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IMDbPro

Cinque dita di violenza

Titolo originale: Tian xia di yi quan
  • 1972
  • R
  • 1h 45min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,1/10
4398
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Cinque dita di violenza (1972)
Two martial arts schools prepare for an important tournament.
Riproduci trailer2: 51
1 video
67 foto
Kung FuMartial ArtsActionDramaRomance

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAs two martial arts schools prepare for an important tournament, one school's master is a dishonorable man, and to ensure his son wins the title, he hires three Japanese samurais, who target... Leggi tuttoAs two martial arts schools prepare for an important tournament, one school's master is a dishonorable man, and to ensure his son wins the title, he hires three Japanese samurais, who target the rival school's best fighter.As two martial arts schools prepare for an important tournament, one school's master is a dishonorable man, and to ensure his son wins the title, he hires three Japanese samurais, who target the rival school's best fighter.

  • Regia
    • Chang-hwa Jeong
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Yang Chiang
  • Star
    • Lo Lieh
    • Ping Wang
    • Hsiung Chao
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,1/10
    4398
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Chang-hwa Jeong
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Yang Chiang
    • Star
      • Lo Lieh
      • Ping Wang
      • Hsiung Chao
    • 42Recensioni degli utenti
    • 76Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Video1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:51
    Trailer

    Foto67

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    Interpreti principali36

    Modifica
    Lo Lieh
    Lo Lieh
    • Chao Chih-Hao
    • (as Lieh Lo)
    Ping Wang
    Ping Wang
    • Sung Ying Ying
    Hsiung Chao
    Hsiung Chao
    • Okada
    Chin-Feng Wang
    Chin-Feng Wang
    • Yen Chu Hung
    Mien Fang
    Mien Fang
    • Sun Hsin-Pei
    Feng Tien
    Feng Tien
    • Meng Tung-Shun
    Seok-hoon Nam
    Seok-hoon Nam
    • Han Lung
    • (as Nan Kung-Hsun)
    Shen Chan
    Shen Chan
    • Wan Hung-chieh
    Bolo Yeung
    Bolo Yeung
    • Pa Tu-er, Mongolian Fighter
    Wen-Chung Ku
    Wen-Chung Ku
    • Sung Wu-yang
    Lung Yu
    • Tu Wei
    Yukio Someno
    Yukio Someno
    • Oshima Shotaro
    • (as Ran Yeh)
    Tse Lin Yang
    Tse Lin Yang
    • Sun's pupil
    Ki-joo Kim
    Ki-joo Kim
    • Chen Lang
    • (as Chi-Chu Chin)
    Bong-jin Jin
    • Lu Ta-ming
    • (as Chen Feng Chen)
    Hsing-Chung Hung
    • Inn-keeper
    • (as Seong-Jung Hong)
    Liu Chia-Yung
    Liu Chia-Yung
      Chuen Chiang
      Chuen Chiang
      • Zaemon
      • Regia
        • Chang-hwa Jeong
      • Sceneggiatura
        • Yang Chiang
      • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
      • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

      Recensioni degli utenti42

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      Recensioni in evidenza

      9TBear477

      spectacular kung-fu film of its time!

      "Five Fingers of Death" started the American kung-fu movie craze but I remember seeing it for the first time as "King Boxer" in Chinatown, NYC, without the bad dubbing and few Americans. I also was fortunate enough to see the American premiere of "Five Fingers Of Death" on Times Square, NYC. What a contrast this turned out to be...same film but different audiences.

      In Chinatown, this film took on a more serious tone to the viewers. It was because of hearing the real voices of the actors(In Chinese) that made this movie more believable. Chinatown theaters were showing violent kung fu films for years(1972's "Boxer From Shantung" beat them all in gore), so the action choreography & story were the main attraction. Rival school plots were not overused yet so the storyline seemed fresh. Every great kung fu film had wonderful, dastardly villains you wanted to see get their comeuppance and FFoD had them too. The star, Lieh Lo, was a known actor in Chinese theaters. The mostly Chinese audience enjoyed this film immensely. The audience buzz while leaving this film gives the final satisfaction to me.

