Tag Archives: Hong Kong fantasy-adventure

Zu: Warriors from the Magic Mountain (1983)

This movie is a frenetic, non-stop action-fest!
This movie is a frenetic, non-stop action-fest!

Starring Yuen Biao, Adam Cheng, Meng Hoi, Sammo Hung, Moon Lee, Brigitte Lin, and Tsui Siu-Keung. Directed by Tsui Hark, produced by Raymond Chow, with action by Corey Yuen, Meng Hoi, Yuen Biao and Fung Hark-On.


Zu!
Zu!

This fine fantasy flick, based on a 1932 book called ‘The Legend of the Swordsman of the Mountains of Shu’ by Huanzhulouzhu (the pen name of Li Shoumin), is so fast, frantic, absurdly action-gorged, fantastical and odd that it makes pretty much any film made in the west look snail-paced in comparison to it.

Yuen Biao!
Yuen Biao!
Ming wants to escape the civil war that is blighting his land
Ming wants to escape the civil war that is blighting his land

Set in a region called Zu, the film tells the tall tale of Ming (Biao), an army private, who becomes disillusioned with the civil war ravaging his land. He escapes to the Magic Mountains, which is a grim area plagued by demons and evil disciples. Meeting up with some magical warriors, Ming attempts to prevent the Blood Monster from ending the world.

A bunch of bad dudes!
A bunch of bad dudes!
The Blood Monster in its liquid form
The Blood Monster in its liquid form
Poster
Poster

By far the best portion of this movie, for me, is Ming’s initial venture into the mountainous region, a zone of misty boulders and temples, where the private encounters virgin-sacrificing cult members and demons that resemble blue-eyed Jawas with stretching bodies!

There's a blue-eyed 'Jawa'-demon behind you!
There’s a blue-eyed ‘Jawa’-demon behind you!

After teaming-up with three good monk-fighters, Ming confronts the Blood Monster, which first appears as a cascade of blood, then becomes a red sheet-covered entity. To the aid of the heroic foursome comes Long Brows (Hung): a grey-haired mystic who manages to keep the Blood Monster in check by clasping it with his magically extending eyebrows and beard! The Blood Monster protects its soul, though, by surrounding itself with the skulls of sacrificial virgins and tusks!

Long Brows, played by Sammo Hung, has got weaponised eyebrows!
Long Brows, played by Sammo Hung, has got weaponised eyebrows!

Ming and his three companions go in search of two powerful swords capable of finally destroying the Blood Monster before it grows too powerful to be restrained by Long Brows.

The Blood Monster as a red, sheet-covered entity
The Blood Monster as a red sheet-covered entity

Tsui Hark adds so many fights, mystics, flying skirmishes, animated magic effects, arguments, twisting Buddha statues and multiple scene-changes that the cumulative effect of this non-stop, energetic assault to the senses is that you feel like your head might explode!

Korean poster
Korean poster

By the time the heroes are flying through red, swirling skyscapes, armed with glowing, magic swords, you wonder if you’re hallucinating it all!
Hark maybe tries to cram just too many optical effects into the finale and the end results are often less effective than, say, the mainly practical special effects seen in A CHINESE GHOST STORY, but there’s so, so much to enjoy here, why bother to quibble? And, let’s face it, what other movie contains a fight between a man and a woman zooming about on levitating large elephant statues and a stone griffin?!

Getting ready to fight on the elephant statues...
Getting ready to fight on the elephant statues…

Note: The English dubbed version starts off in the modern day, and is edited to suit a more western market.

This flick is an energetic assault to the senses
This flick is an energetic assault to the senses
Chinese poster
Chinese poster

Frenetic, funny, bizarre, wacky, magical and mad as a box of frogs.

She's got the moves
She’s got the moves

The Peacock King (1988)

What are they looking at?!
What are they looking at?!

Starring Yuen Biao, Hiroshi Mikami, Wong Siu-Fung, Narumi Yasuda, Gloria Yip, Eddy Ko, Gordon Liu and Philip Kwok, directed by Nam Nai-Choi for Golden Harvest.

It goes without saying that various people in this flick have special powers
It goes without saying that various people in this flick have special powers
Gordon Liu!
Gordon Liu!

Two young monks, Peacock (Biao) and Lucky Fruit (Mikami), must prevent the Hell King from destroying the world. Supernatural forces are able to enter the world via four holes to Hell, and the bulk of the tale concerns the hunt for these entrances. In fact, the film’s main weakness is that too much time is given over to whizzing to Japan, Hong Kong and Tibet, fracturing what chance there is of linear plot development.

Poster
Poster

However, the movie’s fun special effects more than compensate…

Early on we see small, many-eyed crawly thingies called ‘womanising ghosts’, which resemble more interesting versions of the stop-motion models crafted for the hologram chess game in STAR WARS.

These lil’ critters run around a sidewalk, chased by a dog.

Stop-motion ‘womanising ghost’ creatures peer out from a discarded fast food burger box
Thai poster for the film
Thai poster for the film

Another animation model comes into play when Hell’s Envoy Raga, played by Wong Siu-Fung, gets injured. Raga arches her back, develops telescopic, insectoid forearms and claws, and then, best of all, causes her now reptilian, elongated face to split lengthwise into a gaping, vertical, toothy maw!

Stop-motion puppet version of the split-faced monster
Stop-motion puppet version of the split-faced monster
Animatronic model of the monster, used for close-ups
Animatronic model of the monster, used for close-ups

This very cool monster acrobatically leaps around the place as it battles the protagonists, with full-scale props and animatronics used in conjunction with the stop-motion puppet to bring this beast to the screen. This is definitely the standout sequence in the movie!

A look inside the Hell's Envoy Monster's mouth
A look inside the Hell’s Envoy Monster’s mouth
Peacock (Yuen Biao) gets pinned down by the beast!
Peacock (Yuen Biao) gets pinned down by the beast!
Poster
Poster

Other special effects moments include a dinosaur model coming to life at a prehistoric exhibition, a genie-type giant and a flaming phoenix of light.


The full size dinosaur model at an exhibition...
The full size dinosaur model at an exhibition…
...is brought to 'life' by evil magic!
…which is brought to ‘life’ by evil magic!
Roar!
Roar!

Also known as Legend of the Phoenix, this modern day Hong Kong fantasy-action flick is flawed but great fun!

Also known as LEGEND OF THE PHOENIX
Also known as LEGEND OF THE PHOENIX

Okay then, one more look at the Hell’s Envoy Monster…

The split-faced creature loses an arm, but it keeps on fighting
The split-faced creature loses an arm, but it keeps on fighting