CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.6/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Un hombre estudia kung fu en el Templo Shaolin para luchar contra el opresivo gobierno manchú.Un hombre estudia kung fu en el Templo Shaolin para luchar contra el opresivo gobierno manchú.Un hombre estudia kung fu en el Templo Shaolin para luchar contra el opresivo gobierno manchú.
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
Lo Lieh
- General Tien Ta
- (as Lieh Lo)
Yue Wong
- Miller Six
- (as Yu Wang)
Liu Chia-Yung
- General Yin
- (as Chia-Yung Liu)
Norman Chu
- Lu Ah-Tsai
- (as Shao-Chiang Hsu)
Yung Henry Yu
- Hung Hsi-Kuan
- (as Yang Yu)
John Cheung
- Lord Cheng
- (as Wu-Liang Chang)
Wilson Tong
- Tang San-Yao
- (as Tang Wei-cheng)
Hoi-Sang Lee
- Abbot of Justice Office
- (as Hai-Sheng Li)
Kwok-Choi Hon
- Lin Chen
- (as Kuo-Tsai Han)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
If you want to see some of the coolest Shaolin training sequences ever, check this one out. Gordon Liu always plays the best young Shaolin fighting monks (he's done it ALOT) and this is his great directing debut. This movie actually has a story to it. Although the hero wants to learn shaolin kung fu for direct revenge at first, his training causes him to seek a different path. During this path, he goes through alot of crazy funky training sequences. If you're a kung-fu fan who loves to see insane tests of skill, this is your movie. Plus, if you love this one, see "Shaolin and Wutang" with Gordon Liu and Adam Cheng.
This is THE Hong Kong martial arts movie every fan of the genre MUST see. After watching this you'll be in no doubt why Tarantino picked the star, Chia Hui Liu, for two parts in his Kill Bill double.
The Shaw brothers demonstrate their mastery of the martial arts movie in this 1978 classic. Following the fortunes of a young rebel as he escapes from the tyranny of the government to a Shaolin temple where he hopes to learn superior kung fu techniques, we see his development from an inexperienced boy to an unrivalled master.
It is wonderful to see the rigours of training in each 'chamber'. The water crossing scenes are a delight. And some of the pain these students go through to perfect their bodies and art is impressive indeed.
I cannot recommend this enough. Indeed everyone should attempt to snap up any Shaw Brothers movie from around that period. "The 36th Chamber" stands head and shoulders above the rest, and is what all Martial Arts directors should aspire to.
Thanks Shaw's and Chia Hui Liu for a truly great experience EVERY time.
The Shaw brothers demonstrate their mastery of the martial arts movie in this 1978 classic. Following the fortunes of a young rebel as he escapes from the tyranny of the government to a Shaolin temple where he hopes to learn superior kung fu techniques, we see his development from an inexperienced boy to an unrivalled master.
It is wonderful to see the rigours of training in each 'chamber'. The water crossing scenes are a delight. And some of the pain these students go through to perfect their bodies and art is impressive indeed.
I cannot recommend this enough. Indeed everyone should attempt to snap up any Shaw Brothers movie from around that period. "The 36th Chamber" stands head and shoulders above the rest, and is what all Martial Arts directors should aspire to.
Thanks Shaw's and Chia Hui Liu for a truly great experience EVERY time.
Wow, I had no idea. Turns out "The 36th Chamber of Shaolin" is one of the best movies I've ever seen.
A simple man, his friends and his father are victimized by a brutal Manchu dictator and he is run out of town. Injured, he makes his way to the Shaolin Temple where he is determined to learn kung-fu. He starts at the top and works his way down, encountering insane training exercises and rigorous obstacles along the way. He proves to be a worthy candidate and then some in what turns into one of the coolest revenge plots in a movie ever.
Amazing choreography, stunts, violence, fight scenes and much more highlight this wicked cool flick. I recommend seeing it for sure.
9 out of 10, kids.
