While possessed by an evil spirit, a man murders his daughter. A police detective investigating the case also becomes possessed. A good monk helps fight the evil spirit.While possessed by an evil spirit, a man murders his daughter. A police detective investigating the case also becomes possessed. A good monk helps fight the evil spirit.While possessed by an evil spirit, a man murders his daughter. A police detective investigating the case also becomes possessed. A good monk helps fight the evil spirit.
- Director
- Writer
- Stars
Melvin Wong
- Bobby Wong King-Sun
- (as Chin Shen Huang)
Fanny Fen-Ni
- Mary
- (as Fanny)
Jenny Liang
- (Guest star)
- (as Jen Ni Liang)
Hussein Abu Hassan
- Exorcist priest (introducing)
- (as Hussin Bin Abu Hassan)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Following the discovery of a dead body, a police detective who helped solve the case finds that the spirit who caused the murderer to embark on his killing spree has now possessed him and turns to a devout priest to before the necessary rituals in order to protect himself.
There was quite a lot to like with this one. One of the many positives of this one is the fact that there's such a deranged and wild atmosphere present in this one due to the black magic cursing involved. The way the spells are enacted in here are quite intense and often creepy, being that they're carried about in the one room where all the different black magic relics are shown from the skulls, black candles, strange jars lining the walls and the different pots and containers featuring all the ingredients to make their spells come to life. The way they include all the different objects here, from the silver bells on the strings of the ceramic boxes to carving out the writing with the special tree-branch and the special altar where they reside over during all the special ranting and enacting their spells, all combine together to give this one a rather creepy and frightening atmosphere which is what makes the film work as it does. This as well carries over into the rather fun curses that actually get played out here, from the black marks on the body that continually spread across them to the different artifacts turning into animals and other objects being turned into lethal and rather dangerous elements to attack their victim that it becomes all the more effective even before adding in the requisite vomiting up worms and maggots that is included in here. Once it finally gets to the spectacular spiritual battle between the two sorcerers at the end, there's just such an insanely wild and fun time here with the frenetic action enabling the two sides to engage in the battles against each other as we get to see the dueling priests throughout here fire some truly outrageous spells at each other. Cursing pictures in order to cause painful sores to appear on the body, causing their equipment to crumble into dust at the merest touch, bringing objects in the room to attack the other and other activities, there's such a wild and crazy assortment of black magic featured here that the film becomes a highly visceral experience on that alone. Even the other finale, from his battle to get free and how he reacts while under that control, makes this one quite fun and rather fun. What makes all this sorcery at the end work is the fact that the build-up exploring what happened to him here, from his relationship with the girl that's quite fun and innocent to the strained way he interacts with his daughter amid the slow-building realization of his curse, the set-up to this one manages to work quite nicely and gives this one the burgeoning storyline necessary to really fuel the rest of this one rather nicely. The only thing that doesn't really work here is the fact that there's the second affliction in the final moments rather than built up so that it really makes a rather strange inclusion. Otherwise, there's not much to dislike here.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence, Full Nudity and Language.
There was quite a lot to like with this one. One of the many positives of this one is the fact that there's such a deranged and wild atmosphere present in this one due to the black magic cursing involved. The way the spells are enacted in here are quite intense and often creepy, being that they're carried about in the one room where all the different black magic relics are shown from the skulls, black candles, strange jars lining the walls and the different pots and containers featuring all the ingredients to make their spells come to life. The way they include all the different objects here, from the silver bells on the strings of the ceramic boxes to carving out the writing with the special tree-branch and the special altar where they reside over during all the special ranting and enacting their spells, all combine together to give this one a rather creepy and frightening atmosphere which is what makes the film work as it does. This as well carries over into the rather fun curses that actually get played out here, from the black marks on the body that continually spread across them to the different artifacts turning into animals and other objects being turned into lethal and rather dangerous elements to attack their victim that it becomes all the more effective even before adding in the requisite vomiting up worms and maggots that is included in here. Once it finally gets to the spectacular spiritual battle between the two sorcerers at the end, there's just such an insanely wild and fun time here with the frenetic action enabling the two sides to engage in the battles against each other as we get to see the dueling priests throughout here fire some truly outrageous spells at each other. Cursing pictures in order to cause painful sores to appear on the body, causing their equipment to crumble into dust at the merest touch, bringing objects in the room to attack the other and other activities, there's such a wild and crazy assortment of black magic featured here that the film becomes a highly visceral experience on that alone. Even the other finale, from his battle to get free and how he reacts while under that control, makes this one quite fun and rather fun. What makes all this sorcery at the end work is the fact that the build-up exploring what happened to him here, from his relationship with the girl that's quite fun and innocent to the strained way he interacts with his daughter amid the slow-building realization of his curse, the set-up to this one manages to work quite nicely and gives this one the burgeoning storyline necessary to really fuel the rest of this one rather nicely. The only thing that doesn't really work here is the fact that there's the second affliction in the final moments rather than built up so that it really makes a rather strange inclusion. Otherwise, there's not much to dislike here.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence, Full Nudity and Language.
Greetings And Salutations, and welcome to my review of Bewitched. Before we get into it, here are my ratings:
Story - 2.00 Direction - 1.75 Pace - 1.50 Acting - 1.50 Enjoyment - 1.75
TOTAL - 8.5 out of 10
On Szeto, the writer of Bewitched, delighted me today with his story. I usually go on about missed opportunities in story concepts. But today, I can keep my gob shut on the subject. The tale of Bewitched, though simple, is complex, intriguing, and enthralling. What made this occult revenge horror flick special was the amount of detail. Once we know about the curses affecting Stephen Lam, we are then shown every detail of their creation. As we are with the subsequent spells against detective Bobby Wong and the Monk, he's asked for help. I particularly liked The Lemon Spell. Be warned that some of the black magic spells are pretty gross. Like the dead fetuses stewing in a pot of their blood, which the evil sorcery drinks - Ugh!
Chih-Hung Kuei directed this battle of Good V's Evil superbly. It is near perfect. He has a skilled eye for using light, shade, and colours to build and sustain an atmosphere. And his talent for controlling the film's tempo is evident in his action sequences. For the most part, the story trots along, but when we get to the exciting scenes, it builds to a cantor or an all-out gallop. Now I said near perfect; the opening scenes are the worst. They chop through the backstory with excessive speed and may leave your head in a spin. But stay with it, and you'll get your just deserts - the best occult movie ever made.
The cherry on top of this mystical cake is the special effects. All of which are excellent. Even the simple ones like pulling the nine-inch nail from the child's head made me squirm. Bewitched is not a film for the squeamish.
The cast is acceptable in their roles. However, I find that early Oriental films like their actors and actresses to ham it up on occasions. And there are a few sections in Bewitched where this happens, especially with the loony who keeps stealing uniforms from coppers. But if you've watched a few of these films, you become inured to them.
So not only would I highly recommend this film to all the horror fans out there, but I would state this is a Must-Watch movie.
Please visit my Absolute Horror list and see where I ranked Bewitched.
Take Care & Stay Well.
Story - 2.00 Direction - 1.75 Pace - 1.50 Acting - 1.50 Enjoyment - 1.75
TOTAL - 8.5 out of 10
On Szeto, the writer of Bewitched, delighted me today with his story. I usually go on about missed opportunities in story concepts. But today, I can keep my gob shut on the subject. The tale of Bewitched, though simple, is complex, intriguing, and enthralling. What made this occult revenge horror flick special was the amount of detail. Once we know about the curses affecting Stephen Lam, we are then shown every detail of their creation. As we are with the subsequent spells against detective Bobby Wong and the Monk, he's asked for help. I particularly liked The Lemon Spell. Be warned that some of the black magic spells are pretty gross. Like the dead fetuses stewing in a pot of their blood, which the evil sorcery drinks - Ugh!
Chih-Hung Kuei directed this battle of Good V's Evil superbly. It is near perfect. He has a skilled eye for using light, shade, and colours to build and sustain an atmosphere. And his talent for controlling the film's tempo is evident in his action sequences. For the most part, the story trots along, but when we get to the exciting scenes, it builds to a cantor or an all-out gallop. Now I said near perfect; the opening scenes are the worst. They chop through the backstory with excessive speed and may leave your head in a spin. But stay with it, and you'll get your just deserts - the best occult movie ever made.
The cherry on top of this mystical cake is the special effects. All of which are excellent. Even the simple ones like pulling the nine-inch nail from the child's head made me squirm. Bewitched is not a film for the squeamish.
The cast is acceptable in their roles. However, I find that early Oriental films like their actors and actresses to ham it up on occasions. And there are a few sections in Bewitched where this happens, especially with the loony who keeps stealing uniforms from coppers. But if you've watched a few of these films, you become inured to them.
So not only would I highly recommend this film to all the horror fans out there, but I would state this is a Must-Watch movie.
Please visit my Absolute Horror list and see where I ranked Bewitched.
Take Care & Stay Well.
