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Sammo Kam-Bo Hung, Sing Chen, and Ho Wang in San De huo shang yu Chong Mi Liu (1977)

उपयोगकर्ता समीक्षाएं

San De huo shang yu Chong Mi Liu

19 समीक्षाएं
8/10

Watch them "Dye"...

Excellently crafted kung-fu film dealing with the conflict between the Manchus and the Shaolin monks. We see the barbaric actions of the Manchus from early on in the film, and the tension builds quite steadily until there is only one option left: fight to the death.

Sammo is brilliant as usual and his directorial talent can be identified in this film clearly. His martial artistry is great and his strength improves as things get more desperate. His use of the spear in the final reel is awesome. Also, watch out for the snake-fist styles towards the end.

That said, this is a pretty challenging film in that it portrays senseless and random abuse towards women and children - well pretty much the whole village really. But I guess it makes the revenge angle all that much sweeter... and righteous: (Buddha be praised).
  • Guardia
  • 3 सित॰ 2006
  • परमालिंक
7/10

Good Sammo Hung directed movie, but not as good as his best stuff like Warriors Two, The Victim, Prodigal Son and Knockabout

Sammo stars as a man who is learning kung fu so that he can fight the Manchus. The directing from Sammo is good, the camera-work is brilliant, the story is decent, and the fights are very good for 1977. Fung Hak-on plays the main villain, and Yen Shi Kwan and Chien Yuet San play his top 2 henchmen. Always nice to see those 3 in action. Chen Sing has a small role and unfortunately he doesn't get to show off his handwork as much as he usually does. But he's still a great actor so I liked his role. If you have seen most of Sammo's movies and are looking for something else to feed your Sammo craving, then give this a try.

Picture and sound quality on the 20th century Fox DVD are good.
  • gorthu
  • 17 अप्रैल 2009
  • परमालिंक
8/10

Hung's 'Iron' Solid Directorial Debut

The Iron-Fisted Monk (1977) is Sammo Hung's brilliant directorial debut. Though the revenge plot is average for kung fu films of the time, the martial arts action and choreography are extraordinary. Iron-Fisted Monk marked the beginning of Hung's movie making prime. In the late 70's and early 80's Hung stared in and directed some of his best films including: Warriors Two, The Magnificent Butcher, The Prodigal Son, Knockabout and The Victim. The Iron-Fisted Monk was the film that got his directorial career rolling.

In the Iron-Fisted Monk, Sammo Hung plays "Husker," a young civilian who is taken in and trained by Shaolin monks after his uncle was killed by the Manchus. Seeking vengeance he eventually leaves the temple. After a group of Manchu officials make trouble in a small town, Husker teams up with a local man named Liang and the "iron fisted monk" Brother Tak (Chan Sing) to finally bring justice to the evil Manchu officials.

The martial arts action and choreography in this film are unbelievable. The film features some of the "hardest" kung fu you will ever see in a Sammo Hung film. Sammo does a great job playing to his strengths, providing a good mixture of martial arts and acrobatics. When this film was made Sammo was young and very near his physical prime. He is very fast and powerful and gives one of his better physical performances. Chan Sing also gives one of the most inspired physical performances of his career. Along with kung fu, the film features a lot of weapon fighting including: swords, spears, knifes and staffs.

The film was made by Golden Harvest studios, which means high production values and a talented stable of actors to work with. Notable appearances in the film include: James Tien as a Shaolin instructor, Casanova Wong as a young monk and Lam Ching-ying as an extra. Fung Hak-on (Warriors Two, Magnificent Butcher) plays the villain yet again and does a very convincing job.

Unlike many of Hung's films, Iron-Fisted Monk has a very serious tone. There are some comedic touches but they are overpowered by the intense drama. The Iron-Fisted Monk is one of Hung's more violent films, featuring very aggressive fight sequences and lots of bloodshed. The movie also includes a few brutal rape scenes. The rape scenes are very graphic and intense and, in my opinion, should have been toned down or left out completely. There is also a ridiculous nude scene in a brothel featuring Wu Ma. The scene was meant for comic relief but should have been left out also. The rape and nude scenes are the only detractions to this otherwise brilliant martial arts film.

