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Xin du bi dao

  • 1971
  • R
  • 1h 42min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.2/10
1.8 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Shin Zatôichi: Yabure! Tôjin-ken (1971)
ActionDrama

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA devious martial arts master targets young, talented swordsmen, and makes a wager that whoever loses should cut off their arm, then surprises them with a secret technique they cannot counte... Leer todoA devious martial arts master targets young, talented swordsmen, and makes a wager that whoever loses should cut off their arm, then surprises them with a secret technique they cannot counter. One of his previous victims have had enough.A devious martial arts master targets young, talented swordsmen, and makes a wager that whoever loses should cut off their arm, then surprises them with a secret technique they cannot counter. One of his previous victims have had enough.

  • Dirección
    • Cheh Chang
  • Guionista
    • Kuang Ni
  • Elenco
    • David Chiang
    • Ching Lee
    • Lung Ti
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.2/10
    1.8 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Cheh Chang
    • Guionista
      • Kuang Ni
    • Elenco
      • David Chiang
      • Ching Lee
      • Lung Ti
    • 13Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 17Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 premio ganado en total

    Fotos38

    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
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    + 34
    Ver el cartel

    Elenco principal55

    Editar
    David Chiang
    David Chiang
    • Lei Li
    Ching Lee
    Ching Lee
    • Ba Jiao
    Lung Ti
    Lung Ti
    • Feng Junjie…
    Ku Feng
    Ku Feng
    • Lung I Chih
    • (as Feng Ku)
    Sing Chen
    Sing Chen
    • Chen Chun Nan
    Chung Wang
    Chung Wang
    • Chin Feng
    Kuang Yu Wang
    Kuang Yu Wang
    • Fan Yun He
    Kang Liu
    Kang Liu
    • Jin Yi
    Huang Pei-Chi
    Huang Pei-Chi
    • Chen Jie
    • (as Pei-Chi Huang)
    Lei Cheng
    Lei Cheng
    • Ching I
    Ching-Ho Wang
    Ching-Ho Wang
    • Boss Li
    Kang-Yeh Cheng
    Kang-Yeh Cheng
    • Lung's Disciple
    Dik-Hak Chan
    Dik-Hak Chan
      Shih-Ou Chang
      Shih-Ou Chang
      Liu Chia-Yung
      Liu Chia-Yung
      • Bandit rider
      • (as Chia-Yung Liu)
      Tien-Chu Chin
      Tien-Chu Chin
      Ming Chiu
      Ming Chiu
      Yun-Kin Chow
      Yun-Kin Chow
      • Extra
      • Dirección
        • Cheh Chang
      • Guionista
        • Kuang Ni
      • Todo el elenco y el equipo
      • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

      Opiniones de usuarios13

      7.21.8K
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      Opiniones destacadas

      8planktonrules

      A one-armed swordsman movie, not THE one-armed swordsman.

      It's very confusing. Director Che Chang made a series of five films which starred Yu Wang as the One-Armed Swordsman. However, Chang ALSO made some other films with the phrase 'One-Armed Swordsman' in the title...but not the same guy! In this case, the great martial arts actor David Chiang stars as Lei Li...A One-Armed Swordsman! Confused? I sure know I was! It is possible that the titles I am talking about are only the English language titles...but they do involve a hero who is missing an arm. My assumption is that the franchise was so successful that Chang decided to put out as many one-armed films as possible! Oddly, however, this is the only one- armed film with Lei Li.

      By the way, the version of this I was was the American dubbed one. Because of this, it might have been edited heavily...I have no idea but this often is the case with martial arts films. It is a Shaw Brothers film...which generally is a VERY good thing, as they tended to make some of the best martial arts film of the era.

      When this film begins, we can see that Lei Li is kind of stupid...at least when it comes to losing his arm. He's attacked by some jerks and he defeats them. When their master comes along and confronts Lei Li for this, Lei Li challenges him to a duel--and the loser promises to give up an arm!!! Naturally the master wins and he's decent about it...telling Lei Li to forget about the bet. But Lei Li is an idiot and soon lops off his arm in a memorable (and silly) scene! This is how this one-armed dude came to be in this film. Unfortunately, after this, Lei Li is pretty defenseless....or so he thinks. Jerks come to town and bully the crap out of him...simply because everyone sees him as a useless one-armed guy...and he is during much of the film. What happens next to make him go from a one-armed loser to a one-armed hero? See the film and find out for yourself.