Hong Kong supernatural horror film directed by Chih-Hung Kuei (Hex after Hex, Curse of Evil, Corpse Mania, Devil Fetus). The movie stars Fei Ai, Melvin Wong and Fanny Fen-Ni. A prequel to Boxers Omen, BEWITCHED is a full throttle as Hex Trilogy. The plot revolves around a detective in charge of hearing a statement and investigates the death of a girl, only to find out that the perpetrator is her father who was cursed by a Shaman. The action shifts to a battle between good and evil that includes worms, possessions, surreal spells between monks which works as a whole package for lovers of the genre. In other words, Bewitched is an explosion reel in its purest form, which when it comes to this genre means lots of crazy antics. If it were made today Bewitched would be mentioned alongside French extremity delights, such is the nature of its content, but it was made in 1980, when special effects were cheap, production quality was low and it was a little too early to sit alongside other HK horror movies. It's a dirty and grotesque film with lot to offer for those craving for twisted sense of humour it is one of those bizarre cult films you really should see. Among all the horror and witchcraft films made by the Shaw Brothers, BEWITCHED (1981) stands out. '80's horror at its finest and purest form! It's weird, disgusting but yet also strangely amusing. Make your choice
Towards the end of the Shaw Brothers' rein over kung fu cinema, the studio branched out into other genres, enjoying some success in the supernatural horror market. Much of their horror output was typified by black magic storylines with gross-out special effects, Bewitched being one of the best examples.
The film opens with the discovery of the decomposed body of a little girl, a nine-inch spike having been hammered into her skull. A police investigation leads to the arrest of her father, Stephen Lam Wai (Fei Ai) who admits to the murder, but claims that he was under the influence of a spell. Sentenced to death by hanging, the man tells his story to policeman Bobby Wong King-Sun (Melvin Wong), and begs the cop to find out what drove him to kill.
According to Lam Wai, the trouble began when he wooed a pretty young woman, Bon Brown (Lily Chan), while on holiday in Thailand. After several days of being romanced by Stephen, Bon gave her new beau an amulet and made him swear to return to her by June 30th. When Stephen returned home to Hong Kong, he boasted about his holiday romance to his work colleagues (no doubt telling them about Bon's topless sprint across the beach, which is shown in slow-motion), but neglected to keep his promise to return. That's when the crazy stuff started to happen: the amulet caused a large stain on his chest, which sprouted hair, he became impotent, and his daughter began to act very strangely indeed. An old woman told him that he had been possessed and that the person closest to him would try to kill him and the only way to stop them would be to hammer a large nail into their head.
Bobby doesn't believe a word of the killer's crazy story, until he too experiences a scary supernatural phenomenon. Now convinced, he travels to Thailand to investigate, learns that Bon had a spell put on Stephen (the magic involving oil extracted from the corpse of a pregnant woman), and attempts to remove the curse with the aid of an old witch (who performs a ritual with some bad flute playing, a levitating skull, a twig and what looks like a small Wade figurine of a frog). When this fails, he visits a monk, who enters into a supernatural battle with the wizard who cast the spell. Cue lots of yuckiness, including the villain drinking blood from a vat full of dead babies, his face oozing pus, and a nail slowly pushed through the palm of his hand.
Unfortunately, the monk is unable to defeat the powerful wizard, and needs a week to recover before he can try again. During these seven days, Bobby is subjected to a variety of spells cast by the miffed magician, which leads to more madness, including the cop developing an appetite for raw pork liver, a bout of heart trouble caused by a lemon, Bobby's wife being stabbed by a flying knife, and a guy getting dragged under a moving car. Director Chih-Hung Kuei also sees fit to throw in those mainstays of the genre, maggot eating and worm vomiting. Meanwhile, Bobby also has to contend with an escaped lunatic who is causing havoc, having got his hands on a cop's gun (in the film's most shocking moment, the madman shoots a child several times in the chest).
The entertaining ending sees the return of the monk, refreshed and ready for round two, in which he successfully desiccates the wizard, forcing a bat demon to fly out of his mouth!
The film opens with the discovery of the decomposed body of a little girl, a nine-inch spike having been hammered into her skull. A police investigation leads to the arrest of her father, Stephen Lam Wai (Fei Ai) who admits to the murder, but claims that he was under the influence of a spell. Sentenced to death by hanging, the man tells his story to policeman Bobby Wong King-Sun (Melvin Wong), and begs the cop to find out what drove him to kill.
According to Lam Wai, the trouble began when he wooed a pretty young woman, Bon Brown (Lily Chan), while on holiday in Thailand. After several days of being romanced by Stephen, Bon gave her new beau an amulet and made him swear to return to her by June 30th. When Stephen returned home to Hong Kong, he boasted about his holiday romance to his work colleagues (no doubt telling them about Bon's topless sprint across the beach, which is shown in slow-motion), but neglected to keep his promise to return. That's when the crazy stuff started to happen: the amulet caused a large stain on his chest, which sprouted hair, he became impotent, and his daughter began to act very strangely indeed. An old woman told him that he had been possessed and that the person closest to him would try to kill him and the only way to stop them would be to hammer a large nail into their head.
