The Bells of Death
The Bells of Death
| 30 June 1968 (USA)
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A simple woodcutter named Wei Fu finds his world shattered when three murderous horsemen arrive to kill his family and kidnap his sister. Left with nothing but his mother’s bell-laden bracelet, he sets out to seek his revenge. Lucky for him, Wei Fu encounters a master swordsman, who takes him under his wing.

Reviews
LastingAware

The greatest movie ever!

Laikals

The greatest movie ever made..!

Guillelmina

The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.

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Marva

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

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poe426

When a roving trio of murderers wipe out his family for no particular reason, Wei (Yi Chang) vows vengeance. He stumbles across an elderly martial arts master who quickly and efficiently dispatches a band of would-be bandits. He dogs the old master until he can literally go no further; he collapses, and wakes to find that the old man is willing to take him under his wing. In an interesting break with tradition, THE BELLS OF DEATH eschews the usual training sequences that would normally follow and instead leaps ahead five years. The next time we see Wei, it's obvious from his demeanor that he's not the same hapless bumpkin that we saw earlier. He promptly proves it by taking on a gang of pimps and "liberating" their latest acquisition. The carefully measured movie-making is a welcome change of pace from the frenetic, free-floating wirework and cgi of contemporary kung fu films; THE BELLS OF DEATH is like a western (Wei wears bells that jinglejanglejingle), and many of the scenes play out like the showdowns in American westerns. There is some good, solid action that compliments the solid filmmaking. Highly recommended.

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MartinHafer

Some tough folks arrive. And, for no reason other than the pleasure of being evil, they wipe out a family. However, they don't realize that one of them survived. This survivor soon after witnesses an amazing old man with a white beard and long hair wipe out a group of thugs--and he begs to be trained by the man. After training for years, vengeance is meted out to each of the three villainous murderers as well as their MANY henchmen. And through amazing sword skills and determination, the folks are defeated. Souds familiar? Well, this is, pretty much, the plot to "Kill Bill"--as well as quite a few of the Hong Kong martial arts films. In fact, it is "The Bells of Death"--made decades before most of these other films. But, despite the familiarity of the plot, it's a must-see for lovers of the genre because the fighting and choreography is so good--among the very best I've seen. There are also, thankfully, few 'wire foo' stunts--only at the end do you see a guy magically jump up to amazing heights--AND he fails!! I loved this touch as well as the nice pacing throughout. Clearly this is among the very best. No blows that don't even come close to landing, no silly characters and no silly story--just a well-made story of revenge...period.In addition, the DVD print is GREAT--nearly pristine. And, fortunately, it is in Chinese with nice English subtitles--none of that crappy dubbing!! For lovers of the genre, it doesn't get much more exciting!

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xBMVHx

Bells of Death is a classic Shaw Brothers production that I first saw in the early 90s when it was released on VHS in North America. I remember being amazed when I discovered that it was made in 1968...and now that I have the restored DVD version put out by Celestial I can fully appreciate how fresh it still feels. This might seem counterintuitive considering that the plot revolves around a man who devotes his life to avenging the murder of his family at the hands of bandits...a kung fu cliché if there ever was one. But while the concept was by no means original in 1968, it was also far from being stale. Add to that the creative cinematography, camera work, and set pieces and it becomes apparent why Hollywood is still trying to catch up to Hong Kong action films almost 40 years later. So while some people call this film completely derivative, I wonder why it hasn't been copied more. Maybe just due to its relative obscurity.With the popularity of Tarantino's Kill Bill, his homage to Asian action cinema (the Shaw Brothers rip-off of the Warner Brothers marquee front and centre, the soundtrack almost directly lifted from films like Bells of Death) it might be instructive and entertaining for more people to watch these old Shaw Brothers' films. The candle fight scene at about the mid- point of Bells of Death is enough to justify hunting the film down. If Hollywood is going to strip mine old films to recycle ideas it could do much worse than recreating such brilliantly executed scenes.

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CitizenCaine

Translated as Bells Of Death, this is a typical martial arts type movie. It's a low budget effort with poor dubbing, poor sound effects, poor script, poor cinematography, non-acting, and not that much fighting in the form of martial arts. It's just a bunch of sword fighting, without style and grace. One can see similar fighting in any pirate movie. The acting is what you would expect in a martial arts movie from 1968: not good. Some of the camera angles are poor and are obscured by the sun at times. The story is a typical martial arts one of revenge for murdering one's family. The survivor or relative then exacts revenge in systematic fashion. Nothing new here, nor is it done in an interesting or exciting fashion. There is much more blood and gore than usual for a martial arts film, although the blood effects, at times, are obviously fake. Watching this movie is a huge waste of time. 0 of 4 stars.

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