The Iron-Fisted Monk was Sammo Hung's first effort as a filmmaker, but it is hard to tell. The martial arts action in the film is superb and outshines most other films made at the time. There are a few weak spots but overall it is a top notch genre film. The Iron-Fisted Monk is one of Sammo Hung's best works and is definitely in the top 30 best martial arts films of all time. The film is definitely not a family friendly Sammo movie but it is highly recommended for hard core kung fu genre buffs.

Martial Arts Genre Rating: 8/10

  • "You're a Shaolin monk. How dare you kill indiscriminately!"


  • "We're here to rid this world of a rapist and a murderer!"
  • kwhuneycutt
  • 26 मार्च 2006
  • परमालिंक

Sammo's directorial debut

Breaking barriers and setting new standards in on-screen fight choreography, Sammo's directorial debut is a must for any chop socky aficionado, and although not his best work (a warm up to Warriors Two), it can easily stand proudly amongst them. It's hodgepodge of a story acts as a boiling pot of escalating annihilation, until exploding in a fury of that unique fast and colourful Sammo choreography that we just love so much. Centring on the real-life legend of 'Miller Six' (Sammo), Iron Fisted Monk is driven by a powerful anti-Manchu narrative that feels relentless in its onslaught (they rape, kill, maim and pillage, not to mention bully little kiddies). Miller Six's uncle is killed, he learns the martial arts at the local Shaolin temple, and then off he goes for vengeance. And it's really as simple as that. This is a great movie - well choreographed (by Sammo), well directed (by Sammo) and with some great performances (especially that scoundrel Fung Hark-on who's simply irresistible as a downright evil Manchu warlord).
  • abentenjo
  • 13 अप्रैल 2002
  • परमालिंक
6/10

Kung Fu Hardcore

In some ways, it was a memorable film. It wasn't noticeably good or shockingly bad, but it had a few unusual scenes that will certainly surprise and unsettle the viewer. It is not your regular kung fu flick even though it had it all: bad guys, good guys, fights between the two and humour between the fights. For one, it also had descriptive rape scenes. I can't remember a Chinese kung fu film with sex being shown in such a crude way, clothes being ripped off, breasts popping out, lewd smirks on the rapist face and ultimately, the victim's death.

That gave the film a startling and awkward contrast with the lighter scenes. A little after the sister of one of the lead characters died following a tragic chain of events, we see that same man, who seemed to be on a quest for revenge, playing around with the idea of going to a brothel with a monk. As this shows, the characters had little consistency -- and little cohesion too, even though Sammo Hung's character was supposed to be the hero, the perspective was shifting so much eventually that it felt difficult to isolate one character as the subject.

Bad guys received more and more screen time, secondary characters came forth while the lead wandered off. The only appropriate way to clear up this profusion of central characters was to have them all kill each other. And so is what the script did. Confrontations suddenly pick up speed, people die en masse, "patience", which virtually was the only reason holding back everyone to settle the scores is no more, thrusting the remaining characters into the grand finale, a somewhat intimate fight between the toughest and the nastiest characters, whose unrestrained sadism had been cultivated during the infamous rapes.

As if in response to these extreme scenes, the makers chose to end with another extreme, gory violence. Like it or not, it does feel fair, but fair as in a talion. Without these short sadistic bouts that seemed borrowed from American exploitation films of the time, it would have been a pretty unremarkable kung fu story. The fights, well-choreographed and using the classic animal postures dear to a long kung fu tradition, are however terribly choppy, to the point that you could easily time the moves "one-two, one-two" as they are performed. Iron-Fisted Monk is not a good kung fu film to start with, it is an oddity that will be met with greater interest by longtime B-movie amateurs.
  • Steamboy
  • 24 नव॰ 2008
  • परमालिंक
6/10

A morally difficult film to like

  • cauwboy
  • 30 जून 2020
  • परमालिंक
6/10

Fantastic finale; misguided midsection.

TW: Descriptions of sexual assault.

'The Iron-Fisted Monk (1977)' is Sammo Hung's directorial debut. It tells the story of a man who leaves his training at the Shaolin temple early so he can seek revenge on the Manchu bannermen who hurt his uncle. That's the setup, at least. The majority of the movie actually focuses on a group of dye workers who come into conflict with the aforementioned bannermen, as well as one in particular who seeks his own revenge after his sister is raped, and sees its main character (who isn't the eponymous monk) become involved with their plight as part of his own journey. It's a darker film than most of Hung's others, but it still has a fluctuating tone and several comedic moments sprinkled throughout its relatively brisk runtime. However, the problem with this is that - unlike with some other movies in the genre which manage to balance humour with heft - its comedy directly clashes with its more serious, sometimes downright upsetting elements and feels really out of place. In fact, the humour almost comes across as downright disrespectful, especially in the wake of a truly horrific rape scene that's way more graphic than it needs to be. Hung simply refuses to cut away from the assault, forcing us to watch it through to its completion. The scene is clearly meant to make us hate the antagonist (literally credited as just "rapist bandit"), but it definitely didn't need to be as overt as it is. It leaves a sour taste in the mouth, for sure, and it actively dampens the impact of the overall affair.

