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Zhong hua zhang fu

  • 1978
  • R
  • 1h 45m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,5/10
2,9 k
MA NOTE
Zhong hua zhang fu (1978)
A Chinese man (Liu) marries a Japanese woman through an arranged marriage and manages to insult all of her Japanese martial arts family by issuing a challenge to her that is misinterpreted by the others. He must then prove how good Chinese Kung Fu really is through a series of duels with the seven Japanese martial artists who come to meet the challenge.
Liretrailer4 min 17 s
1 vidéo
32 photos
ComédieMesureKung Fu

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA Chinese man marries a Japanese martial artist, and they begin to bicker over which country has the better martial arts. It reaches a point where he has to go against Japanese martial artis... Tout lireA Chinese man marries a Japanese martial artist, and they begin to bicker over which country has the better martial arts. It reaches a point where he has to go against Japanese martial artists in different styles to prove who's the best.A Chinese man marries a Japanese martial artist, and they begin to bicker over which country has the better martial arts. It reaches a point where he has to go against Japanese martial artists in different styles to prove who's the best.

  • Director
    • Chia-Liang Liu
  • Writer
    • Kuang Ni
  • Stars
    • Chia-Hui Liu
    • Yuka Mizuno
    • Yasuaki Kurata
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,5/10
    2,9 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Chia-Liang Liu
    • Writer
      • Kuang Ni
    • Stars
      • Chia-Hui Liu
      • Yuka Mizuno
      • Yasuaki Kurata
    • 33Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 33Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 4:17
    Trailer

    Photos32

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    Rôles principaux43

    Modifier
    Chia-Hui Liu
    Chia-Hui Liu
    • Ho Tao
    Yuka Mizuno
    • Yumiko Koda
    Yasuaki Kurata
    Yasuaki Kurata
    • Takeno, Japanese ninjutsu expert
    • (as Kurata Yasuaki)
    Naozo Kato
    • Dojo Grandmaster
    Tsutomu Harada
    • Japanese Kendo expert
    • (as Riki Harada)
    Yujiro Sumi
    • Karate expert
    Hayato Ryuzaki
    • Nunchaku expert
    Nobuo Yana
    • Japanese spear expert
    Yasutaka Nakazaki
    • Japanese Sai expert
    Hitoshi Ômae
    • Japanese judo expert
    Chia-Liang Liu
    Chia-Liang Liu
    • Drunken Master Su (Guest star)
    Ho Bao-Hsing
      Lung Chan
      Lung Chan
      Ming-Wai Chan
      Ming-Wai Chan
        Kang-Yeh Cheng
        Kang-Yeh Cheng
        • Chow Kan
        Chok-Chow Cheung
        Chok-Chow Cheung
        Tien-Chu Chin
        Tien-Chu Chin
        • Wedding guest
        Miao Ching
        Miao Ching
        • Mr. Ho
        • Director
          • Chia-Liang Liu
        • Writer
          • Kuang Ni
        • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
        • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

        Commentaires des utilisateurs33

        7,52.9K
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        10

        Avis en vedette

        10Steve K.

        An excellent but overlooked classic

        If you've ever enjoyed the classic Kung-fu films of the 70's, I'm sure you remember The 5 Deadly Venoms, Master Killer, 10 Dragons from Canton, etc, etc... But this classic is almost always overlooked for the simple reason that it wasn't aired too many times in the states. And this title is impossible to find on VHS, DVD, LD or any other medium. But if you ever have the chance, see this movie!!! This movie is as good as it gets when it comes to showing off the difference between Chinese Kung-fu and various Japanese techniques. And this movie is very humorous at the same time.

        You see, as the Japanese challenger comes one by one to duel, the wife of our star tells him of the exact style of fighting that the challenger will use (i.e. sword, spear, throwing stars, Ninjitsu etc...) . It is upto our hero (Gordon Liu of Master Killer) to counter each particular Japanese style with a similar Chinese technique. Chinese sword vs Japanese sword, Chinese spear vs Japanese spear. You get the idea. Now bearing in mind that this movie is Chinese made, of course the Chinese techniques prove to be superior. But really the best part of the movie is seeing how each weapon and techniques match up against each other.

        And look at the ratings the people who have seen this movie gave. Check it out.
        8Macholic

        Classic martial arts' finest hour

        This is classic martial arts with everything that comes with it, including, to start with the downside first: A terrible English dub. The videotape I saw was also cropped. But if you can past that and get on to the movie you're in for a positive surprise. Drunk Shaolin.. is as good as it gets and offers a great sense of humor without getting silly. In brief the story is about a Chinese man who happens to be a kung fu expert marries a Japanese girl who is a an avid karate fighter. Trouble is certainly ahead as she chucks out her husband's Chinese kung fu weapons to make room for her own Japanese weapons, even worse: He insults her karate she takes it personally as so does her teacher in Japan and a group of his crack students, so they are off to China to challenge her husband to a duel. What follows is a fantastic display of Japanese contra Chinese weapons and techniques presented with considerable style as well as humor. I watched this film many times, it is joy forever. 8/10
        10Matti-Man

        The best of the "old-school" kung fu films

        Let's begin by saying that I consider Chia Hui Liu (Gordon Liu, to you KILL BILL fans) to be, pound-for-pound, the greatest movie martial artist of all. Before the Bruce Lee and Jet Li fans start baying for my blood, just read that phrase again. I said "movie martial artist" ... not "star" or "actor". But martial artist.

