| Index | 7 reviews in total |
10 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
David Chiang takes over in lavish Shaw Bros. follow-up, 9 September 2001
Author:
Brian Camp from Bronx, NY
THE NEW ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN (aka TRIPLE IRONS, 1971) follows director Chang
Cheh's earlier one-armed swordsman films (ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN, RETURN OF THE
ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN) but replaces departing star Jimmy Wang Yu with the
director's newer find, David Chiang, who is joined by frequent co-star Ti
Lung. It's a colorful, occasionally moody historical adventure shot on Shaw
Bros.' sprawling Hong Kong backlot and features a climactic battle in which
the titular hero takes on an army of bad guys single-handed.
David plays a swordsman tricked into a duel to defend his honor with a
corrupt swordfighting teacher (Ku Feng) who causes him to cut off his own
arm. He leaves the `gallant fraternity' and broods in isolation, making a
living as a waiter at a roadside tavern. When a wandering swordsman, played
by Ti Lung, learns who he is and gives him a pep talk, David is stirred, but
refuses to take action. When Ti is killed by the same corrupt teacher, who
uses a lethal three-section staff, David is finally spurred to action and,
armed with a dead warrior's sword given to him by the tavern owner's
sympathetic daughter (Li Ching), he goes after the offending gang of
fighters and figures out a 3-sword move designed to beat the 3-section
staff. Before he's through, he leaves a trail of corpses littering a massive
bridge leading to the gang's fortress.
David Chiang may not have been the best martial artist, but he had a wiry,
energetic quality that served him well in this type of slashing and swirling
fighting style. He also exuded a brooding intensity that came in handy in
his portrayal of the onetime swordsman, who is crippled both physically and
psychologically and has turned his back on his calling. Chiang and Ti Lung
worked well together in violent tales of male bonding in turbulent eras. The
villains here, Ku Feng and Chen Sing, both excelled at playing devious and
crafty characters capable of unctuous charm one minute and great cruelty the
next.
Famed martial arts director Lau Kar Leung worked on the fight scenes, in
which kung fu takes a back seat to swashbuckler-style sword- and weapons
play. (Lau was an expert in both styles of fighting.) This was one of a
group of costume epics made by Chang Cheh prior to his series of
Shaolin-themed martial arts films, dating from 1973-76, which put kung fu in
the foreground and were made initially in collaboration with Lau, who broke
off in 1975 to direct his own films.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
A Great Fantasy Martial Arts Film, 6 July 2007
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Author:
seductrix from United States
I usually like more realistic action films like Bruce Lee. Not the
latest Die Hard where they break the laws of physics every ten minutes.
And I don't like the current stuff with too much CG and wire-work.
That said, I love this film. Especially in the original Mandarin. Fine
production values, two heroes Chiang and Jimmy Wang Yu and a great
villain "Hero Lung." A classic movie baddie.
The only possible improvement would be if Bruce Lee had starred. Still,
I'll have to say Chian is perfect as a young master swordsman who would
rather cut off his own arm than live with dishonor.
I've heard that Jimmy Wang Yu was not a trained martial artist, but a
pretty tough guy in real life. Too cute guys.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
One of the best movies I have seen so far, 7 September 2002
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Author:
S1lv3rSp33r (S1lv3rSp33r@zvssite.nl) from Netherlands
This is 1 of the best movies I have seen so far!
Its always nice to see david chiang and ti lung playing togheter with
eachother !
Like some guy explained before , you can learn from this movie , because
although you have a handicap you can still be improving your
skillz.
This story is well made , like mentioned before a guy Lei Li losing his
arm
to a corrupt "held" Lung. After being retired for a year a brother Feng
come
to his place where he acts like a bartender. While he was demolished by
some
people from the Tiger Fort , Feng teached Lei Li to appreciate himself
again. Then one day Feng is losing his battle in the Tiger Fort against
Lung
, Lung used the same trick he used to do to Lei Li to with his sticks.
After
that Lei Li sworn revenge and the ending is amazing ! He defeats a whole
squad of fighters from the Tiger Fort! And once again he meets Lung , the
man that made him retire for a year. A very nice battle at the end
!
Anyway just watch the movie then you know what I mean !
:-)
Greetz!
