Xiao shi yi lang (1971) Poster

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5/10
The real rambler plus the real blade equals real average
ckormos114 April 2019
Wai Wang or Frankie Wang started acting in Taiwan then came to Shaw Brothers in the late 1960s. He had a wide range of roles including martial arts but not as a lead martial arts until this movie. This seems to be his only lead martial arts role.

Tina Chin Fei's career at Shaw Brothers is typical of so many young ladies of the time. She played the usual hot chick roles for about twelve years then married a rich guy and career over.

The same could be said for Margaret Hsing Hui but for only nine years.

Sammo Hung plays the bandit and rapist and dies in the opening scene. His career lives on.

The other star is the sword (or knife). Special swords need awe and fear inspiring names. Much seems to be lost in the translation regarding this sword. I think the idea is you can cut a deer in half with one swing of this blade. That would be an impressive sword. It seems hard to put that special ability into just two or three words and maintain the power.

After the opening credits Chang Yi's escort company is attacked by Chen Hung-Lieh and gang. After a brief and bland fight Chang Yi dies standing up and full of arrows. Tina arrives and is not pleased that Chen Hung-Lieh is posing as Hsiao the Rambler and quickly kills him. Her weapon is the whip. I usually do not like this as a weapon in these movies because it really is not a weapon. It is used for safety. Learning to use any weapon the first rule is do not hurt yourself or your partner with the weapon. Even a wooden sword can do serious damage to an actor with no martial arts experience. A whip is almost harmless but gives the impression it could hurt. Plus, if you go along with "movie physics" the whip can do amazing things.

Wai Wang and Tina meet. They talk about the plot for a long time and the movie starts to drag. The story resumes when the Deer Knife is easily stolen from its owner. It gets complicated because there are fakes so who has the real one pretty much sums up the rest of the movie.

I watched this movie twice before watching it again for this review. My notes on the first view rated it as only average and not enough action. The second time I felt less critical. For my final review I rate this only average. The movie's main flaw is the story drags at times and always for the same reason. Everything stops because the actors talk about the plot and just say things the audience already knows. This is symptomatic of a movie that has too short a run time and is getting padded. It would have been better with a shorter run time or more fights instead of expository dialog.
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SWORDSMAN AT LARGE – Unusual swordplay film with gripping love story
BrianDanaCamp23 September 2008
SWORDSMAN AT LARGE (1971) is an intriguing Shaw Bros. swordplay adventure that starts out as a typically convoluted array of various parties involved in a desperate search for a precious sword called the Deer Knife and assorted treacheries that arise. However, about half-way through, the narrative shifts to a deeply touching and affecting love story between a girl from the region's richest family who'd been kidnapped by the bad guys and the hero who rescues her, a Robin Hood type who has a bad rep because of various impersonators committing heinous crimes in his name. The girl, identified only as Miss Shum, gradually comes to recognize the outlaw, known as Xiao the Rambler, as a good and noble man and falls in love with him and he with her. They even share a song together, a slow lament about the sheep and the wolf, sung in the moonlight at an outdoor tavern, a remarkable piece of poetry unlike any song I've ever heard in a Hong Kong movie. This whole romantic twist is quite unexpected in a film like this, but it does indeed arise naturally from the plot and the characters, so it makes perfect dramatic sense. In fact, it pushes aside all the other characters and plot threads for most of the middle section of the film, which was fine with me because I was getting confused by it all anyway.

Ultimately, everyone has to get back to the business of finding and retrieving the Deer Knife from a band of vicious bandits led by a nomad leader named Happy King, who has become quite obsessed with Miss Shum himself. It all culminates in a big battle in Happy King's tent involving various fighters, Happy King's thugs and a showdown between Xiao and Happy King. One of the more interesting characters involved is a swordswoman of dubious loyalty named Xi Niang, who's quite a fashion plate and changes outfits at least five times in the course of the film, even though we never see any luggage on her horse!

The cast is led by Frankie Wei Hung (FIVE TOUGH GUYS) as Xiao the Rambler, Margaret Hsing Hui (THE SWIFT KNIGHT) as Miss Shum, and Tina Chin Fei (TEMPTRESS OF A THOUSAND FACES) as Xi Niang. Margaret is very beautiful and resembles a young Rosamund Kwan. She's also quite a capable actress. Tina not only offers dazzling costume changes but some vigorous fighting as well and it makes us wish she'd done more action roles in her career. Sammo Hung appears in the opening sequence as a hapless bad guy who has a particularly ill-fated encounter with Xi Niang.

The screenplay is credited to Ku Lung and it has a number of the writer's characteristic "martial world" touches. The big difference, of course, is that it wasn't directed by Ku Lung's regular director, Chor Yuen, but instead by Hsu Cheng-hung who did the spectacular Red Lotus trilogy from 1965-66 (TEMPLE OF THE RED LOTUS, TWIN SWORDS, and THE SWORD AND THE LUTE, all also reviewed on this site). Much of it was filmed outdoors so it looks a tad more—dare I say it?—realistic, as opposed to the stylized, mythic studio-built look that Chor Yuen crafted so meticulously in THE MAGIC BLADE, CLANS OF INTRIGUE, JADE TIGER, LEGEND OF THE BAT, etc.
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