VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,5/10
1076
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA Hong Kong taxi driver's life horribly falls apart after accidentally hitting a sorcerer with his cab. He decides to seek the sorcerer's help to turn the curse on his enemies at the expense... Leggi tuttoA Hong Kong taxi driver's life horribly falls apart after accidentally hitting a sorcerer with his cab. He decides to seek the sorcerer's help to turn the curse on his enemies at the expense of his own life.A Hong Kong taxi driver's life horribly falls apart after accidentally hitting a sorcerer with his cab. He decides to seek the sorcerer's help to turn the curse on his enemies at the expense of his own life.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Norman Chu
- Anthony Fang
- (as Shao-Chiang Hsu)
Maria Jo
- Irene Chou
- (as Chih-Hui Hsuan)
Jung Wang
- Doctor (Guest star)
- (as Yung Wang)
Man-Biu Pak
- Taoist
- (as Wen-Piao Pai)
Wai Lam
- Casino Patron
- (as Wei Lin)
Recensioni in evidenza
I have been putting this off for a few years (I have had the DVD since 2009) mainly because I thought it was going to be shockfest that outdid The Boxer's Omen in gonzo-style horror. Well it was not even close to The Boxer's Omen which still holds a place deep in the suppressed subconscious of my cranium (actually it is more weird and gross than actually scary). In fact this has to be one of the most overstated and over-hyped horror films of Hong Kong though this is not a horrible film.
Chow (Phillip Ko: The Boxer's Omen, Shaolin Intruders) interrupts black magic by inadvertently saving the life of a black magic priest who is being chased down by an angry mob. Because of this the priest says at best he will get very sick and at worst his whole family will die. Since this is a horror film we know which scenario is going to take place. A film with him just being sick would not be as fun. But it is especially hilarious that it seems that the angry mob gets off clean and that he picked up the priest far from where the incantation went awry. I am probably over-thinking this.
Chow's wife Irene has been cheating on him because of his lowly taxi driver job, taxi drivers are a deranged lot (ask Anthony Wong), and his hair (seriously one of the worst wigs I have seen, worse than a Sammo Hung haircut). She is enticed by playboy Anthony Fong Ming (Norman Chu Siu-Keung: Bastard Swordsman) who visits her job of dealing cards and showers her with money, gifts, better hair (to be fair to Phillip check out Norman's perm in Hong Kong Godfather) and affection. One night those two adulterers have a fight and she gets out of the car and goes off by herself. Never good to be alone late at night when ruffians are about. She is confronted by two young hooligans who chase her down, one rapes her and ultimately she gets killed (why she runs into an abandoned house I do not know, why there would be an abandoned house in an abandoned area Hong Kong I also do not know).
When Chow finds out she is dead, he is ultimately a suspect for about 15 seconds. Fong is another suspect and despondent Chow finds out about the affair. He gets bad ideas in his head and wants revenge at all costs for those involved and goes to the black magic priest (still dressed like a shirtless jungle native; I wonder if he goes to the store like that) to seek revenge. This requires that they dig out his wife's corpse and he is warned that his monomaniacal revenge will likely result in his demise as well. The corpse is used quite effectively and it is creepy, the most scary aspect of the film. You can see it on the cover of the DVD and poster.
Fans of horror could do worse by seeking this out. I do not think it is as unique/interesting/gratuitous as Black Magic or The Boxer's Omen out of the Shaw Brothers horror oeuvre and I would suggest seeking those out first. This film overdoes the sleazy exploitation aspect of it, elongates the nudity and the film comes off more as a voyeuristic exercise especially in the beginning which starts to drag on. The slow motion topless running scene becomes almost absurd in its length and its use of the zoom lens. But you do get the benefit of a few fight scenes decently done involving Phillip Ko (still mad about the outcome with Norman Chu) who proves once again that you should not mess with taxi drivers or Phillip Ko. You also get a variety of gross out moments, Taoist priests, scares all done better in a variety of Hong Kong films. However, when the ghost is seeded there are plenty of horror elements, while keeping the exploitation element alive, especially towards the finale that will be of interest to viewers. There you get to witness a creature that seems inspired by John Carpenter's The Thing while a segment from the soundtrack from Alien is played.
