Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe martial-arts action film 10 Brothers of Shaolin tells the tale of ten specially trained fighters, five monks, five laymen, who have been taught their skills in order to protect Master Ch... Alles lesenThe martial-arts action film 10 Brothers of Shaolin tells the tale of ten specially trained fighters, five monks, five laymen, who have been taught their skills in order to protect Master Chu, who needs all the help he can while attempting to bring down the Mings.The martial-arts action film 10 Brothers of Shaolin tells the tale of ten specially trained fighters, five monks, five laymen, who have been taught their skills in order to protect Master Chu, who needs all the help he can while attempting to bring down the Mings.
- Chi Yung (one of the 10 brothers)
- (as Wang Tao)
- One of the 10 Brothers
- (as Kaow Fi)
- General's son
- (as Tong Wei)
- C in C's envoy
- (as Cheng Ju)
- One of the 10 Brothers
- (as Kuan-Hsiung Wang)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Typical ho-hum about Chings oppressing innocent Hans and the Shaolin running about. What I found notable was the different number of actual Kung Fu styles being represented here. Many of the characters fight with a specific style that actually contains moves from the style. You can even see some relatively accurate Eagle Claw (briefly), Preying Mantis and Hung Ga during the film. That said the choreographers frequently revert to movie style kung fu. Unfortunately the martial art fighting is just OK with a lot of slow fighting and unrehearsed moves.
The film available is a horrid TV print with screwy English dubbing. Not only is there no pan and scan on the original widescreen, the image is set dead center, it's also zoomed in to avoid the original subtitles. I might have liked this better if I saw an original print.
Chia Ling plays the niece of a Ming General who waits for the emperor so he can rally an army on his behalf. Chia has three fight scenes, including one extended spear fight about an hour into the film. Venerable kung fu performer Phillip Ko (FEARLESS DRAGONS) plays one of the Shaolin Brothers. The villains include kung fu heavyweights Chang Yi (EAGLE'S CLAW), Leung Kar Yan (THUNDERING MANTIS) and Tung Wai and Chan Chia Kai, both from MARS VILLA.
The low-budget film is shot on location, with a number of fights staged in the woods. The fights may not be the best we've seen in these films, but at least there are lots of them to keep us interested. The music score features a number of familiar Chinese tunes (including the oft-used Wong Fei Hung theme) splattered indiscriminately across the soundtrack. (Well, at least we don't hear the theme from HANG 'EM HIGH for the umpteenth time.)
One amusing aspect of this film is that it points up a curious tendency of kung fu films to show characters traveling long cross-country distances on foot without any luggage whatsoever. No changes of clothing, no food, no water, no materials for sleeping or shelter. And when the hero and his royal charge stop at a roadside inn to eat, they're recognized and immediately attacked by Ching spies, so they can't eat or sleep that way either. How do they survive on the road? Best not to ask.
10 so-called brothers by way of principal since they trained and lived together for a long time in the same temple are ordered by the head Chinese monk to protect a hierarchy ruler whose been hiding in the temple until his cover was blown in which the unfaithful commander putting a bounty on his head. The dubbing is atrocious which didn't make since but in order to appeal to English speaking viewers, the language was changed from "Buddha be praised" to "God be praised". The martial art sequences is some of the worst I've ever seen since they barely even touch one another. And they're too many twists that don't make a lot of sense such as the monk who betrayed the temple for the whereabouts of the hierarchy ruler but is necessary, since it's supposed to be a movie and may have ran out of ideas.
Some such pictures are much stronger than others, however. For starters, God's name be praised, '10 brothers of Shaolin' would have benefited from even ten minutes spent developing a plot. A uselessly broad, basic, vague narrative concept is sort of offered as a meek through-line - there's one side in a conflict, you see, and there's also another side, and there might be a traitor on the side that's kind of posited as the one we might be supposed to cheer for. The screenplay isn't very good about elucidating any story beyond this. Action sequences are fine, serving their purpose of entertainment, and some moments are better and more interesting than others. The acting is fine; everyone does their job, God's name be praised. One has to wonder just much the dialogue in the widely available dubbed version reflects the original Mandarin script, if for no other reason than that the repetition of the phrase "God's name be praised" is downright parodic at points. Some other instances of dialogue and scene writing are just as curious, coming closer to inspiring mocking laughter than anything else. The direction is fine.
It's all just so fine, God's name be praised. "Fine" doesn't sustain viewer engagement, however, or build a fan base, or bring in box office receipts. Did you know "fine" is also a synonym for "middling," and "bland?" Well, it can be in colloquial usage, at least, and I'm sure the folks at Merriam-Webster would agree. Hold on, why was it, again, that I chose to watch '10 brothers of Shaolin?' I was bored, I guess, and looking for something relatively light and uninvolved. God's name be praised, I succeeded. I wouldn't have minded being pleasantly surprised by a movie that was actively exciting, absorbing, and satisfying, but as it turns out that just wasn't going to happen with this. Period film? Check. Martial arts? Check. Significant, enduring value? Sorry, keep on looking. I suppose you could do worse, but why bother at all? Cheers to those who like this more than I do. I need something more - God's name be praised.
Top-Auswahl
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- 10 Brothers of Shaolin
- Drehorte
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen