Lang zi di shi san (1980) Poster

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3/10
They forgot the action
Leofwine_draca26 August 2017
Warning: Spoilers
TRIUMPH OF TWO KUNG FU ARTS is a slow-moving and exceptionally dark - in terms of lighting - Taiwanese period kung fu film. The plot is taken up by family drama with the hero played by real-life Triad Michael Chan Wai-Man, here sporting long hair as well as his usual full complement of chest and arm tattoos. Sadly, for a kung fu film this only has one or two fight scenes, and very brief they are too. The rest is pure melodrama: cheaply shot, made at speed, and almost entirely lacking in incident and interest. Kam Kong co-stars but is wasted alongside Wai-Man.
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2/10
Too much Lamenting for my taste
dafrosts16 June 2018
A 91 minute WUSHU movie should not contain this much pathos. I like watching Michael Chan Wai Man fight. All he seems to do in this movie is moan and groan about not being able to exact revenge for his father. he has spent years wandering, looking for those who murdered his father. A lot of the scenes are literally too dark to see, so all you hear is his whining. I stayed with it for an hour. I was too much and I found a different Michael Chan Wai Man movie. I do not recommend this movie. ha I wanted to watch this much depression, I would have chosen a Jimmy Wang Yu movie.
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5/10
Heavy on the drama and light on the action
ckormos19 January 2016
Triumph by Two Kung Fu Arts or Triumph of Two Kung Fu Arts 1977 Taiwan with Gua Ah-Leh, Henry Luk Yat-Lung, Chow Siu-Loi, Kam Kong and Michael Chan It starts with mom (Gua Ah-Leh) looking for her son. After much abuse, a man finally has sympathy for her and she meets another man who used to know her son years back. When she finally reunites with him she is angry not happy. Son left eleven or so (inconsistent) years ago and has done nothing but turn into a beggar and acquired many tattoos. This course of action took up forty minutes of screen time and could have been set up in four minutes. Plus there were only two fights in all that time and they were quick and in the dark. The movie strives to capture the feel of the earlier Taiwanese movies such as "A Touch of Zen" but fails in that it simply drags with no action and the character development is more like character stagnation. All of the actors have about 100 movies to their credit but Michael Chan and Kam Kong are the only names I recognized. I stuck with it and about forty five minutes in our guy and his helper have hooked up with a master and know the location of father's murderer. Finally we have some action with training sequences all in the form of fights. This sets up the fact that the son's kung fu is rusty and he could not defeat his opponent. Nevertheless he walks right up to Kam Kong and challenges in in his own stronghold surrounded by his men. He defeats all the underlings but takes a sword in the belly. Kam Kong then finishes him off. Oddly, that fight is mostly a series of stills with a short song accompaniment. Helper guy and friends go looking for him and find the body. They formally challenge Kam Kong and fight him in the woods. The master intervenes otherwise Kam Kong would have beaten them. Then they set it up to make it appear that mom stabbed him with a knife to get revenge.

The copy is English dubbed and widescreen – not from VHS – but not restored so there are plenty of scratches instead of tracking lines. Overall I can only recommend this movie for fans of the genre with the warnings that the story drags and the action is minimal and I give it a below average five out of ten rating.
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