I have the R1 Image release and it has English and Spanish subtitles. It comes with the Mandarin mono dub only. The R3 IVL release comes with both the Cantonese and Mandarin dub. At the time of the Hong Kong audience would have heard the Cantonese soundtrack, but most of the transnational audience would have heard it in Mandarin. Since at the time post dubbing was the norm and multiple dialects were often used on set it does not matter as much to me. However, this is a controversial topic where some have to have the "preferred" dub. I personally would like a release from this time period to have both the Cantonese and Mandarin language, but I will take what I can get. There are plenty of the Image released Shaw Brothers trailers (not the original trailers) on this release, but no trailer for the movie.
Chow (Phillip Ko: The Boxer's Omen, Shaolin Intruders) interrupts black magic by inadvertently saving the life of a black magic priest who is being chased down by an angry mob. Because of this the priest says at best he will get very sick and at worst his whole family will die. Since this is a horror film we know which scenario is going to take place. A film with him just being sick would not be as fun. But it is especially hilarious that it seems that the angry mob gets off clean and that he picked up the priest far from where the incantation went awry. I am probably over-thinking this.
Chow's wife Irene has been cheating on him because of his lowly taxi driver job, taxi drivers are a deranged lot (ask Anthony Wong), and his hair (seriously one of the worst wigs I have seen, worse than a Sammo Hung haircut). She is enticed by playboy Anthony Fong Ming (Norman Chu Siu-Keung: Bastard Swordsman) who visits her job of dealing cards and showers her with money, gifts, better hair (to be fair to Phillip check out Norman's perm in Hong Kong Godfather) and affection. One night those two adulterers have a fight and she gets out of the car and goes off by herself. Never good to be alone late at night when ruffians are about. She is confronted by two young hooligans who chase her down, one rapes her and ultimately she gets killed (why she runs into an abandoned house I do not know, why there would be an abandoned house in an abandoned area Hong Kong I also do not know).
When Chow finds out she is dead, he is ultimately a suspect for about 15 seconds. Fong is another suspect and despondent Chow finds out about the affair. He gets bad ideas in his head and wants revenge at all costs for those involved and goes to the black magic priest (still dressed like a shirtless jungle native; I wonder if he goes to the store like that) to seek revenge. This requires that they dig out his wife's corpse and he is warned that his monomaniacal revenge will likely result in his demise as well. The corpse is used quite effectively and it is creepy, the most scary aspect of the film. You can see it on the cover of the DVD and poster.
Fans of horror could do worse by seeking this out. I do not think it is as unique/interesting/gratuitous as Black Magic or The Boxer's Omen out of the Shaw Brothers horror oeuvre and I would suggest seeking those out first. This film overdoes the sleazy exploitation aspect of it, elongates the nudity and the film comes off more as a voyeuristic exercise especially in the beginning which starts to drag on. The slow motion topless running scene becomes almost absurd in its length and its use of the zoom lens. But you do get the benefit of a few fight scenes decently done involving Phillip Ko (still mad about the outcome with Norman Chu) who proves once again that you should not mess with taxi drivers or Phillip Ko. You also get a variety of gross out moments, Taoist priests, scares all done better in a variety of Hong Kong films. However, when the ghost is seeded there are plenty of horror elements, while keeping the exploitation element alive, especially towards the finale that will be of interest to viewers. There you get to witness a creature that seems inspired by John Carpenter's The Thing while a segment from the soundtrack from Alien is played.
I have the R1 Image release and it has English and Spanish subtitles. It comes with the Mandarin mono dub only. The R3 IVL release comes with both the Cantonese and Mandarin dub. At the time of the Hong Kong audience would have heard the Cantonese soundtrack, but most of the transnational audience would have heard it in Mandarin. Since at the time post dubbing was the norm and multiple dialects were often used on set it does not matter as much to me. However, this is a controversial topic where some have to have the "preferred" dub. I personally would like a release from this time period to have both the Cantonese and Mandarin language, but I will take what I can get. There are plenty of the Image released Shaw Brothers trailers (not the original trailers) on this release, but no trailer for the movie.
High expectations can be a bad thing when it comes to viewing obscure exploitation films. The problem is, once you've finally seen the film in question, it's like all of the past descriptions and reviews of it that made you want to see it in the first place were for a different film completely. SEEDING OF A GHOST suffers from this very syndrome. While certainly odd and unique, I have to admit that I was disappointed by this. Don't be fooled by all the hype surrounding this in cult movie circles; it's not half as outrageous as you've probably been led to believe.
