Shaolin Invincible Sticks
Shaolin Invincible Sticks
| 23 November 1978 (USA)
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Lu Tai Yeh (Chang Yi) is a stick fighter who uses his deadly “Tzu Wu” stick to make mince meat of his opponents. Lu Tai Yeh, along with his two sidekicks (Fung Long & Cheng Ching) just about closes down all the gyms in Northern China. Never satisfied, Lu and his men travel down south to clean up the region and take out all gyms and fighters who think they may be good with the stick. Lu’s plan is running without a hitch until he meets a new upstart, Ku Yung (Wang Tao), who plans on fighting Lu to take back the family heirloom - a Tzu Wu stick - and regain the honor of his family.

Reviews
Huievest

Instead, you get a movie that's enjoyable enough, but leaves you feeling like it could have been much, much more.

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Joanna Mccarty

Amazing worth wacthing. So good. Biased but well made with many good points.

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Neive Bellamy

Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.

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Bessie Smyth

Great story, amazing characters, superb action, enthralling cinematography. Yes, this is something I am glad I spent money on.

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ckormos1

The movie starts quickly with the white eyebrows gang appearing invincible. Cut to the narrator and demonstration of various "stick" fighting weapons and techniques. Back to the movie and Don Wong is more interested in gambling and having fun rather than learning his family's tradition of "stick" fighting. Chang Yi wants to destroy all the "stick" fighting families. Don can "stick" fight but he is not good enough to inherit the family's most valued POLE so his family disowns him. (He should have known this day was coming but it is a surprise.) He is now wandering, broke and homeless. He encounters Kam Kong and after a fight they buddy up. Kam's uncle has a school that comes under attack. Don trains hard to regain the family's respect and ties. If there was a reason for this change in character it was lost in the dubbing or it was never there in the first place. There are more story lines but why bother? The whole point is for Don to come of age and return to his family as a master of the Shaolin pole. The other story lines are just filler material for in between the fights. They are not interesting and they don't augment the action at all.The fights are fabulous. The pole is my favorite weapon and the choreography here is all top notch. The fights are all the movie really has going for it in my opinion. Still I rate it about average and recommend it for fans of the genre.

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phillip-58

For fans of stick fighting this is a treat though the actual fighting, though featuring nearly every type of stick (including an iron bar) is not to the same standard as say '8 Diagram Pole Fighter'. But Don Wong Tao, though not a great actor, is athletic and dominates the screen. Chang Yi is great as Lu Tai-yeh, a Silver Fox type figure who for reasons never explained wants to kill every other stick fighter he can find. Ha Kwong Li and Kam Kong help along the way. The story is very ordinary, the comedy more than usually annoying (except for the probably unintentional humour of a teacher's dying words to his idiot son) but the final fight in a bamboo grove is worth waiting for. The Vengeance DVD is a reasonable print with bad dubbing. The only extras are a deleted scene.

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Dharm Singh

A very under-rated martial arts film, its got great action and humour and I strongly recommend any martial arts movie fan to watch this. It is true that majority of the fighting in this film uses sticks and has very little hand to hand combat but nevertheless its a good movie and great action. I only wish that more time and money could've been spend to give the the movie more of a story line i.e. some romance which was evident between the two main characters in the film. The ending could have been longer and better. The English dubbing could have been improved, but hey I would keep their funny accents since those give the movie humour. I agree this film is better than a lot of more so called good martial arts movies like Big Boss.

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john_r035

This is a pretty typical early Hong Kong kung-fu film - i.e. Young man who looks like Bruce Lee has to fight a bad guy. However, the fighting sequences are quite good, and the dubbed English version, which I saw has quite a lot of humour. Although the picture quality isn't too good, I found it better than, for example, Bruce Lee's 'The Big Boss'. 6/10.

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