It's not great by any means, but it's a pretty good movie that didn't leave me filled with regret for investing time in it.
View MoreSimple and well acted, it has tension enough to knot the stomach.
View MoreAll of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.
View MoreThis is ultimately a movie about the very bad things that can happen when we don't address our unease, when we just try to brush it off, whether that's to fit in or to preserve our self-image.
View MoreI saw Ti Lung's and David Chiang's names in the credits on Amazon Prime for this film and immediately clicked play. I have been enjoying this duo in Wushu for months. The fact Chen Kuan-Tai, Danny Lee Sau-Yin and Wong Chung round out the Five Heroes, made it all the better.A peaceful village is overtaken by bandits looking for a someone to open a safe they've stolen from a bank. The bandits immediately set beating on the villagers to announce there's a new "sheriff" in town. The villagers cower and lock themselves in their houses to avoid confronting the bandits. This does nothing to phase the bandits. They take sheer pleasure in kicking Yao Guang (Wang Chung), an acrobat recovering from an illness, out of hotel room, beat him then tie him to a tree for their own amusement.The local thief Chen Deng (David Chiang Da-Wei) sees this and reports it the town Kung Fu talent Fang Yi Fei (Ti Lung), their acquaintances Ma Dao (Chen Kuan-Tai) who is Obmutescent most of the film, and Wei Min Hui (Danny Lee Sau-Yin) the local blacksmith, who wants to fight the bandits. An attempt to rescue Yap ends with Fei and Dao being whipped by the bandits as a warning to the villagers. When the bandits decide their next amusement will be the local women, they kill Da Niu (Norman Chu Siu-Keung - who only appears in the film during this scene), when Niu tries to prevent his friend from become a victim of the bandits. San Niang (Wong Bing-Bing), Dao's special friend, surrenders herself to the bandits to protect the other women. Her walk home the next morning is somber and heart-wrenching.The villagers grow angry with the young men who want to defend their town. The villagers naively believe if they let the bandits be, they will leave once the safe is open. The quintet knows there's only one way to get rid of the bandits and plot ways to make it happen. They will also learn Deng is well known to the bandits. He is actually "The King of Thieves", who decided being a bandit weighed too heavy on his conscience. Wei sneaks out of town to alert authorities to the bandits location. He encounters whom he believes to be the authorities but are actually just stragglers from the bandit group, on his return to town. He returns to find the townsfolk have finally grown a pair and fought back. Sadly, Dao died during the villager revolt. The arrival of more bandits only makes things worse, as they include Brother Li (Wai Wang), who has two guns and two belts filled with bullets. He shoots several villagers when he sees his leader (Wong Ching) and bandit brother Liang Shan (Chiang Tao) tied to posts where the bandits had previously tied and slaughtered villagers.Once more, the villagers are groveling at the bandits' feet. The remaining heroes regroup to take out the bandits once and for all. Deng steals Brother Li's gun belts and the heroes use the powder from the bullets to make a bomb. They plan to blow up as many of the bandits as possible when Wei return to town to open the safe. It's a suicide mission and the quartet knows it.The other three plan to deal with the surviving bandits once the smoke clears. Deng uses his body to shield the others from the 3 remaining bullets in Brother Li's guns. Fighting ensues leaving Fei with an abdomen wound, Deng dying from his injuries and Yap, barely standing. Fei manages to walk away from his last encounter and saunter toward a large jug of wine. He tries to take a drink, but dies from his injuries.The four dead heroes are carried away on stretchers by the villagers. Yap says his goodbyes to San Nieng and leaves town. I gave this a nine because the story moved along quite well. The fight scenes weren't simply for having fights, they were important to the plot. And, the comradery between Lung, Chiang Da Wei, Kuan-Tai and Wang Chung is as strong as it was i Hellfighters of the East.
