"99 have fallen, 1 remains." The Supreme Swordsman is a late, but celebrated entry into the long list of awesome Shaw Brothers swordplay epics. In feudal China, an extremely conceited swords... Read all"99 have fallen, 1 remains." The Supreme Swordsman is a late, but celebrated entry into the long list of awesome Shaw Brothers swordplay epics. In feudal China, an extremely conceited swordsman named Qin Wu Xin slices his way through 99 of the best swordsman China has to offer so... Read all"99 have fallen, 1 remains." The Supreme Swordsman is a late, but celebrated entry into the long list of awesome Shaw Brothers swordplay epics. In feudal China, an extremely conceited swordsman named Qin Wu Xin slices his way through 99 of the best swordsman China has to offer so that he can add their famous blades to his infamous 100 Swords Mansion. Now, with only on... Read all
- Director
- Writer
- Stars
- Shih Yen-peh
- (as Tung-Shing Yee)
- Swordsmith 'Old Eagle' Xie Ying
- (as Feng Ku)
- Hsiao-tien
- (as Yung Wang)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This film is one of the last Shaw's productions- and also one of its best, up there with gang Master, Lady Assassin, Long Road to Gallantry, B*stard Swordsman & the like.. with a few quibbles.
The story is fantastic, simple yet gripping, a true homage & culmination of tales set in the 'Martial World' of WuXia/Swordplay Myths. In some ways a riff on the Jimmy Wang Yu gem of obsessive misery THE SWORD (1971).
This film makes a great double bill with DUEL FOR THE DEATH as well.
The direction is excellent & dynamic, emphasising a lot of dark humor without resorting to slapstick & gurning.
The fight chorography in this film is as good as it gets... however..... a few of the very early fights are far too undercranked (ie sped up during filming & not a post production trick, hence why they may have misgauged the resulting speed) which utterly ruins about 3 & a half brief fights. Hence a 9/10 , tho it should be 9 & a half.
Thankfully they soon settle down into some of the most impressive action you will ever see.
The change of pace halfway through is a refreshing masterstroke for possibly all of us familiar with the genre, viewers unfamiliar with the conventions of the genre may be disappointed & somewhat confounded by it.
The first hour had a great deal of momentum, but goes off on a tangent when Derek undergoes new training with a trio of crazy old monks (including kung fu regular Lee Hoi-sang), one of whom has a pretty granddaughter (Li Tien-lang) who becomes Derek's companion. By the time Jason comes back into the fray for the final battle, the initial momentum has dissipated and the film never quite picks it up again.
Still, Jason and Derek have good parts and Ku Feng has one of his best late Shaw roles. Yuen Wah has a good part as well, playing a defeated opponent who becomes Jason's reluctant assistant. The film's got a lot of well-staged action and is one of the few martial arts films made at Shaw after 8-DIAGRAM POLE FIGHTER that focused on a distinct martial arts theme to the exclusion of other plot elements, in this case Jason's pursuit to be the best in his field and defeat all others. The director, Li Pai-ling (aka Keith Li),was making his directorial debut, having been an assistant director beforehand. It's not among the best of late Shaw swordplay films (I'm quite partial to BASTARD SWORDSMAN and RETURN OF THE BASTARD SWORDSMAN myself), but it's a bit different from the others and does have its distinct pleasures.
The first 55 minutes is actually a rather interesting, but very typical, wuxia plot as the the main character, Chin Wu-hsin, goes on his quest to kill 100 hundred swordsmen to become the top swordsman in China. He finally reaches 99 but fails when he goes against "The Supreme Swordsman". Despite being told that he doesn't have the right mental clarity to beat the Supreme Swordsman, Chin Wu-hsin decides that he failed because his sword was no good. He tries to bully an elderly sword smith into forging a new sword but he suddenly hears of the special "Cold Eagle" sword. Complications ensue as the sword smith and his son are drawn into the quest for the legendary Cold Eagle sword. It's old school but a better than average movie at this point.
That's the interesting part of the movie, the next half hour is interesting as well but for different reasons. Suddenly the sword smith's son, while battling Chin Wu-hsin, falls off a ledge that we never see and crash lands in the home of three old martial artists. Here we enter crazy kung-fu land where the masters exit the scene by yelling, "Hu-wa!" and flying straight up into the air. Chin Wu-hsin is forgotten as the sword smith's son receives healing from the fall and kung fu training. He eventually has to go thru a kung fu gauntlet before facing up with Chin Wu-hsin.
This film is certainly paced fast so it's never boring. The change of genres is off putting and by the end I didn't really care about the story anymore. There are better wuxia films and better crazy kung fu films out there.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Supreme Swordsman
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 35 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1