Wu di tie sha zhang (1971) Poster

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5/10
Minimal expectations met
ckormos15 April 2019
It starts with two men on horseback riding through the desert as music plays. Alan and Charlie come to the rescue of a girl getting raped by the reservoir. The rapist requests their names and addresses to properly thank them for showing him mercy. He returns their kindness with cruelty by returning with Pai Ying to get revenge against their entire escort company. Pai Ying is the title character and uses his power to take over the entire town. Our guys train to beat him. It all comes down to the final fight.

I have the Video Asia DVD of this movie. It comes with the 1993 movie "Shaolin Megaforce" (original title Megaforce from Highland") in a two for one. This movie is dubbed in English. The video is widescreen and the resolution is good but scratchy at times. The voice over actors aren't the "A Team" but they are good. All it takes to be good is not to be annoying.

This is one of the early movies to feature training sequences. One fighter strengthens his hands and the other works on leg strength. The exaggerated, over the top training sequence would become a standard part in these movies by the late 1970s. These actors are not martial artists as typical of the time. Both have the habit of raising their arms over their head, like signaling "Touchdown" between moves. This is unrealistic and wasted energy and movement but perhaps it also makes it look like more action.

The parts of this movie that drag are the drama and the drag is because it is melodrama. It gets beyond that to cringe-worthy with the children crying after watching mother drown herself.

This movie would only draw the attention of a hard core fan of martial arts movies of the golden age from 1967 to 1984. That fan would find here a totally average movie, formulaic, with every beat delivered as expected and nothing beyond those minimal expectations.
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5/10
Invincible Iron Palm
jddog13013 April 2015
Warning: Spoilers
It starts with our stars Alan Tang and Charlie Chin riding through the country and happen upon a bad guy (Chiang Nan) and his thugs harassing a family and trying to rape the daughter. Our heroes beat the thugs and spare Chiang Nan but he swears revenge against the two for meddling in his business.

Later he (Chiang Nan) shows up with his henchmen (Tony Liu and Pai Ying) and beats our heroes, exposing the henchmen's Iron Fist and 36 Steps technique. The two heroes then seek training from they're uncle to learn new fighting methods including Iron Palm to combat the Iron Fist and 36 Steps.

Meanwhile... the thugs build a casino, brothel etc. and wreak havoc on the town. It's time for our heroes to show up with they're new styles and clean up the filth and save the town.

Contains some blood and nudity... The fights are a little slow but overall it was enjoyable for 1971. I give it a 5
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6/10
Western-influenced kung fu story
Leofwine_draca14 February 2018
Warning: Spoilers
INVINCIBLE IRON PALM is one of the earliest kung fu films out there. Shot in Hong Kong on the cheap, this is actually much better quality than I was expecting and actually pretty entertaining. The action-packed story is similar to that of a spaghetti western and has a couple of heroic brothers literally stumbing into the midst of a criminal gang. Fisticuffs ensue, and then time is spent with the bad guys as they take over a small town and set up gambling houses and brothels. The heroes don't take kindly to this and the scene is set for a showdown. Charlie Chan and Alan Tang make for nimble and athletic heroes and there's plenty of bad guys for them to fight; future Shaw star Chen Kuan Tai also shows up in a small part early on in his career.
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6/10
An all-stars-cast for an independent Kung-Fu!
deluca.lorenzo@libero.it6 January 2021
A typical low-grade Martial Arts movie from Hong Kong, where this opened 12/29/71. Two years later it made some money in foreign markets like Italy and France. The influence of spaghetti-western is all too evident (the heroes arrives on their horses!). Story is formulaic, the set is cheap (a farm, a tavern, a small forest, a stony valley) but the cast is a joy for the fans of old school Kung-Fu extravaganza, in that its filled with famous HK actors (Alan tang, Charlie Chin), regular character-actors (Chiang Nan, Lee Man Tai, Chu Mu, this one also in charge as film-director; the ubiquitous Hao Li Jan from Enter the Dragon) and an army of stuntmen including future legends of the genre like Chen Kwan Tai (Boxer from Shantung), Tommy Loo Chun Kou, Jason Pai Piao (Stranger from Canton), Eddy Ko Hung (Avenging eagles; Lethal Weapon 4; the documentary Dragonland), and many other familiar faces. So the whole matter is a sort of Who's Who of old Kung-Fu cinema, and this is why I give a broken 6 to this mediocre film. A kind of nostalgic archive, if you like.
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