Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaExpelled by a band of restless ghosts in his village, Taoist Priest Mao Ming, and his two spirit companions, visit another village to seek wealth. There, Ming meets Master Gau, the "Vampire ... Ler tudoExpelled by a band of restless ghosts in his village, Taoist Priest Mao Ming, and his two spirit companions, visit another village to seek wealth. There, Ming meets Master Gau, the "Vampire Buster," who is trying to defeat an evil Sorceress and her henchmen, whose goal is to conq... Ler tudoExpelled by a band of restless ghosts in his village, Taoist Priest Mao Ming, and his two spirit companions, visit another village to seek wealth. There, Ming meets Master Gau, the "Vampire Buster," who is trying to defeat an evil Sorceress and her henchmen, whose goal is to conquer the human race. Gau also informs Ming that humans and ghosts cannot co-exist peacefull... Ler tudo
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- (as Yun-Sang Ban)
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Avaliações em destaque
While this film is titled "Mr. Vampire Part 3," the usual hopping vampires do not make an appearance in this movie. However, this story is still full of horror fun and an intriguing plot to follow; the two Taoists priests attempt to rid their village of an evil Sorceress and her henchmen, bent on conquest of the human race, with the help of Master Gau's slapstick disciples and Mao Ming's friendly ghost companions. Thrown into the mix is a sequence where live bats attack the protagonists and a mummy-like ghost in pursuance of Ming - providing originality in the film.
Plenty of action, humor and suspense to entertain you throughout the movie, again overseen by Mr. Vampire director Ricky Lau. All these elements plus a delightful music score by Anders Nelsson make this film a great classic of the fantasy, horror and ghost genre and certainly a worthy "sequel" in the Mr. Vampire series.
Grade A
Nothing is really brought from the "Mr. Vampire" film, apart from maybe Lam Ching-Ying's character, (whether he is supposed to be the same actual man is never explained), but it doesn't really matter. The fantasy and horror elements in this film are great.
It has great comedy and great action sequences. The use of the magical and superstitious ideas are fascinating. And the Taoist priest rituals are very entertaining. The fight sequences have that typical chaotic Honk Kong cinema feel, but the continuity is fine and it holds up well to this day - it's sense of humour definitely helps.
It's much better than the second one, and for my tastes, as good as the first but in a different sense - it is not as accessible and requires that you be a least a little familiar with the background of the series, (however shallow that may be).
Skip the second one and treat this as the REAL sequel, I say.
The storyline in this third movie is once again set to take place in ancient China, for better or worse. Writers Wing-Keung Lo and Cheuk-Hon Szeto opted to tone down on the comedy elements that were abundant in the 1986 second movie, and that made for a somewhat more enjoyable viewing experience. The storyline, however, was pretty straight forward, but not overly outstanding.
Once again there are returning cast members from the previous two movies, with the likes of Ching-Ying Lam, Billy Lau and Chau-Sang Lau. "Ling Wan Sin Sang" also have the likes of Richard Ng, Corey Yuen and Sammo Kam-Bo Hung on the cast list, making it quite some talents on the screen. And it certainly was nice to see Richard Ng in the movie, because he brought a lot of comedy to the scenes.
At least this third movie was pretty much in the spirit of the previous two movies, so it was a fair enough movie to sit through.
The effects in "Ling Wan Sin Sang" are quite an improvement in comparison to the 1985 and 1986 movies, making it all the more enjoyable to watch.
My rating of director Ricky Lau's 1987 movie "Ling Wan Sin Sang" lands on a five out of ten stars.
A priest who rock ups in a town has two ghosts (his nephews) that he uses to scam people, by using them to do a haunting while then being hired to get rid of them. But that gets put on the back-burner when he bumps into the master and his loyal men. Putting things aside they join together to vanquish a witch and her army, but it ends up being no easy task..
An abundance of endearing slapstick humour, vividly staged costume and set-designs, flamboyantly up-tempo martial arts / choreographed stunts, wacky performances and gimmicky, but cleverly used special effects. Everything is piled on, while not always coming off (namely the humour -- as it's really in-your-face); it just remains too much fun and the rapid pacing means it never gets bog down for long. The story is busy, busy, busy and Leu's direction is expansively flashy. The atmospheric horror actually installs some intriguingly artistic visuals with the imaginatively violent thrills being evenly served alongside the comedy of errors the characters were finding themselves stuck in. Vampires might no feature, but you get some spooky, menacing demons / spirits for the motley, but dedicated crew to take on. Lam Ching-Ying returns again as the straight-face master, in quite a rock-solid and assured performance. Around him everyone is chipping in with playfully palatable turns; Richard Ng, Billy Lau and Ho Kin Wai.
Part 3 is a worthy, entertaining sequel.
Você sabia?
- ConexõesFollowed by Mr. Vampire IV (1988)
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- How long is Mr. Vampire Part 3?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 2.365.001