In order to restore their village to it's former glory, the Kung Fu Rascals must go on a quest to find a power most...BIG. The evil Bamboo Man sends out his forces to teach the Rascals a les... Read allIn order to restore their village to it's former glory, the Kung Fu Rascals must go on a quest to find a power most...BIG. The evil Bamboo Man sends out his forces to teach the Rascals a lesson in kung fu etiquette. Who will triumph? Only the Old Wise Guy knows.In order to restore their village to it's former glory, the Kung Fu Rascals must go on a quest to find a power most...BIG. The evil Bamboo Man sends out his forces to teach the Rascals a lesson in kung fu etiquette. Who will triumph? Only the Old Wise Guy knows.
Johnnie Saiko
- Reepo
- (as Johnnie S. Espiritu)
'Evil' Ted Smith
- Dar Ling
- (as Ted Smith)
- …
Michael Deak
- Angry Ninja
- (as Mike Deak)
Moto Hata
- Sushi Chief
- (as Motoyoshi Hata)
Featured reviews
Kung Fu Rascals was the brainchild of a young Steve Wang, who scripted, directed, and created far-better-than-budgeted special effects to create a slapstick tribute to martial arts, Ray Harryhausen, Kaiju, and the Three Stooges, all wrapped up in a film that really should have been a mainstream hit.
Assembling friends from the film industry, Wang, who at a very young age, had co-created the Predator designs for Stan Winston Studios, and later the Gillman from The Monster Squad, before directing his own films, Guyver, Guyver II: Dark Hero, and Drive, starring Mark Dacascos and Brittany Murphy and Kadeem Hardison.
The story revolves around "three fools from the orient," Reepo, Chen Chow Mein, and Lao Ze, and their adventures.
Exceptional visual effects. Fun story. Brilliant sight-gags. Overall a lot of fun.
Assembling friends from the film industry, Wang, who at a very young age, had co-created the Predator designs for Stan Winston Studios, and later the Gillman from The Monster Squad, before directing his own films, Guyver, Guyver II: Dark Hero, and Drive, starring Mark Dacascos and Brittany Murphy and Kadeem Hardison.
The story revolves around "three fools from the orient," Reepo, Chen Chow Mein, and Lao Ze, and their adventures.
Exceptional visual effects. Fun story. Brilliant sight-gags. Overall a lot of fun.
this movie is goofy and dumb, but is worth checking out for one reason: it stars Les Claypool, bass player extraordinare for the great band PRIMUS. he stars as an evil sheriff and actually does quite a good job.
I did like the fact how the movie tried to skewer all kung fu film cliches in 90 minutes but overall it just doesn't hang together that well, but it does succeed on a so stupid it's cool level.
I did like the fact how the movie tried to skewer all kung fu film cliches in 90 minutes but overall it just doesn't hang together that well, but it does succeed on a so stupid it's cool level.
I knew I was in for trouble when one of the trailers for this film was the sequel to Hell Comes To Frogtown (as if the first one wasn't absolutely horrible). When I watch movies like this, all I can do is try to figure out the key demo that it was targeted to, as I can only assume there are people out there who find this garbage entertaining. Nerds who like the Sci-Fi Channel? A ten-year-old with developmental issues? If you liked this thing, I'm not trying to rag on you here, but this film doesn't work for me on any level. It's not funny, the action sucks, and the shtick where it tries to mimic low-budget martial arts films is a total fail, especially when you can watch the real thing in abundance. Ever heard of a guy named Godfrey Ho? No? You should.
I'm sure people will try to pass this off as a brilliant piece of camp perfection, but let's not kid ourselves. This movie was painful to watch, despite the bizarre satisfaction of seeing Les Claypool attempt to act. I got the impression that the initial filming was silent, and that the dialogue and sound effects were poorly dubbed on later. Seriously, unless your tolerance for utterly atrocious physical 'comedy' and dialogue that a dyslexic 6-year old could have spat out is ridiculously high, then you have no reason to watch this horror of a production. The sole high point would be the 'POWER MOST BIG' line, but they manage to repeat it enough to make it lose any comedic power.
For those of you have seen this movie , this is actually a remake of Steve's great super 8mm film he did in the early 80's which to me is not as polished as this film, but a lot funnier. Steve along with local Bay Area friends from San Jose made this classic . I own a copy but it is a little on the grainy side. To see this 8mm classic is a holy gem.
From what I have been told, I do believe this film some sort of bet that Steve made that a film of this type could be made on a modest budget.There are a lot of great in jokes with great kung fu action.
There is also a great kicking soundtrack by Johnny and his punk band. The Theme- We are the Kung fu Rascals , And we don't need no hassles, If trouble is what you are giving, You must be tired of living.
From what I have been told, I do believe this film some sort of bet that Steve made that a film of this type could be made on a modest budget.There are a lot of great in jokes with great kung fu action.
There is also a great kicking soundtrack by Johnny and his punk band. The Theme- We are the Kung fu Rascals , And we don't need no hassles, If trouble is what you are giving, You must be tired of living.
Did you know
- TriviaA more expensive remake of a feature-length amateur movie that Steve Wang worked on with several friends in the early 1980s.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Guyver : La Sentinelle de l'ombre (1994)
Details
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Adventures of the Kung Fu Rascals
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content