The plot is suitably contrived. A cab driver accidentally runs into a mysterious vagrant, who promptly scuttles off into the woods. Meanwhile, his wife Irene has begun an affair with a handsome married man; she asks him to marry her, he refuses, and later that night she ends up getting raped and murdered by a couple of hoodlums. The cabbie is inexplicably led to her body through supernatural means, and decides to take revenge. He goes to the aforementioned vagrant, who promptly digs up Irene's body and begins a series of black magic rituals that lead to all sorts of weird happening amongst the perps: one guy throws up worms over his dinner plate, another is tricked into eating brains, and the married man's wife is possessed. Without giving anything away, all of this eventually leads to a blood-soaked finale in which Irene sets out for a final revenge...
From all the reviews I had read about SEEDING OF A GHOST, I had been led to believe that it was an incredibly disgusting, disturbing and downright nasty little film. Well, only a portion of that is correct. This film is not bad at all, but it's hardly notable. It reminded me of an EC comic book like TALES FROM THE CRYPT: it's incredibly over-the-top and weird, but too silly to be taken seriously. And although not as comical as, say, MR. VAMPIRE or A Chinese GHOST STORY, this still has a sense of humor, albeit a very strange one.
One thing this film is is SLEAZY; there's an undercurrent of misogyny here that will not fly with a lot of Western viewers. All of the women are essentially dumb, slutty punching bags, and the film is packed with a number of leering, gratuitous nude scenes that are so blatant in their execution they're not even erotic. The truth is, by the one hour mark I was kind of fed up; I had been given nudity galore, sex, creepy atmosphere, explosions and multiple kung fu fights (!), but what I really wanted was some horror. This film's structure is totally disjointed; it's like the filmmakers were making it up as they went along.
Thankfully, there's the final ten minutes. As many other viewers have noted, the climax is worth viewing in itself. Think a more outrageous, blood-splattered Asian version of John Carpenter's THE THING, and you have the right idea. I wanted more of that! Overall, SEEDING OF A GHOST was hardly as off-the-wall, gross, and skin-crawling as I was hoping for. It's more in line with the rest of the Hong Kong films I've seen, in the sense that all it wants to do is please the viewer, not necessarily scare him or disturb him. Hong Kong fans should seek out the incredible (and very similar in tone) SEVENTH CURSE with Chow Yun-Fat over this one.
The plot is suitably contrived. A cab driver accidentally runs into a mysterious vagrant, who promptly scuttles off into the woods. Meanwhile, his wife Irene has begun an affair with a handsome married man; she asks him to marry her, he refuses, and later that night she ends up getting raped and murdered by a couple of hoodlums. The cabbie is inexplicably led to her body through supernatural means, and decides to take revenge. He goes to the aforementioned vagrant, who promptly digs up Irene's body and begins a series of black magic rituals that lead to all sorts of weird happening amongst the perps: one guy throws up worms over his dinner plate, another is tricked into eating brains, and the married man's wife is possessed. Without giving anything away, all of this eventually leads to a blood-soaked finale in which Irene sets out for a final revenge...
From all the reviews I had read about SEEDING OF A GHOST, I had been led to believe that it was an incredibly disgusting, disturbing and downright nasty little film. Well, only a portion of that is correct. This film is not bad at all, but it's hardly notable. It reminded me of an EC comic book like TALES FROM THE CRYPT: it's incredibly over-the-top and weird, but too silly to be taken seriously. And although not as comical as, say, MR. VAMPIRE or A Chinese GHOST STORY, this still has a sense of humor, albeit a very strange one.
One thing this film is is SLEAZY; there's an undercurrent of misogyny here that will not fly with a lot of Western viewers. All of the women are essentially dumb, slutty punching bags, and the film is packed with a number of leering, gratuitous nude scenes that are so blatant in their execution they're not even erotic. The truth is, by the one hour mark I was kind of fed up; I had been given nudity galore, sex, creepy atmosphere, explosions and multiple kung fu fights (!), but what I really wanted was some horror. This film's structure is totally disjointed; it's like the filmmakers were making it up as they went along.
Thankfully, there's the final ten minutes. As many other viewers have noted, the climax is worth viewing in itself. Think a more outrageous, blood-splattered Asian version of John Carpenter's THE THING, and you have the right idea. I wanted more of that! Overall, SEEDING OF A GHOST was hardly as off-the-wall, gross, and skin-crawling as I was hoping for. It's more in line with the rest of the Hong Kong films I've seen, in the sense that all it wants to do is please the viewer, not necessarily scare him or disturb him. Hong Kong fans should seek out the incredible (and very similar in tone) SEVENTH CURSE with Chow Yun-Fat over this one.