A simple man, his friends and his father are victimized by a brutal Manchu dictator and he is run out of town. Injured, he makes his way to the Shaolin Temple where he is determined to learn kung-fu. He starts at the top and works his way down, encountering insane training exercises and rigorous obstacles along the way. He proves to be a worthy candidate and then some in what turns into one of the coolest revenge plots in a movie ever.
Amazing choreography, stunts, violence, fight scenes and much more highlight this wicked cool flick. I recommend seeing it for sure.
9 out of 10, kids.
10dee.reid
Anyone familiar with the hip-hop super-group the Wu-Tang Clan knows that "The 36th Chamber of Shaolin" (a.k.a. "Shaolin Master Killer"), directed in 1978 by Liu Chia-Liang, is essential viewing for any martial arts movie fan. This movie started the whole "good-guy-gets-his-butt-kicked-and-undergoes-martial arts-training-to-exact-vengeance" storyline that's been used so many times in the martial arts movies since (i.e., the American "Karate Kid" movies). In it, anti-Manchu patriot San Te (Gordon Liu) is a humble country boy who is cast out of his village when Manchu soldiers (led by the villainous Lo Lieh) slaughter his parents, orphaning him. He manages to make it to the famous Shaolin Temple, where he is nursed back to health by the monks living there, and soon undergoes a rigorous and dangerous regiment of training to master the 35 "chambers" (styles) of kung-fu. In seven years, he completes his training, mastering all 35 styles, invents a brand-new weapon (the three-section staff), and suggests creating a 36th chamber - to spread kung-fu beyond the Shaolin Temple's walls and bring it to the masses. The whole story is pretty formulaic (what martial arts movie from the '70s doesn't have a formulaic plot?), but what gets this movie going is its rousing training sequences. These are not the run-of-the-mill stuff we're used to seeing in these movies. San Te's quest to become a martial arts warrior is a tortuous journey of self-actualization, a kind of virtue commonly lacking in the genre; San Te actually becomes a better person as a result of his experiences at the Shaolin Temple. Most grind-house cinema aficionados love this movie (Wu-Tang Clan co-founder the RZA in "The Wu-Tang Manual" does an entire section on the martial arts movies that influenced his development of the Wu-Tang Clan and much of their underlying philosophy). Finally, I'm glad to see an old-school martial arts movie that has its heart and brain in the right places.
10/10
10/10
Firstly, let me say that Chia Hui Liu (aka Gordan Liu) "MAKES" this movie. It would not be what it is without him. To be fair, I have to give notice that every movie with him and the director (who I understand is a relative) is good. Now, let me tell why. Liu gives effort and emotion to his parts. Every part and every movie I have seen him in, this has been the case. When there is anger, you see it in his face. When there is despair, you see it. He makes it almost tangible. Plus, he has "skills". Also, this movie has plot and believability. It's interesting and "absorbing". The one I watched was "English" dubbed, but the dubbing was good. Even the sound track was complimentary for the scenes.
I's unfortunate that the asian movie industry has been in the past just like the American sports industry was. The take talented young people, chew up their juices, and then spit them out all used up.
I wonder if Liu even suspected that he had attained "Classic" status with this movie as far as "old school Kung-Fu fans" in the North-east USA are concerned?
I's unfortunate that the asian movie industry has been in the past just like the American sports industry was. The take talented young people, chew up their juices, and then spit them out all used up.
I wonder if Liu even suspected that he had attained "Classic" status with this movie as far as "old school Kung-Fu fans" in the North-east USA are concerned?
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe movie won the Best Martial Arts Award at 24th Asian Film Festival and was the 1978 Top 10 Box Office Hits in Hong Kong.
- Citas
Senior monk: The wall may be low, but the Buddha is high.
- Versiones alternativasGerman theatrical version was heavily cut for violence and plot by nearly 30 minutes. Subsequent TV and VHS releases were cut as well. Only in 2004, the film was redubbed and released completely uncut on DVD by MiB. And also in August 2025, the uncut version was re-rated to "not under 12" by the FSK.
- ConexionesFeatured in Martial Arts Mayhem Vol. 2 (1998)
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