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The Man from Hong Kong
The Dragon Flies / Yellow Peril / Sky High
Australia / Hong Kong 1975
produced by John Fraser, Raymond Chow, David Hannay (executive), Andre Morgan (executive) for The Movie Company, Golden Harvest
directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith
starring Jimmy Wang Yu, George Lazenby, Hugh Keays-Byrne, Roger Ward, Rosalind Speirs, Grant Page, Rebecca Gilling, Frank Thring, Sammo Hung, Deryck Barnes, Bill Hunter, Ian Jamieson, Elaine Wong, John Orcsik, Geoffrey Brown, Kevin Broadribb, Brian Trenchard-Smith, Peter Armstrong, Rangi Nikora, Bob Hicks, Max Aspin, Robert Fay, Ruth Erica, Gerry Gauslaa, Lin Ke-Ming, Andre Morgan, Alan Walker, Corey Yuen, Lam Ching-Ying, Chin Tang Tang, Tu Wei-Ho, Wu Chieh-Chiang, Yang Hsi-Chun, Yuen Biao, Cheung Chok-Chow, Lin Yuen, Yin Leng-Kuang
written by Brian Trenchard-Smith, music by Noel Quinlan, stunt coordinator: Peter Armstrong, martial arts choreographed by Sammo Hung, Jimmy Wang Yu
review by Mike Haberfelner
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Inspector Fang (Jimmy Wang Yu) has come to Sidney from Hong Kong just
to extradite a drug courier (Sammo Hung) - but that men is shot dead by a
sharp shooter (Grant Page) from right under his nose, a sharp shooter Fang
catches up with and kills in the ensuing fight. It's found out that the
assassin was a top student at Wilton's (George Lazenby) martial arts dojo
though, and Wilton has been long known to be a crime kingpin, without the
local police being able to pin anything on him. Fang wants to take Wilton
down on his own but the cops in charge of him (Hugh Keays-Byrne, Roger
Ward) pretty much urge him to leave the country - and yet he uses a
journalist he knows (Rosalind Speirs) to get invited to one of Wilton's
parties - where the two men battle it out to a standstill. Later that
night, Wilton tries to have Fang murdered, but he makes a daring escape to
the countryside and finds love with Angelica (Rebecca Gilling) - something
that almost makes him forget the case, but Wilton's goons catch up with
him, and in an attempt to get rid of him they kill the girl - and now Fang
will stop at nothing to make sure that Wilton gets his just desserts ... The
first feature film of B action veteran Brian Trenchard-Smith - and it sure
is a fun ride, an early merger of Hong Kong kung fu and Western action
cinema that pretty much seems to stumble from one fight or chase or action
sequence to the next and is unapologetic about it, plus all the action's
well-staged, the stunts are thrilling, and the East-West merger comes
across more natural than in other similar movies (including Enter
the Dragon, actually), while the whole thing, while definitely no
comedy, has a light enough tone and traces of irony to it to actually get
the more over-the-top scenes across convincingly enough to basically make
this a fun ride.
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review © by Mike Haberfelner
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Robots and rats,
demons and potholes, cuddly toys and shopping mall Santas,
love and death and everything in between,
Tales to Chill Your Bones to is all of that.
Tales to Chill Your Bones to -
a collection of short stories and mini-plays ranging from the horrific to the darkly humourous,
from the post-apocalyptic to the weirdly romantic,
tales that will give you a chill and maybe a chuckle,
all thought up by the twisted mind of screenwriter and film reviewer Michael Haberfelner.
Tales to Chill Your Bones to
the new anthology by Michael Haberfelner
Out now from Amazon!!! |
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