      On Times Square, this film was an action comedy...probably unintentionally. I enjoyed it here too but for different reasons. The crowd was ethnic and quite energetic. From the start, the movie made you laugh. As soon as the audience heard those strange British accents come from those Chinese actors the movie turned into a violent and gory cartoon. Most American audiences saw this kind of gore in a horror film not in an action film. The action sequences blew the audience away. Unfortunately, the movie studios saw that they enjoyed it so much that, bad dubbing and unnecessary violence became a kung fu flick formula.

      I had fun seeing this movie with an American audience but enjoyed it much more in Chinatown. Some films can pass the test of time but the dubbed version of FFoD can't. The original "King Boxer" is still enjoyable...a CLASSIC!
      Boodikka

      Beginning of a craze......

      In retrospect, this is indeed a mediocre example of early '70s kung fu product. However, fans of the genre should not forget that this was the film that began the martial arts craze. It established the typical themes of later films: Chinese/Japanese antipathy, over-the-top cartoonish violence (the eye gouge!), as well as the "rival school" conflicts. Not anywhere in the quality of later films such as "Enter the Dragon" or the unusual "Challenge of the Ninja", it still remains a rich piece of nostalgia for those who sat entranced in theatres watching men fight and fly around movie screens during the early '70s.
      8winner55

      recommended.

      Five fingers of death: Although previous Shaw Martial Arts epics had shown the influence of the American cowboy genre, none had paid such open tribute to it as this one, especially in the saloon fight scene. And though Shaw Bros. films had borrowed from the Japanese chambara (swordfight) genre before, none had done so with such success as this one. i suppose some of this had to do with the fact that the director originated from Korea, and thus brought a non-Chinese perspective to such borrowings, which certainly raises some interesting questions about culture; but in any event, this film presented real innovations in technology and technique in Hong Kong action films. for the first time in Hong Kong, the camera was given access to the whole of any given set, which meant shots from many different angles, such as the low-angle interior shot showing the ceiling of a room (the original American innovation of which usually credited to John Ford), or the high angle long shot that allowed visualization of a large ground area, or the frontal tracking shot.

      It is true that this was not the first hand-to-hand combat film of real cinematic substance - that remains Wang Yu's 'Chinese Boxer'; but on a commercial level, Shaw Bros. were right to choose 'Five Fingers' as their first major release to the West because, one might say, it was the 'least Chinese' of their action films, that is, the least dependent on purely Chinese theater traditions. Although this made no impression on the American critics at the time (who universally trashed the picture), it wasn't lost on American audiences, especially among African Americans, whose culture had always been - by necessity - an eclectic patchwork of borrowed elements and innovation. In 'Five Fingers' they were given the opportunity to discover the core of the story, in the earnest young man forced to make the extra effort to overcome social barriers and betrayal in order to have his merit recognized. This seems to be an issue universal to Modernity, but each culture has its own way of expressing and resolving it; 'Five Fingers' presented it in a way many Americans could relate to as well as Chinese.

      So is the film now only of historical value? Certainly not. For one thing this issue hasn't gone away. Secondly, some of the innovations leave much of the film looking as fresh today as it did on first release. Also the action is well-staged, and the performances, though a little too earnest, are crisp. The film is a might over-long, but the story does cover a lot of ground. And there are marvelous set-pieces through-out, such as the saloon confrontation, the fight on the road to the contest, the odd double finale.

      definitely looks better on a theater screen, but still impressive for home viewing: recommended.
      7dee.reid

      "The martial arts movie that started it all!" some anonymous movie critic

      Hong Kong filmmaker Chang Chang Ho's 1972 martial arts movie epic "Five Fingers of Death" is widely considered by a great many film experts and kung-fu movie fanatics to be the martial arts movie that started it all.

      Being released in 1972, it was phase-two of the three-step process that would lead to the explosion of martial arts movies in the West - "Billy Jack" (1971), with its famous Hapkido showdown in the park, was released the year before, and Bruce Lee starred in "Enter the Dragon" (1973) two years later, thereby solidifying martial arts movies' place in Western cinema.

      But what is all the hoopla about regarding "Five Fingers of Death"? The movie, with its terrible dubbing, explosive (if not highly improbable) action sequences and technical flaws and all, has a plot, albeit a very thin one. Chih-Hao (the late Lo Lieh) is a young and dedicated student of Chinese gong-fu who is selected to represent his school in an upcoming martial arts tournament. His teacher offers to allow him to self-train in the "Iron Fist" style of fighting, a style so deadly that it could very easily kill a man with only one blow.