      This is clearly a better than average martial arts film. Even with the celery-crunching sound effects and silly dubbing (typical of most films in the genre), the fighting scenes are better than usual and the story a bit different from other one-armed films. Oddly, however, they did no follow-up films with Lei Li...and I would have enjoyed this.
      7DICK STEEL

      A Nutshell Review: (DVD) The New One-Armed Swordsman (1971)

      I can't remember the details behind the reason why Wang Yu left the franchise, but Chang Cheh replaced him with David Chiang in the titular role, and of course it's a totally new character, having his own motivations and background, as compared to Yu's Fang Gang.

      Written by Ni Kuang (author of HK's popular Wesley science fiction series), the new one- armed swordsman is now Lei Li (Chiang), an arrogant young swordsman whose specialty is his "yuan-yang" double swords. A hotheaded, up and coming hero, a diabolical plot was hatched by Lung I Ching, a veteran swordsman in the martial arts world, to keep these young upstarts at bay. With his three-joint-poles, which always seem to defy gravity, he schemes and manages to duel with Lei Li, defeating him and caused Li's arm to be chopped off.

      Herein lies the difference between this One Armed Swordsman, and the original Fang Gang. Fang Gang had lost his arm because someone else hacked it off in a fit of rage. Here, Lei Li actually gambled with his arm - the loser of the duel would have to remove it, and retire from "society". While Fang Gang had to learn his martial arts all over again, Lei Li was already skilled with his left hand, because he was originally ambidextrous. Also, Fang Gang's weapon of choice is his father's iconic broken sword, Lei Li doesn't seem to have any preference, and could fight with any.

      While there is a token romance with the daughter of a village blacksmith, the introduction of a special sword didn't seem to auger well, and it didn't last - it lacked something special, be it emotions or prowess, and seemed too generic. Anyway, I can't help but to chuckle at Ti Lung's character Feng Chun-Chieh, also a young upcoming swordsman who uses two swords. Chun-Chieh and Lei Li formed a sense of brotherhood when the former protected the latter from bullies, only because the latter doesn't wish to use his martial arts skills anymore. They become fast friends, but from the way their scenes were shot - the numerous hugs, back-slapping, arm holding, eyes longing, you might be expecting one of them to say that if only he knew how to quit the other.

      That aside, you'd come to expect the usual ketchup blood laden violence which have become the hallmarks of Chang Cheh's swordfighting movies. Here, it doesn't get any less bloody, and scenes can be quite graphic with the numerous decapitations of limbs, and one really interesting decapitation of half a human body, across the waist.

      There are plenty of set action pieces, like that iconic fight on the bridge with many footsoldiers simultaneously. Scenes like these are what Tarantino adopted in his homage Kill Bill double feature, where the hero goes on an unstoppable roaring rampage. Though I must admit the introductory fights don't contribute much to the plot - just there for the sake of showing off what Lei Li can achieve.

      All in all, it's great fun, just to watch what our parents were watching as they grew up, and comparing these films to the standards of today. While cheesy, the good old classics stand out for their groundbreaking effort in those days, to bring us what has evolved till now.

      Code 3 DVD contains minimal extras, just one trailer, a photo gallery, the original poster, one general paragraph passing off as production notes, a biography and selected filmography of the cast and crew.
      8t_atzmueller

      One of Chang Chehs finest films

      Chang Cheh had already directed an iconic "One-Armed Swordsman" (Jimmy Wang Yu) a few years earlier but for reasons unknown to me decided to 'reboot' with "The New One-Armed Swordsman", featuring David Chiang as the protagonist. Unlike stern and stoned-faced Wang Yu, Chiang plays the ever-jolly, jovial Lei Li, a very skilled traveling swordsman who is forced to cut his own right arm off after loosing a fight with villainous mastermind Lung I-Chih (Feng Ku), leader of the "Tiger Gang". Li retires from being a fighter and resigns himself to becoming an aid at a local restaurant, constantly subjected to the mockery of the patrons. When fellow traveling swordsman Feng Chun-Chieh (Lung Ti) rides into town, he and Li bond almost immediately but Feng likewise looses a battle with I-Chih and is killed in the process. Li swear vengeance and goes up against I-Chih, his supposedly unbeatable weapon, an interlinked, triple-iron staff (a weapon that "can only be bested by three swords") and his army of goons.

