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La Fureur de Shaolin

Original title: Nan Shao Lin yu bei Shao Lin
  • 1978
  • R
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
La Fureur de Shaolin (1978)
ActionDrama

A devious Qing general pits the South and the North Shaolin schools against each other by inviting three fighters from each school, makes them compete against each other, and whoever loses h... Read allA devious Qing general pits the South and the North Shaolin schools against each other by inviting three fighters from each school, makes them compete against each other, and whoever loses he kills, and blames it on the other school.A devious Qing general pits the South and the North Shaolin schools against each other by inviting three fighters from each school, makes them compete against each other, and whoever loses he kills, and blames it on the other school.

  • Director
    • Cheh Chang
  • Writers
    • Cheh Chang
    • Kuang Ni
  • Stars
    • Feng Lu
    • Sheng Chiang
    • Chien Sun
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    1.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Cheh Chang
    • Writers
      • Cheh Chang
      • Kuang Ni
    • Stars
      • Feng Lu
      • Sheng Chiang
      • Chien Sun
    • 9User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos24

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    Top cast28

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    Feng Lu
    Feng Lu
    • Pao Sen Tsao (Chin Kan Palm)
    Sheng Chiang
    Sheng Chiang
    • Yang Chung Fei (Butterfly Pole)
    Chien Sun
    Chien Sun
    • Su Fong (Whirlwind Kick)
    Phillip Chung-Fung Kwok
    Phillip Chung-Fung Kwok
    • Ho Ying Wu (Fishtail Pole)
    • (as Kuo Chui)
    Meng Lo
    Meng Lo
    • Chu (Mantis)
    • (as Lo Meng)
    Pai Wei
    • Mai Fong (Wing Chun)
    Lung-Wei Wang
    Lung-Wei Wang
    • General Pu
    Dick Wei
    Dick Wei
    • South Shaolin teacher #1
    • (as Tu Lung)
    Tai-Ping Yu
    • South Shaolin teacher #3
    Shen Chan
    Shen Chan
    • Grand Master Mai Qi
    Chih-Chiang Chen
    Chih-Lu Chen
    Hung Chen
    Miao Ching
    Miao Ching
    • Woodcutter Zhu
    Mai-Li Chou
    Kwok Wing Ha
      Yu-Lung Hsiao
      Yu-Lung Hsiao
      You-Hsing Lai
      • Director
        • Cheh Chang
      • Writers
        • Cheh Chang
        • Kuang Ni
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews9

      6.91.3K
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      Featured reviews

      10tanishaturk

      Another great movie directed by Chang Cheh

      When I saw the Unbeatable Dragon also known as Invincible Shaolin I was very impressed with the movie. There was a good story line to it and great acton sequences. With all my favorite guys in it. Chiang Sheng is my number 1 favorite in all the movies because he was the cutest. There where others but I will leave something to talk about next time. Sincerely, The Biggest Venom Fan Ever
      8BrianDanaCamp

      The Five Venoms are back in a clever tale of Shaolin vs. Shaolin

      INVINCIBLE SHAOLIN (1978), directed by Chang Cheh, is almost a perfect kung fu film. It's got a cast of some of the best fighter-actors working at Shaw Bros. at the time, including the five who were collectively known as the Five Venoms; it employs some excellent training sequences; and it pits three of its cast against three equally matched opponents in the film's final 15 minutes for some of the most breathtaking duels seen in any of these films. The plot involves a Manchu general (Wang Lung Wei) and the devious machinations he undertakes to root out and neutralize potential foes of the regime who are practicing kung fu at Shaolin Temple. On the pretext of recruiting trainers for his soldiers, he pits three experts from the northern branch of Shaolin against their counterparts from South Shaolin. When the South Shaolin experts die by an act of treachery, with the deaths publicly blamed on wounds inflicted by the North Shaolin men, the South Shaolin master recruits three more experts, two of whom also die in fights with the North Shaolin men. The master then recruits two more, joining the one survivor, but sends each off separately to hidden masters to train in specific techniques to combat the experts from North Shaolin. Thus, enmity is created between the two branches of Shaolin, all to serve the interests of the Manchu rulers.

      We get a series of hard-hitting kung fu battles right at the beginning, followed by scenes of extensive training in different techniques. We see Lo Meng, as one of the new South Shaolin champions, forced to do push-ups on top of a well, with eggs placed under his hands. Every time he succeeds in doing them without breaking the eggs, the master gives him a new challenge, which causes him to break the eggs again. Only when he finishes the final variation without breaking the eggs will he be ready. Another expert (Kuo Chui) has to learn stick fighting, while another (Wei Pai) has to practice close-quarter combat. Each training sequence is methodically structured so we can see exactly what kind of fighting technique they're being trained in and what the end result will be. When we see the final fights, we understand exactly how these fighters developed their skills.

