skjam: Man in blue suit and fedora, wearing an eyeless mask emblazoned with the scales of justice (Default)
Five Deadly Venoms (1978) dir. Cheh Chang

Many years ago, the Poison Clan used its powerful martial arts techniques for evil. By this means, they amassed great wealth, but also many enemies. The remaining members had to move into the remote wilderness to keep their lore alive. Now the last teacher of the Poison Clan (Dick Wei) is dying. He instructs his final pupil, Yang Tieh (Chiang Sheng) to go out into the world to check up on the five previous students, Centipede, Snake, Scorpion, Lizard and Toad. Some of them may be using their martial arts for evil; if so, Yang will need to ally with one of the less evil ones to defeat the more evil ones.

This won't be easy--each of the former students always wore a mask during training, so that no one, either the teacher or each other, knew who they actually were. In addition, Yang's training was incomplete, so he won't be a match for any one of the Venoms in their special skills. But there is a clue that might help. Years before, one of the teacher's colleagues had absconded with the clan treasury. His true name and appearance aren't known either, but clues suggest a particular town he's hiding in. The Venoms will certainly converge on that town to find the embezzler and the treasure, and thus Yang should be able to find them.

Indeed, some of the Venoms have come to the town, and Bookkeeper Yuan and his entire family are murdered in an attempt to find the treasure. Police officers Meng Tianxia (Kuo Chui) and Chief Constable Ma (Sun Chien) are assigned to the case, and Yang gives them some behind the scenes help, but political corruption and dirty cops stand in the way of justice.

This is one of the classic kung fu films, with exciting action, well-staged fight scenes with distinctive style use, and just enough mystery to keep the audience guessing. No time is wasted on romantic subplots or other distractions.

Mind, this also leaves little time for subtle characterization--the scene where Snake (Wei Pai) admits that he's discovered he has a conscience too late for it to do any good is about as much nuance as we get.

Content notes: there's some torture in a judicial context (both historically accurate and highly dubious versions), blood, and a couple of the murders are more wince-inducing than others.

This film is referenced a lot in other films and martial arts stories, so is a must-watch for martial arts fans.
skjam: created by djinn (Bottomless)
Project A (1983) dir. Jackie Chan

In the fading years of the Nineteenth Century, the waters off Hong Kong are infested with pirates. It's the duty of the Hong Kong Coast Guard to deal with said pirates, and they haven't been doing a very good job. Sergeant Ma Yue "Dragon" Lung (Jackie Chan), the most competent member of the Coast Guard, would dearly love a victory. Especially as there's friction between the Coast Guard and the land police, who have had to fund the sea-going disasters at the price of their own salary budget. While many cops and Coast Guard members are individually friends, there's a strong inter-service rivalry. The tension comes to a head with a restaurant-smashing brawl started by the arrogant Captain Tzu (Biao Yuen), nephew of the police captain.

This disgrace could be wiped out by the Coast Guard's next mission against the pirates, but all their ships are blown up while still at anchor. It's almost as if someone told the pirates exactly where and when to strike! The Coast Guard is disbanded, and the troops reassigned to the land police under the direction of Captain Tzu, who tries to give them some disciplined spit and polish, but is an ass about it.

Captain Tzu gets a hot tip that a notorious gangster is holed up in an exclusive club owned by the wealthy shipping magnate Chao, and brings along Sergeant Ma Yue and a couple of other undercover officers to make a quiet arrest. Things quickly go south as the club employees refuse to cooperate, and the higher-ups in the police force seem more interested in not upsetting Mr. Chao than in bringing in the criminal. Dragon turns in his badge in disgust (and Captain Tzu is not pleased either.)

Dragon is contacted by his shady old friend Fei (Sammo Hung), who's been hired by the pirates to obtain some police rifles. Fei doesn't care if the pirates get the rifles or are captured by the government, as long as he gets his payday. What follows is a complex series of plans, counter-plans and doublecrosses as Dragon and Fei try to achieve their not-always-congruent goals.

This action comedy is one of my personal favorite Jackie Chan movies, and was successful enough to spawn a sequel Project A 2 and have its title parodied by one of my favorite animated films, Project A-ko. You can see the strong Buster Keaton influence in the physical comedy, particularly a running chase/battle scene on bicycles, followed by a clock tower battle, and then a spectacular falling stunt from the clock tower. (So spectacular that the movie uses two different takes so as not to waste them.)

There's a bravura scene where Dragon gets to call out the venality of the British consul and not only not get punished, but trusted with the concluding anti-pirate mission, which was probably a favorite of native Hong Kong residents at the time.

I watched the American dub this time, which skips a couple of comedy bits and has ordinary credits, rather than the set with outtakes from the film. This may have caused the verbal humor to suffer a bit; some of the minor characters' voice acting didn't quite hit.

Isabella Wong has a pretty thankless role as Winnie, the daughter of the Coast Guard Admiral, who is sweet on Dragon. Her primary function is to be useless during the bicycle chase scenes so Dragon has to rescue her several times.

Jackie Chan plays to his strengths here as a hero who's more competent than most of the people around him, but still prone to miscalculation, pratfalls and pain. (A nice bit in the first fight scene is Jackie and Biao Yuen breaking off combat with each other to hide and express how much each other's blows hurt.)

This is a fun film that melds martial arts action and comedy well.

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