In general, Hung's direction is confident and considered. For a lot of the affair, it's dependable but unremarkable. In the climax, though, his skills behind the camera really become apparent, alongside his skills in front of it. The finale, which is easily the best part of the picture, features two heroes against many villains, and the camera makes a point of flowing between both of them evenly. Unlike in similar films with simultaneous fights (including the generally superior The Magnificent Butcher (1979)), the set-piece manages to make it feel as though both are actually occurring at the same time. The fighters don't just pause when they're off-screen, as indicated by the purposeful jumps in choreography when the camera returns to one battle or the other, and there are some shots which have both sets of combatants in the frame, establishing the scene's geography and making the composition more interesting by pulling focus from foreground to background when necessary. It all culminates in a two-on-two segment which keeps all four fighters in frame and has them seamlessly swap between foes on occasion, creating a complex ballet of blows that's exciting to behold. The marriage of choreography and camera work is what makes Hung's debut truly stand out, marking the finale as an entertaining and well-crafted slice of action cinema that encompasses everything you think of when these creators first come to mind.

It's a shame the rest of the film doesn't live up to this segment. Rape scene notwithstanding, the plot is relatively ambling and not all that engaging. A loose narrative is common within the genre, but it's more noticeable here because this picture's comedy falls so short (you don't feel like you should be laughing at it, and it's not funny enough to break through that barrier). Plus, its story is really generic and its characters aren't all that interesting. Still, it's typically engaging enough to keep you watching and its action is always enjoyable. Its brutality is disarming on occasion, even if it's way too unpleasant at certain points, and it's always a joy to watch Hung do what he's best at. It's not a bad effort overall, and the fact that Hung would go on to direct some certifiable classics using lessons learned while making it certainly makes up for its shortcomings. Its finale truly is fantastic, too. It's not Hung's best, but it's a decent experience that's almost worth watching for its climax alone.
  • Pjtaylor-96-138044
  • 18 जन॰ 2025
  • परमालिंक
7/10

Gritty directorial debut for Sammo

The directorial debut for Sammo Hung, who over his long career has made some of the most exciting and well choreographed action comedies in Hong Kong's history. He also plays the starring role in this one as a long-haired monk who finds himself battling various Manchu baddies in a sometimes convoluted plot. You know the routine for this one: it starts out as a light knockabout comedy before becoming much darker as time goes on. There are graphic rape scenes (censored in the UK print), massacres and all manner of bad behaviour, but the pace is solid and the action very good, particularly as we move on to the climax. The excellent cast includes a rare good-guy turn from Chen Sing alongside Fung Hark-on's baddie, and bit parts for future greats like Mars, Eric Tsang and Lam Ching-ying.
  • Leofwine_draca
  • 13 फ़र॰ 2023
  • परमालिंक
8/10

Sammo Hung given a chance to shine!

  • alexanderdavies-99382
  • 7 अग॰ 2018
  • परमालिंक
7/10

The Genesis of Sammo As A Director

Required viewing for fans of The Fat Dragon, Iron Fisted Monk is Sammo's directorial debut and a film well worth the time for any fan of martial arts cinema. The fights are well-choreographed and both Chen Sing and Sammo kick ass in this film. This film isn't just historically significant for being Sammo's first foray into directing but is also a solid film for kung fu fans
  • coconutkungfu-30704
  • 18 फ़र॰ 2020
  • परमालिंक
5/10