      In the meantime, the three Northern Shaolin experts train the soldiers and romance three local girls, two fruit vendors from the adjacent town and a maid from the palace. (Kara Hui Ying Hung, a female fighting star in her own right—MY YOUNG AUNTIE, LADY IS THE BOSS—plays the maid, while Niu Niu, from BRAVE ARCHER 2 and THE SWIFT SWORD—plays one of the vendors.) In the course of these scenes, the Northern Shaolin men, played by Lu Feng, Chiang Sheng and Sun Chien, meet and have brief interactions with the Southern Shaolin men, whom they determine are worthy of respect.

      Eventually, the three South Shaolin champions show up at court to confront the Northern Shaolin men. By this point, all six are wracked with doubts and suspect they should all be allies rather than opponents. They fight anyway, with not so predictable results. The fights are sheer poetry in motion, particularly when Chiang Sheng and Kuo Chui face each other. It's like watching two great dancers in a duet. The action is photographed on large, well-lit indoor sets with beautiful décor in the background. Eventually, the final confrontation expands to include the General and his men, leading to a spectacular battle which spreads throughout the palace. Wang Lung Wei, as the General, was no slouch in the fighting arts either and makes quite a formidable foe. I've seen all of the films featuring the Five Venoms and believe this is one of the best, on a par with—and maybe surpassing—THE FIVE VENOMS (1978), the film that started it all. This film once played in the U.S. under the title, UNBEATABLE DRAGON. I watched it in its remastered version, in Mandarin with English subtitles, on an R3 DVD from Hong Kong's Celestial Pictures.
      7gavin6942

      Fight!

      Three North Shaolin teachers (Lu Feng, Chang Sheng, and Sun Chien) are called on by the Manchus to teach their soldiers and are urged to challenge the current South Shaolin teachers. They defeat the South Shaolin teachers and, that night, the head general (Wang Lung Wei) kills the South Shaolin teachers and blames their death on the North Shaolin teachers.

      What does this film have going for it? For one, this is one of the few Venom films featuring Wei Pai (the Snake). And as another reviewer points out, "Sometimes dramatic and rarely violent, the action is carefully choreographed and edited for maximum visceral and emotional entertainment." Cinematography is key in kung fu movies, because it is all about the action and choreography... which is captured perfectly here.

      Another reviewer notes that this was made "while a drunken Jackie Chan was farting in people's faces and sticking frogs down his underpants." Indeed! Maybe the Shaw Brothers and Chang Cheh are not as respected as John Woo, looking back now it seems that their films are the more authentic -- and more fun -- martial arts films of the time.
      gwerq

      Standard Stuff

      This Kung Fu film from the Shaw brothers is quite entertaining, but lacks the self-sufficiency and consistence of their earlier "Five Venoms" and now seems dated and slow-paced. However, there are some classic moments, such as the final battle and one of the most hysterically funny death scenes ever! Otherwise, this is merely an okay addition to the Kung Fu genre.
      7BA_Harrison

      They ain't so invincible.

      Three kung fu experts (Feng Lu, Chiang Sheng, and Sun Chien) from the North Shaolin temple are summoned to train the Qing army, but must first prove themselves in a friendly fight against the current South Shaolin trainers. North wipe the floor with their cocksure opponents. Later that day, in a move designed to pit North vs South and destroy Shaolin once and for all, devious Qing General Pu (Wang Lung-wei) kills the shamed South Shaolin trainers, pinning the blame on the new arrivals from the North.

      On hearing of his students' deaths, the South Shaolin master sends three more of his men to exact revenge, but this time around, two of them are accidentally killed by the Northerners, the third injured fighter returning to his temple to relay the bad news. Realising that none of his students are good enough to beat the North Shaolin, the South Shaolin teacher picks three more men (played by Lo Mang, Kuo Chui and Pai Wei), each to train under a different kung fu master. Six months later, the trio leave to face the North Shaolin, even though both North and South now suspect that they are being manipulated.

      With the Five Venoms on top form, kung fu fans can rightfully expect some astonishing old school martial arts action in Chang Cheh's Invincible Shaolin, including an entertaining training sequence that shows off the impressive skills of Lo Mang, Kuo Chui and Pai Wei (Lo Mang does one finger press-ups with a large polystyrene rock placed on his back!!!) and a wonderfully bloody final battle that makes use of lots of red paint as North and South battle it out before joining forces to kick some well-deserving Qing butt. Be warned though, even though evil General Pu gets his comeuppance, it's not without several of the supposedly invincible Shaolin fighters also buying the farm (the Northern fighters dying in front of their helpless fiancées).

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      Storyline

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      • Connections
        References Hong quan yu yong chun (1974)

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      FAQ13

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • November 19, 1978 (Hong Kong)
      • Country of origin
        • Hong Kong
      • Languages
        • Mandarin
        • Cantonese
      • Also known as
        • Invincible Shaolin
      • Production company
        • Shaw Brothers
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        1 hour 38 minutes
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 2.35 : 1

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