      Additionally, Chih-Hao's arrival at the school coincides with a violent conflict with a rival school, its students, and a trio of murderous heavy hitters from Japan. Before you know it, a major setback threatens Chih-Hao's training, and his ability to represent his beloved school in the upcoming tournament.

      Let me just say that "Five Fingers of Death" is in fact the movie that started it all. As another viewer mentioned, "Five Fingers of Death" helped to set a lot of standards in martial arts movies over the next three decades - Asian, European, and North American martial arts movies. Such standards include the dedicated student, the learning of patience and endurance, conflicts between rival schools, the intense ethnic animosity between the Chinese and Japanese, and learning a system of fighting for that good old-fashioned action movie motive: revenge. "Five Fingers of Death" would also serve as a major influence on American filmmaker Quentin Tarantino's "Kill Bill" movies (Tarantino borrows quite liberally from this project, among many others, just so you know).

      The acting is pretty good, considering the fact that this is a martial arts movie from the early 1970s, the best of which is Lo Lieh. As the atypical student of the martial arts, his performance is quite groundbreaking, though upon first glance at this movie you wouldn't really know it because of how that particular character arc has been done to death so many times over the years. He's quite humble in his acting, doing anything he can to persevere over his enemies and not fight them in anger or stoop to their level of stupidity or arrogance. Also, when he suffers his major setback, it does make your heart sink a little bit because it's so brutal and you wonder if he's going to recover enough to realize his life-long ambition.

      "Five Fingers of Death" is a classic in every sense. It's by no means perfect, and viewers would be crazy to expect something on the caliber of the "Godfather" of martial arts movies. What it does offer you is the ultimate example of Eastern hand-to-hand combat from the time before Eastern cinema was a major fixture in the West.

      7/10

      P.S.: "Enter the Dragon" Bolo Yeung also appears as the Mongolian street fighter near the beginning of the film.
      8bart-117

      MUST-SEE for Kung Fu Fans

      "Five Fingers of Death" is a classic of 70's kung fu cinema. As the film that "broke out" HK cinema to the west, this is a must see for any serious fan of the genre. It's also a damn entertaining film, with hard-hitting, non-stop action, solid and mostly believable fight choreography and great over-the-top 70's era dubbing ("Oh I see ... so you want it THE HARD WAY!! HWAA!!").

      "Five Fingers" is an eye-for-an-eye revenge tale ... and I mean literally, eye for an eye! It's great to see Lo Lieh portraying a hero. He played so many great villains later in his career - including Pai Mei in the classic FIST OF THE WHITE LOTUS, which was one of the characters Tarantino used in creating the Pai Mei of KILL BILL.

      My only complaint is that I wish there was a better quality DVD - mine looks like it was a VHS transfer. Overall this is a great film - don't miss it!

      Bart Blackstone Film Club - Hollywood, CA

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      Trama

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      Lo sapevi?

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      • Quiz
        The English dubbed version, released through Warner Brothers, was the film that launched the craze for "kung fu" movies in the United States.
      • Citazioni

        Yin Yin's Dad: Chi-Hao, can you afford to be selfish, when so much is at stake?

      • Versioni alternative
        Although the UK cinema version was intact the 1986 Warner video was cut by 7 secs by the BBFC to remove a double ear clap and shots of a victims severed eyeballs. The 2009 DVD is fully uncut.
      • Connessioni
        Featured in Sneak Previews: Take 2: Movies That Changed the Movies (1979)

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      Dettagli

      Modifica
      • Data di uscita
        • 28 aprile 1972 (Hong Kong)
      • Paese di origine
        • Hong Kong
      • Lingua
        • Mandarino
      • Celebre anche come
        • Five Fingers of Death
      • Luoghi delle riprese
        • Hong Kong, Cina
      • Azienda produttrice
        • Shaw Brothers
      • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

      Specifiche tecniche

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      • Tempo di esecuzione
        1 ora 45 minuti
      • Mix di suoni
        • Mono
      • Proporzioni
        • 2.35 : 1

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