Bobby doesn't believe a word of the killer's crazy story, until he too experiences a scary supernatural phenomenon. Now convinced, he travels to Thailand to investigate, learns that Bon had a spell put on Stephen (the magic involving oil extracted from the corpse of a pregnant woman), and attempts to remove the curse with the aid of an old witch (who performs a ritual with some bad flute playing, a levitating skull, a twig and what looks like a small Wade figurine of a frog). When this fails, he visits a monk, who enters into a supernatural battle with the wizard who cast the spell. Cue lots of yuckiness, including the villain drinking blood from a vat full of dead babies, his face oozing pus, and a nail slowly pushed through the palm of his hand.
Unfortunately, the monk is unable to defeat the powerful wizard, and needs a week to recover before he can try again. During these seven days, Bobby is subjected to a variety of spells cast by the miffed magician, which leads to more madness, including the cop developing an appetite for raw pork liver, a bout of heart trouble caused by a lemon, Bobby's wife being stabbed by a flying knife, and a guy getting dragged under a moving car. Director Chih-Hung Kuei also sees fit to throw in those mainstays of the genre, maggot eating and worm vomiting. Meanwhile, Bobby also has to contend with an escaped lunatic who is causing havoc, having got his hands on a cop's gun (in the film's most shocking moment, the madman shoots a child several times in the chest).
The entertaining ending sees the return of the monk, refreshed and ready for round two, in which he successfully desiccates the wizard, forcing a bat demon to fly out of his mouth!
The first film of Kwei Chih-Hung I ever saw was the indescribable Mo (Boxer's Omen) so working backwards I just had the chance to watch his previous outing into the world of Thai black magic.
A policeman investigating the horrid death of a five-year old girl is led to Thailand where he encounters black magic and eventually a series of horrible curses are placed on him to prevent his solving the mystery. That description makes the film sound reasonable if not a bit boring but believe me it's not boring! We are witness to lots of sights including, a six inch nail being pulled from the corpse of a five year old girl, an extended spell battle between a monk and a sorcerer, a séance with floating skulls and twigs that write plus exploding bats. We also learn many useful things such as how to extract oil from the rotting corpse of a pregnant woman, or that eating maggots gives you super evil powers, or that if you discover a loved one is eating raw pork liver at night, all may not be well. All this commotion is because a callous Hong Kong tourist didn't come back to his Thai lover by a certain date. She happily causes the death of several people and is willing to kill more so her ex-lover dies a protracted death. And strangely she somehow convinces a black magic priest to go along with this despite the pain and danger he goes thru when a Buddhist priest volunteers to fight back.
It's quite an experience but it falls apart by the final third and the ending looks like they ran over budget and Mona Fong said, "You have one night to finish this film and send those Thai actors back!". So they shot the ending in a HK airport terminal. Regardless, the film looks quite good at times with interesting art direction and photography. There's a bit of nudity when the Thai girlfriend goes for a slow motion swim, but most of the film is just silly looking but gross effects.
Fun but "Mo" is more fun.
A policeman investigating the horrid death of a five-year old girl is led to Thailand where he encounters black magic and eventually a series of horrible curses are placed on him to prevent his solving the mystery. That description makes the film sound reasonable if not a bit boring but believe me it's not boring! We are witness to lots of sights including, a six inch nail being pulled from the corpse of a five year old girl, an extended spell battle between a monk and a sorcerer, a séance with floating skulls and twigs that write plus exploding bats. We also learn many useful things such as how to extract oil from the rotting corpse of a pregnant woman, or that eating maggots gives you super evil powers, or that if you discover a loved one is eating raw pork liver at night, all may not be well. All this commotion is because a callous Hong Kong tourist didn't come back to his Thai lover by a certain date. She happily causes the death of several people and is willing to kill more so her ex-lover dies a protracted death. And strangely she somehow convinces a black magic priest to go along with this despite the pain and danger he goes thru when a Buddhist priest volunteers to fight back.
It's quite an experience but it falls apart by the final third and the ending looks like they ran over budget and Mona Fong said, "You have one night to finish this film and send those Thai actors back!". So they shot the ending in a HK airport terminal. Regardless, the film looks quite good at times with interesting art direction and photography. There's a bit of nudity when the Thai girlfriend goes for a slow motion swim, but most of the film is just silly looking but gross effects.
Fun but "Mo" is more fun.
Did you know
- ConnectionsFollowed by The Boxer's Omen (1983)
- How long is Bewitched?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 41m(101 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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