        That's because Liu Chia-Hui (in China, you put your family name first) really is a martial artist. Bruce Lee was many things - actor, star and fighter - but never a martial artist in the traditional sense. And Jet Li is a wushu player, and wushu is a system of acrobatics, much like western gymnastics, never intended for combat.

        And I consider ZHONG HUA ZHANG FU the best sustained martial arts performance in Liu's filmography, as much as I admire WU LANG BA GUA GUN (1983, aka EIGHT FIAGRAM POLE FIGHTER).

        I won't elaborate on the plot of ZHONG HUA ZHANG FU here as many other commenters have already done that (but what *about* that wig, eh?), but simply observe that although, as many have stated, director Lui Chia-Liang appears to show Japanese martial arts in a sympathetic light, he does still take the position that Chinese martial arts are better, and that still amounts to a pretty damning criticism, no matter how polite he is about it.

        Clearly the message of this film is that Japanese styles are direct, bombastic and chest-beating and Chinese styles are subtle, layered and adaptable. I'm not entirely disagreeing with that. I'm a 20-year student of Chinese kung fu myself. So perhaps my eye is better attuned to discern what's going on in the first battle between the Japanese Katana and the Chinese straight sword.

        The katana is a weapon that is used for hacking and chopping and as such needs to have a hugely strong blade. Indeed, the manufacture of the Japanese katana is a long and arduous process in which the metal is folded and beaten many times to produce a blade that is made up of dozens of wafer-like layers of steel. This means that the weapon can take no end of punishment, even at the hands of the clumsiest or strongest swordsman.

        In contrast, the Chinese sword is a far more delicate weapon and must be wielded with care and accuracy in order to be at its most effective. No hacking and chopping with a Chinese sword, then, as the blade would simply break.

        So, the fight with Liu using a Chinese sword against a katana should have ended with the Chinese sword broken and Liu helpless. It's a testament to both Lius' understanding of martial arts and the limitations and advantages of both weapons that the fight is as realistic and believable as it is.

        And each battle in ZHONG HUA ZHANG FU is treated with equal care (though I won't try everyone's patience by analysing each in detail)

        It's well worth seeking out the Celestrial Pictures release of HEROES OF THE EAST which offers a Chinese soundtrack and English subtitles, rather than the awful Ground Zero release which is dubbed and looks like it was transferred from a full-screen VHS.

        Definitely one of the best depictions of Chinese martial arts on film - ever!
        8gjhong

        better in Chinese

        I read somewhere that the producers tried hard to come up with a story that viewers outside Hong Kong would enjoy because Gordon Liu had fans in China and Japan thanks to his Shaolin monk movies. "Heroes of the East" was the result. Gordon Liu was in Montreal for the Fantasia Film Festival so local organizers and sponsors got him to come to Toronto to say hello after the show.

        I noticed something watching the Chinese version that slipped by me when I watched the English dub years ago - only the Ninja Master and Ah To's wife could speak Chinese! I guess that was necessary for the sake of the story so our hero couldn't tell the other Japanese masters that everything was a big misunderstanding and there was no reason for them to fight.

        I have good feelings about this movie because the story held together so well. Nobody was portrayed as a villain and everything was resolved happily with our hero accepting the friendship of the Kendo Master.
        9Stofft

        Just awesome!

        This movie is awesome!

        don't let the old year scare you away! This movie truly has it all, nice scenery and exciting fights.

        Shaw Brothers did have a nose for great martial arts flicks and this one is one of them (one of the better they have released I would say)

        the film centers around man named Liu that marries a Japanese girl. They early in their marriage argue about which martial arts styles that are the best; Chinese or Japanese. He of course speaks for the Chinese arts and she for the Japanese. He insults here that hard that she leaves him and goes back to China. In an attempt to win her back he writes a letter and sends off to her, but are misunderstood and so he insults HER family so they seeks him up to have a duel.

        Now here is where this film becomes really interesting; Every Japanese that he fights has different styles and weapons so this movie really shows off various styles in Martial Arts.

        And it shows it off well. the actors really knows their stuff; they all move and fight AMASING!

        don't hesitate to wait, rent/buy it know!

        I shall also add: IVL (Intercontinental Video Limited) has re-released this film on DVD with re-mastered video and sound quality! and it truly looks good! so I recommend looking this version up.

        9/10

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        Histoire

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        • Anecdotes
          When the Japanese fighters arrive in Hong Kong they walk past, possible arrive on, the Norwegian ship MS Halldis.
        • Autres versions
          The UK VHS release is cut by over 5 minutes for a '15' rating.
        • Connexions
          Featured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Best Kung Fu Movies of All Time (2020)

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        FAQ

        • How long is Heroes of the East?Propulsé par Alexa

        Détails

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        • Date de sortie
          • 30 décembre 1978 (Hong Kong)
        • Pays d’origine
          • Hong Kong
        • Langues
          • Mandarin
          • Cantonese
          • Japanese
        • Aussi connu sous le nom de
          • Heroes of the East
        • Lieux de tournage
          • Yokohama Harbour, Kanagawa, Japon(Yumiko returns home)
        • sociétés de production
          • Film Workshop
          • Shaw Brothers
        • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

        Spécifications techniques

        Modifier
        • Durée
          1 heure 45 minutes
        • Mixage
          • Mono
        • Rapport de forme
          • 2.35 : 1

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