The Golden Seal
The Golden Seal
| 23 June 1971 (USA)
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Award-winning actor Ku Feng is Lei Chen-tien, a vicious, cunning, murderous brigand who wants the title treasure. Tsung Hua is Tai Tien-chou, the handsome swordsman who wants to avenge his father's death. Wang Ping is Wu Hsiao-yen, the lovely girl who must disguise herself as a boy to take on this pirate. Tien Feng both directs and co-stars as The Senior Master in this blade and battle-filled adventure of intrigue, treachery, and tragic triumph.

Reviews
SunnyHello

Nice effects though.

Mabel Munoz

Just intense enough to provide a much-needed diversion, just lightweight enough to make you forget about it soon after it’s over. It’s not exactly “good,” per se, but it does what it sets out to do in terms of putting us on edge, which makes it … successful?

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Haven Kaycee

It is encouraging that the film ends so strongly.Otherwise, it wouldn't have been a particularly memorable film

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Phillipa

Strong acting helps the film overcome an uncertain premise and create characters that hold our attention absolutely.

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Brian Camp

THE GOLDEN SEAL (1971) offers an opening hour of convoluted plotting and complicated family and clan histories as a young martial artist, Dai Tianchou (Tsung Hua) goes after Lei Zhentian (Ku Feng) the rival clan leader who murdered his father and destroyed his clan. He is joined by Jingyi (Yu Feng), a young woman assassin with the same intent and a family secret that we learn near the end. They're eventually joined by the assassin's female mentor Feng (Ha Ping), who bears facial scars from a fight with Zhentian; Miss Shi, a wild forest girl who lives in a cave and runs around topless; and Xiaoyan (Wang Ping), a conflicted daughter of one of the enemy clan leaders. So the hero has four female allies with whom to confront the Sun and Moon Clan, a large and vicious gang of killers.After getting through the slog of establishing all these characters and relationships, the film finally settles into a solid action niche in the final half-hour, with one excellent fight scene after another, beginning with a scene where Xiaoyan, on her way to find the hideout of Dai and Jingyi, is ambushed in a forest by Little White Dragon (future kung fu star Cliff Lok) and his men and has to fight her way out and reach the others. (This scene may have been influenced by King Hu's A TOUCH OF ZEN.) Eventually, they bring the fight back to the Sun and Moon Clan's outpost, with lots of sprawling swordfights, a duel between Dai and Little White Dragon, and a final showdown with Lei Zhentian.Ku Feng has some of the best fight scenes I've seen him in as he takes on his opponents with a sword and a circular multi-bladed weapon that can do a lot of damage. The other actors get to do a lot of swordfighting and are quite adept at it, doubled by stunt players only when they do high leaps, falls and other acrobatic stunts. I was quite impressed. The fighting instructor, Liang Shao Sung, favors long takes so he gets the most out of his actors as they employ several moves in each shot. Liang did the same job for quite a few other exemplary kung fu films, including the Shaw Bros. films, THE LONG CHASE (1971), THE 14 AMAZONS (1972), TRILOGY OF SWORDSMANSHIP (1972), and THE THUNDERBOLT FIST (1972), all but one of which (AMAZONS) I've reviewed here, plus, in his post-Shaw career, RAGE OF WIND (1973), THE TWO CAVALIERS (1973), and two Billy Chong vehicles, KUNG FU EXECUTIONER (1981) and A FISTFUL OF TALONS (1983).Aside from Ku Feng, the actors constitute a strictly second-tier Shaw cast. I've seen Wang Ping and Yu Feng in a few films each, but they never really registered with me until this film. Now I want to re-screen the other films of theirs to see if I missed anything. I don't know who plays Miss Shi, the cave girl who swings on vines and goes topless in her first scene, showering under a waterfall. Ha Ping was a character actress who usually played mothers, shopkeepers' wives and the like, but gets to play an embittered kung fu master here, possibly the largest role I've seen her in. Cliff Lok makes a good villain, but would soon be starring in his own top-drawer kung fu films, including KUNG FU GENIUS, RING OF DEATH, NINJA SUPREMO and DUEL OF THE SEVEN TIGERS. The film was directed by actor Tien Feng (ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN), who has a cameo as the revered master who teaches the hero kung fu. He only directed two other films in his career, neither of which I've seen.

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poe426

THE GOLDEN SEAL opens with a cliffhanger, a flashback in which we learn that the evil Lei Zhentien (Ku Feng), head of the Sun and Moon Clan, murdered the father of Dai Wu (Huang Hua) to get his hands on the Golden Seal.The gambit didn't work, and the son, Wu, escaped a fiery death. An adult, now, Wu is given the seal and "the sword villains avoid" and sent out into the martial arts world. He meets "Dai" (whose actual name is Xiao), a beggar on the run from the Sun and Moon Clan. They camp out in an abandoned building, where Wu inadvertently learns that "Dai" is a female- moments before her father and his men arrive to drag her back to the clan. Wu tags along. While nosing around one night, Wu takes a dart meant for a female intruder, Feng.(Lei wears a weaponproof vest during the day, so Feng decided to attack him at night, when he wasn't wearing the vest. So much for well-laid plans...) They manage to escape and Wu meets a cave woman running around topless in the mountains. This is Shi. Now Wu has THREE women to contend with. Needless to say, things get interesting from here on out, but, lest we forget, this is a kung fu movie and love don't always work out in the end.

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