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Challenge of the Masters

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Challenge of the Masters (1976)

May. 07,1976
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6.6
| Drama Action
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The Wong family kung fu school gets smacked around by a rival school. Wong Fei-hong gets fed up with the abuse and goes to learn from his fathers master. After one of the rival schools members kills some of the towns people Wong Fei-hong becomes enraged trains even more comes back and gets his revenge.

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Reviews

Peereddi
1976/05/07

I was totally surprised at how great this film.You could feel your paranoia rise as the film went on and as you gradually learned the details of the real situation.

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AutCuddly
1976/05/08

Great movie! If you want to be entertained and have a few good laughs, see this movie. The music is also very good,

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Stephan Hammond
1976/05/09

It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,

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Freeman
1976/05/10

This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.

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Leofwine_draca
1976/05/11

During the mid 1970s, famed Shaw Brothers director Chang Cheh and equally famed Shaw Brothers action choreographer Liu Chia-Liang had an unspecified falling out which meant they would never work together again. The good news for genre fans is that both Cheh and Liu went their own way making rival products during the latter part of that decade which turned out to be among their very best work. While Cheh concentrated on the Venoms and heroic bloodshed cinema, Liu went for more classical martial artists like Gordon Liu and delivered films all about technique.CHALLENGE OF THE MASTERS is such a film. While it's not as profound as MARTIAL CLUB, later made by the same team, it's still a solid watch and a must for fans of the star or director. What I enjoyed about this film is the plotting, which is more intricate than expected and gives the major stars different roles to the norm. The most standard of the bunch is Gordon Liu himself, who undergoes the usual gruelling training regime found in most of his films from the era, although the twist is that he's playing Wong Fei-hung himself.Liu Chia-Liang plays in support as a bandit expert, kind of like the role he played in DRUNKEN MASTER II but with a much darker edge. His fight scenes are invariably the highlights of the picture. In a star-studded picture, we also get Wong Yue in support as well as Lily Li and even Chen Kuan Tai, playing something other than the usual stock hero or villain he essayed. Liu Chia-Liang gets to battle his own brother at one point and it's another hit. The episodic nature of the production takes in rival school material, some comedy, some lion dance episodes, and a moralistic ending that I enjoyed. Regular screen thugs Chiang Tao and Fung Hark-On have a good double act. There are even bit parts for the likes of Yuen Biao, Eric Tsang, and Lam Ching-Ying if you can spot them.

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ckormos1
1976/05/12

I consider Liu Chia Liang (Lau Kar-Leung) the most important person in the history of martial arts movies. I call him the Grandmaster. No man can better tell any story about Wong Fei-Hung. Liu Chia-Liang learned martial arts from his father, a student of Lam Sai-Wing, who was a student of Wong Fei-Hung himself. Liu Chia-Liang honed his skills as stunt man and then action choreographer beginning in 1953 with the Wong Fei-Hung series of movies starring Kwan Tak-Hing. His personal golden age of directing martial arts movies began in 1975 with "The Spiritual Boxer." His other movies "Challenge of the Masters", "Executioners from Shaolin", "Heroes of the East", "The 36th Chamber of Shaolin", "Dirty Ho", "My Young Auntie", and "Legendary Weapons of China" are among the top ten martial arts movies of all time. I am often asked "What was the best martial arts movie ever?" and my subjective answer has been "Legendary Weapons of China". I am also often asked "What was the best fight scene ever?" Like the other question this is really impossible to answer. It is totally subjective and how does one even define the qualities that make the best fight scene ever? Yet, I can tell you this with no doubt, on May 7, 1976 (the release date of "Challenge of the Masters") the best fight scene ever filmed as of that day was the fight scene in that movie with Liu Chia-Liang against his brother Lau Kar-Wing. The runner –up would be his fight against Gordon Liu in the same movie.

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Matti-Man
1976/05/13

Just need to point out that one of the other reviewers here has made a mistake. He's clearly thinking of "Challenge of the Ninja" (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0080172/ ) not "Challenge of the Masters"."Ninja" is the one with Gordon Liu (Liu Chia- Hui) marrying the Japanese girl and having to fight her relatives to prove whether Chinese or Japanese Martial Arts are best. It's especially memorable for the superb Chinese Sword vs Katana battle, still one of the great duels of Hong Kong movies, 25 years on.Not as polished as later films by Chia-Liang Liu, "Challenge of the Masters" is still a pretty slick accomplishment when gauged against other contemporary Hong Kong films. Though shot in 1976, the movie looks as though it were made 5-10 years later. There's no doubt that the young Chia Hui Liu (Gordon Liu) is a star in the making. As always, his physical presence is arresting, his technical skills second-to-none and, heck, he's just plain likable.His mentor Chia-Liang Liu does a reasonable job with the direction, but it's the fight choreography that shines here. His one-on-one fight with his protégé Chia Hui Liu in the bamboo forest at the three-quarter point is just excellent, and the interesting theme of martial arts binding its exponents together in brotherhood, is a refreshing change from all the revenge dramas that were coming out of Hong Kong (mostly from Chang Cheh, it would seem) at the time.

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di kit
1976/05/14

This movie was pretty darn good. One reason was that it showed lots of different techniques of kung fu. This chinese guy marries a japanese girl. They have an argument and through a misunderstanding these japanese fighters come to challenge him and he has to fight them all. It has sword, staff, hand-to-hand, and more types of fighting. Plus Lau Kar Fai actually has all his hair. So watch it okay?

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