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IMDbPro

Wu quan

  • 1976
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
138
YOUR RATING
Jackie Chan and Dean Shek in Wu quan (1976)
ActionComedy

A woman uses her knowledge of kung fu to kill many warriors by kicking them in the ribs and head.A woman uses her knowledge of kung fu to kill many warriors by kicking them in the ribs and head.A woman uses her knowledge of kung fu to kill many warriors by kicking them in the ribs and head.

  • Director
    • Chi-Hwa Chen
  • Writers
    • Hsin-Yi Chang
    • Ching-Kang Yao
  • Stars
    • Pu-Liao Hsu
    • Angela Mao
    • Dean Shek
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    138
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Chi-Hwa Chen
    • Writers
      • Hsin-Yi Chang
      • Ching-Kang Yao
    • Stars
      • Pu-Liao Hsu
      • Angela Mao
      • Dean Shek
    • 8User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos4

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    Top cast19

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    Pu-Liao Hsu
    Pu-Liao Hsu
    • Madman Lu
    • (as Po-Lu Hsiao)
    Angela Mao
    Angela Mao
    • Fei Fei
    Dean Shek
    Dean Shek
    • Bird Egg
    • (as Tien Shih)
    Kai Chia
    Kai Chia
    • Mu Fa-Shan
    Paul Chun
    Paul Chun
    • Ku Cheng-yuan
    • (as Chin Pey)
    Ting Chao
    Ting Chao
    Chi-Hwa Chen
    Hou Kuang Chi
    Shao Hsiao
    Sun Jung-Chi
      Shih-Hao Ko
        Wen-Tai Li
        Wen-Tai Li
        Pao Lu
        Yung-Ku Sun
        Ai-Chi Wang
        Heng Wang
        Tai-Liang Wang
        Wang Yao
        Wang Yao
          • Director
            • Chi-Hwa Chen
          • Writers
            • Hsin-Yi Chang
            • Ching-Kang Yao
          • All cast & crew
          • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

          User reviews8

          5.6138
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          Featured reviews

          8geek3866

          "Agile monkey picking peaches."

          Very funny Angela Mao vehicle. She plays a character named Fei Fei who is seeking vengeance for the deaths of some friends she just met, as well as trying to help two older kung-fu masters decide who is the better fighter. Much comedy is provided by these two men. One is a drunk with a prominent red nose and the other is smoking something that causes hilariously goofy music to play whenever he takes a hit off his pipe. Angela is very funny, mixing in a good deal of slapstick with straight fighting, in the various combat scenes. Also funny are nods to both Clint Eastwood's man with no name and Henry Mancini's Pink Panther theme. Recommended to those looking for a more light hearted martial arts flick.
          8ckormos1

          A fun to watch martial arts comedy and one of the best of 1976

          The movie starts with two screwball kung fu masters sparring. They have bee equal in ability for years and fighting over who is best. Angela Mao comes forward with a proposition. They both teach her their styles and she will fight using one or the other to determine once and for all the best. That is all that is needed for plot. The rest will be martial arts comedy. This was the recipe for success in the coming transition of the genre.

          Angela is frequently mistaken for a man in this movie. If you are unfamiliar with this genre this might seem absurd. It's like this, if the character is wearing male clothes then everyone sees only a man. Westerners will also be unable to tell the difference between male and female clothes. The reveal comes when the woman lets down her hair. Everyone is then amazed that she was a woman all along. This also might seem absurd because the men also have hair just as long. So now you know the rules. They make no sense but now you know!

          A movie like this lives or dies by the fights. The acting will be overacting, mugging for the camera, and double takes, and nothing more. The character development is nonexistent. The plot already set up in the first scene.