About as good as any other 70s kung fu flick

  • MBunge
  • 9 जुल॰ 2011
  • परमालिंक
8/10

Off To A good start

This movie happens to be the first directorial effort by Sammo Hung. It certainly doesn't do to badly. It starts off decently, and the learning curve is very sharp. Each fight in the movie is more surely Choreographed and is faster than the ones that preceded it. There is a prevelance of armed combat and acrobatics (non-wire) which are all well done. Sammo is as young as you'll see him in any movie except ENTER THE DRAGON. There is however an annoyingly large amount of nudity in this movie. The plot has Sammo training as a civilian in a shaolin temple in order to avenge the death of a neighbor at the hands of some manchu thugs. He has improved to the point of teaching classes to other non-monks at the temple. He decides to head out after the manchus, after his skills have reached a certain level. he is assisted by the brother of another victim of the manchu's, and his instructor, who is the title character. Sammo and the monk are both extremely fast and athletic, doing some impressive back flips and leaps. give it a try if you run across it.
  • Azzy
  • 5 सित॰ 2000
  • परमालिंक
7/10

Sammo directs

  • BandSAboutMovies
  • 5 नव॰ 2023
  • परमालिंक
4/10

Fairly bland and generic martial arts movie...

Well, given the fact that this was a 1977 Hong Kong martial arts movie and that it had Sammo Hung in it, I assumed that the movie would prove to be an entertaining one. Especially so, since other movies from that same time turned out to be rather enjoyable.

But "The Iron-Fisted Monk" (aka "San De huo shang yu Chong Mi Liu") didn't turn out to be as interesting or entertaining as I had hoped for. Sure, it was still a watchable movie, but the storyline was just way too mundane, almost bordering on being boring actually.

The action and martial arts sequences were good enough, though the fighting definitely felt staged and you could sense the choreography throughout the fights, as the performers took odd breaks in between moves. It made for a less than natural feel to the fighting sequences.

As for this being a director debut for Sammo Hung, well it wasn't really all that great. I am sure, though, that back in 1977 then this was a fantastic movie. But having sat down to watch it for the first time ever now in 2021, it wasn't a movie that had withstood the test of time particularly well or gracefully.

Sure, "The Iron-Fisted Monk" is a movie that has an appeal to hardcore fans of the martial arts genre. But if you look at the movie objectively in terms of entertainment value, then it just didn't stand out.

My rating of "The Iron-Fisted Monk" is a less than mediocre four out of ten stars. While it was watchable, it is hardly a movie that will ever find its way back to my screen.
  • paul_m_haakonsen
  • 25 जन॰ 2021
  • परमालिंक

Almost as good as it is bad

Sammo's directorial debut is a mixed bag with some great fight scenes, decent comedy, and unpleasant scenes of violence. The plot, which rolls along almost painfully a times, centers around Husker (Sammo Hung) seeking revenge against the Machus for killing his uncle. Along the way to actually taking revenge he befriends a man who's daughter is raped by the local Manchu official and ultimately enlists in the aid of his wandering monk friend, Brother Tak, to take on the Manchus. The plot changes direction so many times that one has to wonder if it was made up as they went along. There are a couple rape scenes midway through the movie that are unnecessarily explicit and go on much too long. As the movie progresses though we are treated to some decent martial arts sequence, which are not as elaborate as Sammo's later works, but fast paced and solid none the less. Worth watching for the fight sequences, but sitting through the plot might turn you off of the movie before you get to them.
  • kiliansabre
  • 11 अक्टू॰ 2004
  • परमालिंक
8/10

Sammo's brilliant debut delivers the goods.

  • BA_Harrison
  • 18 दिस॰ 2006
  • परमालिंक
4/10

Below average

Well. I have to say I am rather amazed that this movie has a 7-star rating at IMDb. I was looking forward to Iron-Fisted Monk, but it strongly disappointed me. The plot and the characters are staggeringly formulaic, and far, far too much time is spent on the bad guys raping and massacring people with impunity (of course, this doesn't mean that there aren't several idiotic comedy scenes in it, also, complete with the worst sound effects in cinema history). There is also far too long between good fight scenes. The last ten minutes are satisfying, but everything else is decidedly below average. A very poor and disappointing effort from Sammo Hung, who has done so many other cool movies. I thought Iron-Fisted Monk would be one of his landmark efforts, but it's more of a landmark failure. It's just not in good taste, and does not deserve a rating above 3 or 4.
  • sarastro7
  • 16 दिस॰ 2012
  • परमालिंक
8/10

Sammo Hung's directorial debut, excellent!

  • dworldeater
  • 11 अप्रैल 2024
  • परमालिंक
3/10

Boobies

  • mrdonleone
  • 20 अक्टू॰ 2019
  • परमालिंक

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