      "The New One-Armed Swordsman" was one of the first Hong Kong films to become a hit in (West)-Germany (under the title "Das Schwert des gelben Tigers" or "The Sword of the yellow Tiger"), sparking a wave similar-minded films to flood the market. Indeed, during the early 1980s you'd have been hard-pressed to pass a cinema that was not showing at least one Kung Fu flick or a video store that wasn't stacked.

      Especially David Chiang does an amazing job, being very charismatic, at the same time makes the viewer believe that he could pull it off and decimate a legion of fighters with only one arm. Like in many other movies that feature this duo, Chiang and Lung Ti have a very good chemistry, something like the Dean Martin & Jerry Lewis of martial arts movie. Perhaps even too good a chemistry: As some may have pointed out, the constant gazing at each other and assuring themselves of their friendship, at times reminds one of "Brokeback Mountain" (and relegates the supposed love-interest, the cute-as-a-button Ching Lee to a mere sister-figure). Feng Ku is a reliable baddie and is well versed in changing from an almost fatherly figure to a menacing fighting machine within an instant.

      The special-effects are bloody but may seem a little dated, especially in times where most martial-arts-movies are saturated with CGI and actors flying around on wires. But for those interested in honest, hard-working Kung Fu and sword fights, there can be few better recommendations than "The New One-Armed Swordsman".

      8/10
      9S1lv3rSp33r

      One of the best movies I have seen so far

      This is 1 of the best movies I have seen so far!

      Its always nice to see david chiang and ti lung playing togheter with eachother !

      Like some guy explained before , you can learn from this movie , because although you have a handicap you can still be improving your skillz.

      This story is well made , like mentioned before a guy Lei Li losing his arm to a corrupt "held" Lung. After being retired for a year a brother Feng come to his place where he acts like a bartender. While he was demolished by some people from the Tiger Fort , Feng teached Lei Li to appreciate himself again. Then one day Feng is losing his battle in the Tiger Fort against Lung , Lung used the same trick he used to do to Lei Li to with his sticks. After that Lei Li sworn revenge and the ending is amazing ! He defeats a whole squad of fighters from the Tiger Fort! And once again he meets Lung , the man that made him retire for a year. A very nice battle at the end !

      Anyway just watch the movie then you know what I mean ! :-)

      Greetz!
      7Jeremy_Urquhart

      Solid

      Compared to the other movies in the One-Armed Swordsman series, this isn't quite as good as the first, but I feel like it's an improvement on the second. It features a new actor playing the titular role: David Chiang, who I feel is one of the best leading actors who frequently headlines these old Shaw Brothers movies (it's either him or Gordon Liu - I honestly can't pick a favourite between those two).

      This delivers everything you'd want from an old-school martial arts movie without truly excelling at everything. It's like the movie equivalent of a classy - but not super fancy - burger place: a step above mass-produced, fast food slop, but not exactly gourmet. Still, the action is good, the story is competent, and the ending features the main character taking on a small army worth of henchmen, and I'm always a sucker for seeing that kind of fight scene play out on screen.

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      Argumento

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      • Trivia
        For the American TV spots for the film (under the title "Triple Irons"), despite being a Shaw Brothers production, the main international theme from the Golden Harvest-produced The Big Boss is used as the background music. This is most likely due to National General Pictures being the US distributor for both films.
      • Conexiones
        Featured in Cinema Hong Kong: Kung Fu (2003)
      • Bandas sonoras
        Escape from Piz Gloria
        Written by John Barry

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      • How long is Triple Irons?Con tecnología de Alexa

      Detalles

      Editar
      • Fecha de lanzamiento
        • 7 de febrero de 1971 (Hong Kong)
      • País de origen
        • Hong Kong
      • Idioma
        • Mandarín
      • También se conoce como
        • The New One-Armed Swordsman
      • Locaciones de filmación
        • Hong Kong, China
      • Productora
        • Shaw Brothers
      • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

      Especificaciones técnicas

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      • Tiempo de ejecución
        1 hora 42 minutos
      • Mezcla de sonido
        • Mono
      • Relación de aspecto
        • 2.35 : 1

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