          My review and rating is based on the fights. There has to be a lot of fights. This movie might have more fights than any movie ever. Dr. Craig D. Reid in his book "The Ultimate Guide to Martial Arts Movies of the 1970s" calculated that 53.26% of the run time of this movie was fight action. A frequent problem with movies that have a lot of fighting is that the action can quickly start to all look alike. I did not see that as a problem in this movie. The quality of the fighting requires power, speed, and focus. A punch should look like it would really hurt. The moves must also be fast and smooth. There should be no hesitation, jerkiness, or uneven pacing with punches and blocks. Finally, the hits have to make contact or at least come close enough not to be obvious. All of this can be accomplished with practice but the time for practice was a luxury back then. Film was also expensive so if it wasn't good on the first take as long as it was good enough they moved on.

          There are also details in fight choreography such as using the fight to advance the plot or reveal the character of the fighter. In 1976 these ideas were rarely used.

          Rather than over complicate everything, here's all you need in a review for this movie. "Dance of Death" is a fun to watch martial arts comedy and as a fun to watch martial arts comedy I rate it as one of the best martial arts movies of 1976.
          6sarastro7

          A must for the Angela Mao fan

          This is a movie for Angela Mao fans. Most others will be disappointed, but for the Mao fan it is unmissable.

          Angela plays a (male) beggar who's involved with a kung fu school. When her school is attacked by an evil rival school, she is chased into the countryside where she immediately discovers two elderly kung fu masters (the landscape must be crawling with them). These two are fighting each other for fun, trying to find out who's best. For the last 20 years, they have been meeting every five years to test their skills against each other, but it's always a draw. Angela suggests that they teach their styles to her, and then she can use it on some bad guys, and whoever's styles are most effective, will be triumphant. The old guys cannot resist this, and start teaching her.

          As a result, the movie is totally full of both training and fighting against enemies. Enemies are everywhere, it seems, and revenge is mentioned often; it is apparently just about the only thing kung fu is used for. I think this is another part of the movie's intentional genre satire.

          Dance of Death is primarily a comedy; all elements of the story and acting are devoted to comedy. Most of the comedy is so silly as to be awful, but little bits of it are all right, largely thanks to Angela Mao's charisma and cheerful acting. She hams it up as a man, effectively exaggerating everything for comedic value. I don't think she's supposed to be a woman dressed as a man; I think she's actually *playing* a man, with her obvious female wiles (and the dancing bit) simply being part of the movie's intentional comedy.

          The movie, although it has its funny points, would be something of a loss if it wasn't for Angela Mao herself. She is many classes above the rest, and a joy to behold. She has marvelously beautiful moves, and is herself marvelously beautiful - at the top of her career here, I would say. Because the movie and much of the fighting is comical, there is indeed a certain intensity lacking. A previous reviewer mentioned how the fights often look like "carefully planned, elaborate stage performance", as they often do in the not-quite-first-rate kung fu movies, and this is true. It tends to get rather dull to see a lot of formal acrobatics where the combatants rarely if ever touch each other, and the whole sequence often feels highly artificial. However, I will say that Angela Mao makes the fights in this movie look better than that. Her every move is obviously expert and admirably graceful, and for a kung fu fan it is absolutely delicious eye-candy. Much of the movie commands your very close attention because you don't want to miss any of the cool fighting. That's a good thing for a martial arts movie to do.

          The main bad guy of the movie, that Angela and others labor to beat, practices something called "upside-down horse boxing", which is simultaneously immensely cool and immensely silly; in short, pretty outrageous. And speaking of silly, the movie parodies strange kung fu styles by inventing a "dancing girl" or "concubine" style, after which the movie is named, but which in fact only plays a minor role in the story. It is an intensely comical element, and of course Angela Mao makes it look very cute.

          My Rarescope DVD was cheap and well worth the price. Still, despite being a recent release, the poor-looking (and poor-reading!) subtitles are hard-coded from some old cinema reel, which is a disappointment. The DVD also has an English dubbing track, with dialog that is different from the still present hard-coded subtitles. I often despair at why the heck we never (never!) get proper, professional subs for movies like these. Without knowing what they're *really* saying, we're never really given a full and whole version of the movie. :-(

          Jackie Chan's name is on the DVD cover, which is something of a misnomer. He was "stunt coordinator" on the movie, but whether that also means action choreographer, I don't know - I doubt it. It's true that some of Angela's acting and fighting style look very Chan-ish, but I don't think Jackie's influence was all that pervasive here.

