. Watching it today made me realize it's quite a weak film with only dated special effects to boast about. and I wonder since some older classics have been remade by Hong Kong filmmakers, whether anyone had thought about this manga inspired movie to be given an update as well. One can only hope.
    3sarastro7

    Disappointing

    If you watch this movie to get some kung fu action out of Yuen Biao, you'll be pretty disappointed. Except for a couple of evasive flips and spins here and there, the is only one fight sequence in this movie, and it comes about an hour into it. This is a supernatural tale, neither funny nor scary, but with lots of pretty bad special effects.

    The story is unclear and messy; yet another example of the fact that Hong Kong commercial cinema has never discovered the importance of a clear plot. Action, helpless women and funny effects seem to be all they think the audience wants.

    Also, an already weak story is completely destroyed by the horrid English subtitles. Why can't they get someone who actually knows the language to at least rephrase the subtitles into something that makes sense? My theory is that the English subtitles are not for Western audiences at all, but for those Asians who happen not to speak Mandarin or Cantonese or any of the other five Asian languages this DVD was subtitled in.

    Anyway, a main reason to watch this movie is Gloria Yip, perhaps the cutest Asian actress of all time. But she hardly has any lines here, nor much of anything to do - you should catch her in Flying Dagger (1993) instead, or Saviour of the Soul (1992).

    All in all, this movie really hasn't got a lot going for it. Amazingly, it spawned a sequel, Saga of the Phoenix, where the entire cast returned. I haven't seen it yet, and, truthfully, I may not bother, because it looks like it's more of exactly the same.

    Peacock King is yet another movie in which Yuen Biao is pretty much wasted. Why has he done so many bad movies? Was it just bad luck that none of them were hits, or does he actually like this kind of thing?

    My rating: 3 out of 10.
    semprini-2

    Initially baffling, but the second go was an improvement

    Despite reasonably pitiful special effects, this was still quite an entertaining martial arts movie. Quite a good amount of fighting, acceptable acting and an unremarkable plot, this was an acceptable way to pass the time.

    If you like Yuen Biao or Hong Kong martial arts movies, you will probably get enough entertainment out of this without being blown away. The first time I saw this I think I must have been pretty tired as I fell asleep. The second time it seemsd a lot better...!!

    I think it deserves a 6 out of 10 which is pretty good going.

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    Fantasie
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    Horror

    Handlung

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    • Alternative Versionen
      The film's Japanese theatrical release (also seen on VHS and laserdisc) features over 12 minutes of additional and extended scenes missing from the Hong Kong cut, primarily focused on Hiroshi Mikami's Kujaku and Narumi Yasuda's Saeko Kazama. Some of these scenes would even be filmed with sync sound Japanese, unlike the standard-at-the-time "dubbed from start to finish" Cantonese of the HK cut.
    • Verbindungen
      Followed by A Xiu Luo (1989)

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 10. Dezember 1988 (Japan)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Hongkong
      • Japan
    • Sprachen
      • Japanisch
      • Kantonesisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Dioses contra demonios
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Golden Harvest Company
      • Toho-Towa
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 26 Min.(86 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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