When some kind of male witch is disturbed in the process of robbing graves by a vengeful mob holding torches come to kill him, he runs across the road where he is immediately struck by a taxi driver. The driver sees the man under the wheel of his car, but then he teleports in the car seat behind him, apparently now safe from the mob. However, he warns the driver that now they have met, things will not go well for him: he is cursed.
The taxi driver doesn't seem to take much notice, and after all he has a beautiful woman at home, and we are treated to plentiful nudity as we are shown their romance, bathing together and apparently spraying each other with water in another scene. They really don't seem to be asking for much but to be together, but then the woman goes off the man almost immediately, and it is revealed she is cheating with another guy. However, while out with that guy, she runs into a pair of ne'er-do-wells, who eventually rape and inadvertently murder her.
Realising that he was being cuckolded and this led to his wife's death, our taxi driver hero seeks out the witch again, who puts curses on all the people who wronged him. We then get some admittedly striking, often revolting scenes of visions suffered by these characters, such as live worms pouring out of the mouth of one poor actor. They end in violent death, which while not realistically shown - one guy throws himself out of a window and hits the ground in the least realistic impact I've ever seen - are still gruesome and hard to watch.
I believe that toward the end the hero needed to enlist a "good witch" to save himself and others from the increasing madness of the bad witch he'd already contacted, but I'm not sure. Typically for a Category III flick from Hong Kong, the movie lets sense take a back seat in favour of increasingly shocking imagery, which while perhaps poor by contemporary Hollywood standards, is always creative and interesting.
I say check it out.
The taxi driver doesn't seem to take much notice, and after all he has a beautiful woman at home, and we are treated to plentiful nudity as we are shown their romance, bathing together and apparently spraying each other with water in another scene. They really don't seem to be asking for much but to be together, but then the woman goes off the man almost immediately, and it is revealed she is cheating with another guy. However, while out with that guy, she runs into a pair of ne'er-do-wells, who eventually rape and inadvertently murder her.
Realising that he was being cuckolded and this led to his wife's death, our taxi driver hero seeks out the witch again, who puts curses on all the people who wronged him. We then get some admittedly striking, often revolting scenes of visions suffered by these characters, such as live worms pouring out of the mouth of one poor actor. They end in violent death, which while not realistically shown - one guy throws himself out of a window and hits the ground in the least realistic impact I've ever seen - are still gruesome and hard to watch.
I believe that toward the end the hero needed to enlist a "good witch" to save himself and others from the increasing madness of the bad witch he'd already contacted, but I'm not sure. Typically for a Category III flick from Hong Kong, the movie lets sense take a back seat in favour of increasingly shocking imagery, which while perhaps poor by contemporary Hollywood standards, is always creative and interesting.
I say check it out.
Yang Chuan is the man who directed this film, SEEDING OF A GHOST (1983) for the legendary Hong Kong Shaw Brothers, who produced many martial art classics and many "explicit horrors" which are so rare not many know anything about them. SEEDING is among the most insane films I've seen and this hyper rare film surpassed most likely every expections I had, and those were very high. I knew Hong Kong film makers can create things which simply cannot be found from elsewhere, and in the horror genre, they are as unique as in action and fantasy, too.
SEEDING tells the story of a cab driver (Philip Ko), whose wife has a lover whom with she spends a lot of time. One night the wife, Irene, is attacked in the street and raped and killed by some hooligans. The taxi driver husband finds her and sadly becomes number one suspect for the murder. At the very beginning and during the credits of the film, the taxi driver met a strange fellow who said he knows about and practises black magic and other "voodoo related stuff." He said to the cab driver that things may not go very well for him from now on because they have met.. Now, after the murder of his wife, the taxi driver remembers this guy and tracks him down. He finds the ominous looking man, and wants to revenge the murder of his wife. The black magic warlock agrees and he creates a horrific curse on all those who were involved in the murder. What follows is a series of over-the-top gory and insane mayhem filled with black magic, devils, tentacle monsters, worms and other things one would expect finding from Hell itself.
This film is the final nail to the coffin of the fact that the Hong Kong film makers really know how to create dark horror films, which this kind of films are called among the cult cinema specialists. Other similar "dark horrors" are (I haven't managed to track these down yet) RAPE AFTER, BLACK MAGIC and BLACK MAGIC 2 aka REVENGE OF THE ZOMBIES. Many of these are produced by the Shaw Brothers and directed by man named Ho Men-Hua, and as far as I know, only RAPE AFTER isn't by Shaw and Ho, unlike many source books seem to say. I've heard this from one very reliable Asian cinema specialist who I believe of course in these difficult questions about these more-than-rare Asian films and oddities.
