Revengeful Swordswoman (1978) Poster

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6/10
Painful on the ears, but worth a watch for female fighter.
kyrat2 September 2006
I generally watch martial arts films in the original language with subtitles. Sometimes however there is only a dubbed version. I believe this to be the worst dubbing job I have ever heard. I literally think Eric Idle was doing the voice for the servant - his voice acting was incredibly jarring! The combination of the poor timing/lip sync or the incredibly British accents... just made it rather hard to watch.

Given the bad dubbing and the fact that they didn't translate any of the signs, letters or messages in the movie - it's hard to tell if the plot really did make much sense or not in the original version. I'm going to hope it's clearer when you can understand the actual dialog and read all the visual clues.

In general this woman is trying to revenge her father. I'm not quite sure who killed him or why and am confused about the people she meets/fights along the way. (whose side are they on? what's going on?)

Beyond the plot confusion, the poor dubbing, I'm not really sure how to rate this film. Most of the Kung Fu films I've seen are Hong Kong films made in the 80's & 90's that have so defined the genre that it's hard for me to look back on the earlier "classic films" from the 60's & 70's (like King Hu). Having seen the later works first this isn't as impressive, the fight scenes are good, but not exciting -- however for all I know, in it's relative context this may've been new/revolutionary for it's time.

I did however finally decide that it's worth watching just because I always like strong female characters as central characters of the movie and other than Wing Chun, I don't find a lot of these. This avoids the traps of being sexist or overly sentimental -- and for that alone I recommend a watch!!

Let's just hope they decide to rerelease it w/ subtitles instead!
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4/10
More of a warning rather than a review
ckormos12 October 2016
It starts with Judy getting tossed off a cliff then she ends up in a cage. It's one of those movie cages where she could easily squeeze out but they put the poles that far apart so you can see her face. A hero comes along and releases her.

That is about where the movie stops making sense. The fights do occur every five minutes so there is plenty of action. Some of it is good but most of it is not. For example she spins around in a circle and four guys fall over from the breeze. That makes for a finger on the fast forward button. Unfortunately when the fighters start shooting laser beams out of the palms of their hands that means it is time for the eject button.

Sometimes I write a review, sometimes I write a warning.
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4/10
Taiwanese kung fu story with a female lead
Leofwine_draca23 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
REVENGEFUL SWORDSWOMAN is a wuxia film from Taiwanese, full of the usual low rent fight scenes and clichéd plotting. Chia Ling bags the lead role and plays a well-dressed swordswoman on a vendetta of vengeance as she tracks down the men responsible for her father's murder. Being a cheap film, there's a lot of outdoor photography as well as random sub-plots that exist solely to pad out the running time. Phillip Ko has a small cameo role as a one-armed swordsman whom Ling battles in the woods. It's very ordinary stuff, and not particularly interesting, unless you have a huge appetite for this particular genre.
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