          Without Angela Mao, the movie would not be worthwhile, rating at most a 3 or 4 or so. But with her, it is very worthwhile for fans of her, and receives from me a 6 out of 10 rating. It's even possible I may later emend the rating to a 7.
          10shroomgazing

          Perfect beginner Kung Fu comedy a drunk review

          The story begins with Angela Mao's character running into 2 kung fu master's with their own unique style fighting eachother. You have the typical beggar drunken master and what I'm assuming to be an opium pipe smoking master who've been fighting for 20 years but have always ended up in a tie. Angela Mao's character convinces these 2 master's to teach her their unique styles in order to see which master's style is truly the best. The story is a bit complicated but also very simple. Angela Mao finds herself defending a runaway kung fu student that's fleeing from the bird clan. The bird clans goal is to finish off the lineage of an old kung fu fighter that killed their master's brother. Anyways Angela Mao defeats the bird clan that is comprised of 3 dumb and silly goons. Although she defeats these goons, their master's are angered by this, since Angela's interference means that the runaway was able to get away without being killed. The master's take this into their own hands and track down the runaway to his uncles school of kung fu, there they defeat and kill everyone except for Angela Mao who was saved by the runaway who decided to sacrificed himself. Thus a story of revenge unfolds. Angela Maos character spends most of the movie training and defeating the goons and the master's servant in a very comedic way. During most of the later half of the fights Angela Mao uses both of her master's techniques which they keep track of inorder to determine who's kung fu style is best, but Angela purposefully uses both styles an even amount so as to make her master's think that they're evenly matched. It's quite funny seeing them argue that their technique is winning just for Angela to switch styles and even the playing field. The finale of the movie has Angela fighting both the main evil master (who of course has white hair, cause that's how you know a master is both evil and an expert at kung fu) and his protégé. So here's my personal opinion on the movie itself, I think that Angela Mao's character is depicted as a man because she's an orphan that's been disheveled from constant traveling and homelessness thus appearing rugged and worn out. What I loved about the ending is that in order to defeat the main villain she has to use a (dancing style) against his crazy horse style. Which really depicts her femininity and her soft fluidness of a woman. The femininity of her style gets to a point in which neither of her masters wants to take credit for it which is quite hilarious. All in all I think this movie is a perfect watch if you're drunk, not cause it's bad but because it's funny and enjoyable.
          7ebiros2

          Angela Mao's version of the "Drunken Master"

          The movie is bit like the "Drunken Master", and maybe it's no coincidence that Jackie Chan is the martial arts director in this movie (opening credit states "Sing Lung" which is Jackie's Chinese name).

          The movie wouldn't have worked if someone with Angela Mao's kung fu skill wasn't playing the part. Her moves are crisp, and always ends in a beautiful pose after she's finished with the move.

          The movie has Taiwanese look and feel to it, and I wouldn't be surprised if it was made in Taiwan. They did one thing right in this movie, and that is to give starring role to Angela Mao. Usually she's co-stared with some other less talented actors which spoils the movie.

          Honestly, this is one of the best choreographed Angela Mao movie, and is recommended for viewing by all Angela Mao fans.

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          Storyline

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          • Connections
            Featured in Top Fighter 2 (1996)

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          Details

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          • Release date
            • 1979 (Hong Kong)
          • Countries of origin
            • Hong Kong
            • Taiwan
          • Language
            • Mandarin
          • Also known as
            • Dance of Death
          • Production company
            • Fortuna Film Company
          • See more company credits at IMDbPro

          Tech specs

          Edit
          • Runtime
            • 1h 30m(90 min)
          • Color
            • Color
          • Sound mix
            • Mono
          • Aspect ratio
            • 2.35 : 1

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