View MoreBack in the early to mid 1970s, the Shaw Brothers studio put out a lot of films in which a band of all-star heroes fought against overwhelming odds in a bid for justice and humanity. These tales were invariably heroic, filled with great action and tragedy, and had more than a hint of SEVEN SAMURAI or indeed THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN about them. THE SAVAGE FIVE is such a film, featuring the 'Iron Triangle' of director Chang Cheh and stars Ti Lung and David Chiang, and it's a real masterpiece.The tale is simple enough: the stereotypical ruthless gang of bandits show up in a small town and proceed to wreak havoc by bullying and then killing the put-upon townsfolk. A bunch of oddball characters (a farm labourer, a drunk, and a thief) have soon had enough of this carnage so decide to mount a resistance. The action comes thick and fast, with martial arts mixed up with the more modern elements of gunplay and explosives, and Cheh ensures that the pacing just zips along with barely a moment to draw breath.THE SAVAGE FIVE is also blessed with an exemplary cast. Chiang and Lung as are good as you'd expect from them, with Lung a stoic and powerful presence and Chiang excelling as the youthful joker with a heart. Alongside them we get Chen Kuan Tai as the simple woodsman who bags the film's best role (he goes berserk with an axe), Danny Lee as an engineer, and Wang Chung as an ailing acrobat. The action is frequent and bloody, building nicely to an appropriately savage climax. Sometimes I find that these smaller-budgeted Shaw films are even better than the big budget epics like THE 14 AMAZONS, and that's the case here.
View MoreTHE SAVAGE FIVE (1974) was the 19th collaboration of director Chang Cheh and his star duo, Ti Lung and David Chiang, a team responsible for many great kung fu films made at Shaw Bros. in the 1970s, aided and abetted by this film's fight choreographers, Tang Chia and Lau Kar Leung, who performed the same duties on most of the previous collaborations. This one doesn't have the flashy kung fu setpieces or elaborate settings of the team's earlier films (THE HEROIC ONES, THE NEW ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN, BLOOD BROTHERS, etc.), but it's still a worthy effort with a strong storyline and a series of fight scenes designed strictly to serve the story. The five lead actors, Ti Lung, David Chiang, Chen Kuan Tai, Danny Lee, and Wang Chung, play characters with kung fu skills who decide to offer some resistance after their town is taken over by a robbery gang. The outlaws want the town silversmith, Wei (Danny Lee), to open the safe that they robbed from a bank in a neighboring town. But when Wei flees town to try and summon help it has tragic repercussions for the townsfolk. After a number of failed attempts which leave several townsmen dead, the remaining four heroes finally get the best of the bandits, only to get sent back to square one after the rest of the outlaw gang shows up, along with their vicious leader (played by Frankie Wei), who is armed with automatic pistols and uses them to regain the upper hand.The other fighters are played by David Chiang as a petty thief with a past; Ti Lung as a drunken scion of a once-wealthy family; Chen Kuan Tai as a simple woodcutter; and Wang Chung as a traveling acrobat who's fallen ill and is recuperating in the town. Wang Ping plays San Niang, a restaurant owner and female friend of the heroes who is quite a cool customer in the face of danger. At one point, she steps forth boldly as the outlaws begin picking out screaming young girls from the town to take with them for the night and offers herself in their place. This encounter and the aftermath in the morning are powerful dramatic scenes in the midst of this kung fu action tale.There are a few contrivances along the way that threaten the film's credibility, but overall it's a lean, mean suspenseful thriller that plays like a western and may indeed have borrowed its plot from one. In fact, there are three earlier films I was reminded of as I watched this: Andre de Toth's Hollywood western, DAY OF THE OUTLAW (1959); Duccio Tessari's Italian western, A PISTOL FOR RINGO (1965); and Hiroshi Inagaki's Japanese samurai drama, MACHIBUSE (1970). The music score in SAVAGE FIVE consists of cues ripped off from Ennio Morricone soundtracks for Italian westerns, including THE RETURN OF RINGO, the sequel to A PISTOL FOR RINGO.The film has come out in a restored, remastered edition in Mandarin with English subtitles available on R3 DVD from Celestial Pictures/IVL.
View MorePacifist village is beset by bandits in this low budget yet lyrical martial arts thriller: One beauty of a film that benefits from simplistic storytelling and nicely drawn characterizations. Underrated Chang Cheh film utilizes some sets and actors from his classic 'Duel Of The Iron Fist' and the isolated seaside setting of the village adds much to the atmosphere of the proceedings. Despite bad dubbing, ultra simply storyline and an almost austere production design 'Savage Five' hands down rivals the ornateness of 'Kid With The Golden Arm' and the twist heavy 'Five Deadly Venoms'. The always great David Chiang plays a lesser version of his Rover character from 'Duel Of The Iron Fist' and Ti Lung, looking incredible here, is at his physical best. Accolades to Chen Kuan (Guan) Tai and Wang Chung (Cheung) in great sympathetic roles too. Kung Fu classic where the actual martial arts display takes a backseat to the mesmerizing story. This review is based on the cut 96 minute t.v. print I have. A Chinese film to cherish!
View More