SEEDING OF A GHOST is dark with the capital D. There is smoke and shadows everywhere and only the beginning of the film has some genuine day light which seems peaceful and safe. But once the curse starts to affect, there's no hope for light or safety no more to the characters than the viewer! The effects are perhaps the most important elements here as they are so imaginative and detailed to the maximum effect. The monsters and creatures from the other side are as effective as in John Carpenter's The Thing (1982) for example, and the budget for SEEDING wasn't too big I think, so they are all created by great imagination and talent to spend the limited budget.
The gore filled and monster inhabited mayhem on screen is incredible. There is a "devil fetus" who explodes through the hapless mother who starts to feel pain in her belly. What comes from her stomach is equally horrific as in David Cronenberg's masterpiece The Fly (1986), and it's very close to the tentacle monster in Carpenter's The Thing, too. Especially SEEDING's finale, during which this devil fetus is born, too, is an amazing barrage of bloody and nightmarish terror which cannot be controlled by the hapless people trapped inside that fateful apartment. The devil fetus once it gets born kills its victims with nasty tentacles which impale and rip anybody hapless enough to get in touch with them. There's also some very graphic nightmare scenes before the ending, too, and one of these is also illustrated in Tom Weisser's Asian Trash Cinema Book next to SEEDING review. I mean the scene in which one of the rapists suddenly starts to vomit worms while eating his food. Also the scene in which the guy gets his spine cursed through his back in explicit detail is again something never before seen in any other horror effort. These Hong Kong directors can create something which necessarily doesn't require plenty of money, but are as (and often, more) effective and nerve shocking as those made with plenty of money but not so plenty of talent.
The dialogue and screenplay isn't too great at all, and the dialogue especially is inept. People say what they think and they say things which should not be said in any noteworthy film. Everybody always screams something like "What are you doing!" when character's stomach explodes or gets his spine ripped off by an invisible force. This kind of brainless dialogue is very usual with some Hong Kong films, and I hated to find it that much in SEEDING, too. But I came to conclusion that the film is perfect in its "dark DARK horror level" so I don't give this the lower rating it deserved because of these errors. If reviewed as a piece of cinema, this would definitely not get the 10 stars rating, but when reviewed as a piece of Hong Kong terror cinema and Asian cult cinema, then this gets easily the ten rating, because it is something I hadn't seen before and something I think isn't easily surpassed anymore. I hope I can track RAPE AFTER and others of its kind down soon and see can they surpass the insanity and impact of SEEDING OF A GHOST in any way. Have a good night's sleep!
SEEDING tells the story of a cab driver (Philip Ko), whose wife has a lover whom with she spends a lot of time. One night the wife, Irene, is attacked in the street and raped and killed by some hooligans. The taxi driver husband finds her and sadly becomes number one suspect for the murder. At the very beginning and during the credits of the film, the taxi driver met a strange fellow who said he knows about and practises black magic and other "voodoo related stuff." He said to the cab driver that things may not go very well for him from now on because they have met.. Now, after the murder of his wife, the taxi driver remembers this guy and tracks him down. He finds the ominous looking man, and wants to revenge the murder of his wife. The black magic warlock agrees and he creates a horrific curse on all those who were involved in the murder. What follows is a series of over-the-top gory and insane mayhem filled with black magic, devils, tentacle monsters, worms and other things one would expect finding from Hell itself.
This film is the final nail to the coffin of the fact that the Hong Kong film makers really know how to create dark horror films, which this kind of films are called among the cult cinema specialists. Other similar "dark horrors" are (I haven't managed to track these down yet) RAPE AFTER, BLACK MAGIC and BLACK MAGIC 2 aka REVENGE OF THE ZOMBIES. Many of these are produced by the Shaw Brothers and directed by man named Ho Men-Hua, and as far as I know, only RAPE AFTER isn't by Shaw and Ho, unlike many source books seem to say. I've heard this from one very reliable Asian cinema specialist who I believe of course in these difficult questions about these more-than-rare Asian films and oddities.
