6 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
The Fighting Fist Of Shangai Joe (Mario Caiano, 1973) **1/2, 14 February 2008
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
Minor, enjoyable and surprisingly violent Spaghetti Western, one of a
clutch of such efforts embellished with an Oriental touch in the form
of a martial-arts exponent hero (as can be gathered from the title).
The film was enough of a success to boast a sequel THE RETURN OF
SHANGAI JOE (1975).
Chen Lee is the typical meek Oriental who becomes deadly when provoked;
we're given plenty of opportunity to see him at work here, particularly
after he falls foul of a slave trader. The latter despatches four
ruthless assassins to exterminate the Chinaman three of whom are
played by well-known actors and popular Euro-Cult figures of the era:
Gordon Mitchell, Giacomo Rossi-Stuart and Klaus Kinski, the other by
Robert Hundar (ill-fated hero of CUT-THROATS NINE [1972], which
actually preceded this viewing!). Kinski receives second-billing but
his contribution lasts all of 7 minutes (and he only turns up 68
minutes into the film!).
Eventually, we learn that the title character is one of only two
masters of a specific martial arts technique so, naturally, the boss
eventually calls on his equal to fight the hero! The most violent
moments occur when Joe gouges the eye of one of the hired killers a
scene which surely must have inspired Quentin Tarantino for his KILL
BILL (2003/4) saga and the confrontation between the two Orientals,
which involves dismembered limbs and busted torsos! As usual for films
of this genre, the music score is a notable asset which is here
provided by Bruno Nicolai.
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