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
A Nutshell Review: (DVD) The New One-Armed Swordsman (1971), 11 June 2006
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Author:
DICK STEEL from Singapore
I can't remember the details behind the reason why Wang Yu left the
franchise, but Chang Cheh replaced him with David Chiang in the titular
role, and of course it's a totally new character, having his own
motivations and background, as compared to Yu's Fang Gang.
Written by Ni Kuang (author of HK's popular Wesley science fiction
series), the new one- armed swordsman is now Lei Li (Chiang), an
arrogant young swordsman whose specialty is his "yuan-yang" double
swords. A hotheaded, up and coming hero, a diabolical plot was hatched
by Lung I Ching, a veteran swordsman in the martial arts world, to keep
these young upstarts at bay. With his three-joint-poles, which always
seem to defy gravity, he schemes and manages to duel with Lei Li,
defeating him and caused Li's arm to be chopped off.
Herein lies the difference between this One Armed Swordsman, and the
original Fang Gang. Fang Gang had lost his arm because someone else
hacked it off in a fit of rage. Here, Lei Li actually gambled with his
arm - the loser of the duel would have to remove it, and retire from
"society". While Fang Gang had to learn his martial arts all over
again, Lei Li was already skilled with his left hand, because he was
originally ambidextrous. Also, Fang Gang's weapon of choice is his
father's iconic broken sword, Lei Li doesn't seem to have any
preference, and could fight with any.
While there is a token romance with the daughter of a village
blacksmith, the introduction of a special sword didn't seem to auger
well, and it didn't last - it lacked something special, be it emotions
or prowess, and seemed too generic. Anyway, I can't help but to chuckle
at Ti Lung's character Feng Chun-Chieh, also a young upcoming swordsman
who uses two swords. Chun-Chieh and Lei Li formed a sense of
brotherhood when the former protected the latter from bullies, only
because the latter doesn't wish to use his martial arts skills anymore.
They become fast friends, but from the way their scenes were shot - the
numerous hugs, back-slapping, arm holding, eyes longing, you might be
expecting one of them to say that if only he knew how to quit the
other.
That aside, you'd come to expect the usual ketchup blood laden violence
which have become the hallmarks of Chang Cheh's swordfighting movies.
Here, it doesn't get any less bloody, and scenes can be quite graphic
with the numerous decapitations of limbs, and one really interesting
decapitation of half a human body, across the waist.
There are plenty of set action pieces, like that iconic fight on the
bridge with many footsoldiers simultaneously. Scenes like these are
what Tarantino adopted in his homage Kill Bill double feature, where
the hero goes on an unstoppable roaring rampage. Though I must admit
the introductory fights don't contribute much to the plot - just there
for the sake of showing off what Lei Li can achieve.
All in all, it's great fun, just to watch what our parents were
watching as they grew up, and comparing these films to the standards of
today. While cheesy, the good old classics stand out for their
groundbreaking effort in those days, to bring us what has evolved till
now.
Code 3 DVD contains minimal extras, just one trailer, a photo gallery,
the original poster, one general paragraph passing off as production
notes, a biography and selected filmography of the cast and crew.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Great story, well made movie, 16 October 1998
Author:
anonymous from Cottondale, FL
There are many metaphors in this movie, but the one, I think, is the most important is that; Once you have accepted your lot in life you can improve yourself beyond your own expectations. The story is straight forward, good guys versus bad guys, and some of the stunts are really unbelievable. But, overall I recommend this movie just because it is a great story.
3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Awesome, 4 June 2005
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Author:
ctomvelu from usa
Lavish costume spectacle about a brooding, self-mutilated warrior who reluctantly returns to his calling when his brother is murdered by an evil baron. The scene of the baron killing the brother is ghastly. What makes this movie, besides some cute stuff with the one-armed swordsman flipping eggs and whatnot, is the finale where he single handedly (pun intended) takes on about 500 castle guards to got to the baron. Clearly, this sequence influenced KILL BILL. I have no idea how they filmed the sequence, but it is magnificent. There was a short-lived period when these lavish costume dramas, using swords more than fists, were all the rage. I much preferred them to the typical slug-it-out kung fu malarkey of earlier Shaw Brothers efforts.
0 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Most realistic sword fights, 15 May 1999
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Author:
Mick-L from Springhill, Fl
As a beginning martial artist at the time I saw this film,I was amazed at how realistic the fight scenes were.This man could handle a sword and to this day I wonder how they made it look so real.
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