SEEDING OF A GHOST is dark with the capital D. There is smoke and shadows everywhere and only the beginning of the film has some genuine day light which seems peaceful and safe. But once the curse starts to affect, there's no hope for light or safety no more to the characters than the viewer! The effects are perhaps the most important elements here as they are so imaginative and detailed to the maximum effect. The monsters and creatures from the other side are as effective as in John Carpenter's The Thing (1982) for example, and the budget for SEEDING wasn't too big I think, so they are all created by great imagination and talent to spend the limited budget.
The gore filled and monster inhabited mayhem on screen is incredible. There is a "devil fetus" who explodes through the hapless mother who starts to feel pain in her belly. What comes from her stomach is equally horrific as in David Cronenberg's masterpiece The Fly (1986), and it's very close to the tentacle monster in Carpenter's The Thing, too. Especially SEEDING's finale, during which this devil fetus is born, too, is an amazing barrage of bloody and nightmarish terror which cannot be controlled by the hapless people trapped inside that fateful apartment. The devil fetus once it gets born kills its victims with nasty tentacles which impale and rip anybody hapless enough to get in touch with them. There's also some very graphic nightmare scenes before the ending, too, and one of these is also illustrated in Tom Weisser's Asian Trash Cinema Book next to SEEDING review. I mean the scene in which one of the rapists suddenly starts to vomit worms while eating his food. Also the scene in which the guy gets his spine cursed through his back in explicit detail is again something never before seen in any other horror effort. These Hong Kong directors can create something which necessarily doesn't require plenty of money, but are as (and often, more) effective and nerve shocking as those made with plenty of money but not so plenty of talent.
The dialogue and screenplay isn't too great at all, and the dialogue especially is inept. People say what they think and they say things which should not be said in any noteworthy film. Everybody always screams something like "What are you doing!" when character's stomach explodes or gets his spine ripped off by an invisible force. This kind of brainless dialogue is very usual with some Hong Kong films, and I hated to find it that much in SEEDING, too. But I came to conclusion that the film is perfect in its "dark DARK horror level" so I don't give this the lower rating it deserved because of these errors. If reviewed as a piece of cinema, this would definitely not get the 10 stars rating, but when reviewed as a piece of Hong Kong terror cinema and Asian cult cinema, then this gets easily the ten rating, because it is something I hadn't seen before and something I think isn't easily surpassed anymore. I hope I can track RAPE AFTER and others of its kind down soon and see can they surpass the insanity and impact of SEEDING OF A GHOST in any way. Have a good night's sleep!
A taxi driver is warned that he will experience bad luck, after his path crosses with that of a strange practitioner of black magic. Sure enough, his beautiful young wife soon embarks on an affair with a suave gambler. Shortly after, he is accused of murder when his spouse is raped and killed by two thugs. And if that wasn't enough, the poor bloke is crippled after trying to beat up his dead wife's lover.
Suitably upset, he decides to enlist the help of the strange sorcerer who first foretold his run of ill fortune, and, by using the dark powers of witchcraft, attempts to exact revenge on the man who stole his woman, and the two responsible for her death.
As 80s Hong Kong horror goes, this movie from the Shaw Brothers studio is a fairly typical example: the story is bizarre, there are plenty of moments that defy logic and it is loaded with shonky creatures and OTT gore. Throw in some gritty fight scenes, a brutal rape, and quite a bit of female nudity (including full frontal) from cute Asian women, and the result is an enjoyable slice of Eastern sleaze that never bores, and even sometimes surprises.
This is perhaps the only film where one might witness a man being sodomised with a giant match-stick, a spirit impregnate a putrefying corpse in mid-air, and a finalé in which a multi-tentacled foetus creature erupts bloodily from its 'mother' and attacks guests at a party.
Suitably upset, he decides to enlist the help of the strange sorcerer who first foretold his run of ill fortune, and, by using the dark powers of witchcraft, attempts to exact revenge on the man who stole his woman, and the two responsible for her death.
As 80s Hong Kong horror goes, this movie from the Shaw Brothers studio is a fairly typical example: the story is bizarre, there are plenty of moments that defy logic and it is loaded with shonky creatures and OTT gore. Throw in some gritty fight scenes, a brutal rape, and quite a bit of female nudity (including full frontal) from cute Asian women, and the result is an enjoyable slice of Eastern sleaze that never bores, and even sometimes surprises.
This is perhaps the only film where one might witness a man being sodomised with a giant match-stick, a spirit impregnate a putrefying corpse in mid-air, and a finalé in which a multi-tentacled foetus creature erupts bloodily from its 'mother' and attacks guests at a party.
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