The Twin Swords
The Twin Swords
| 22 December 1965 (USA)
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Gui Wu happens upon a kidnapping with his wife Gan Lian-zhu at the Red Lotus Temple. Lian-zhu sends Wu to go for reinforcements while she stays to fight the kidnappers. Fortunately, the mysterious Scarlet Maid is surreptitiously helping her.

Reviews
StunnaKrypto

Self-important, over-dramatic, uninspired.

Dirtylogy

It's funny, it's tense, it features two great performances from two actors and the director expertly creates a web of odd tension where you actually don't know what is happening for the majority of the run time.

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Aneesa Wardle

The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.

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Rosie Searle

It's the kind of movie you'll want to see a second time with someone who hasn't seen it yet, to remember what it was like to watch it for the first time.

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Leofwine_draca

THE TWIN SWORDS is an early Shaw Brothers martial arts picture and a follow-up to THE TEMPLE OF THE RED LOTUS, with returning cast members and a continuing storyline. Wang Yu and his love interest Chin Ping are once more battling against the evil criminals inside the temple, which has more varied and violent traps than the ones in HOUSE OF TRAPS. When Ping is kidnapped by the foes, Wang Yu and his buddies must figure out how to rescue her.This vibrant swordplay epic suffers only from not being directed by Chang Cheh, who would have given the fight scenes a little more zing and who would have made the drama more, well dramatic. Otherwise it's business as usual, with plenty of plot twists and incident to keep it running smoothly along. Wang Yu is something of a wet blanket in this film, always in the background or running late, but Ivy Ling Po as the Scarlet Maid and Lo Lieh as a love rival help make up for his lack of assertiveness.

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bob the moo

I was a little thrown at the start of this film as it jumps right into the middle of a fight sequence without a word and it took me a few minutes to look up that this film is a sequel and thus I was going to be at a bit of a disadvantage in terms of the story. This didn't last too long though because basically the plot see Xiaowu and Lianzhu (as my subtitles called them) eloping together when they find some women being captured. They set off to help but fall into a series of traps set by the Red Lotus Clan. Lianzhu is captured by Xiaowu returns home to seek help from the rest of the Gan family – which is just what the Red Lotus Clan were planning for.As a plot it isn't too complicated once it gets moving and the story itself is mostly pretty good. The tone of the film is rather uneven though – good in some ways but odd in others. Firstly it must be said that the violence is quite tough at times, stagey perhaps but there is blood and quite cruel deaths throughout. The action isn't quite as well staged as I have seen, so this tough edge does help, even if the henchmen fall too easily and the film does lack a sense of danger in many of the scenes, still engaging but not as impacting as I would have liked. The actual telling of the story is rather melodramatic. This has the effect of slowing down the action a bit, but it does make it feel like a "proper" story as well. As a mix it doesn't really work even though bits of it do.Those looking for cheesy genre laughs will be disappointed as this approach does mean there isn't much in the way of flamboyance or fun to be had. The cast are solid and are better at the melodrama than I had expected, with some good performances. The villains of the Red Lotus Clan provide some color but sadly do not have as much time as I would have liked.Overall the film doesn't quite do it for me in any one way but is good enough as a whole to be worth a look. The blood and tough edge is good, while the melodrama provides structure – it is just the mix of them that makes the film a bit uneven and at times it is hard not to wish it had been darker or lighter just to move it away from the middle ground.

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Brian Camp

TWIN SWORDS (1965) is an elaborate studio production that boasts great color, beautiful sets & costumes, and a non-stop music/narrative song soundtrack. This was the Shaw Bros. studio style of the early 1960s before things got darker and more intense with ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN (1967), which also starred Jimmy Wang Yu and propelled him into martial arts stardom. TWIN SWORDS starts right in the middle of the action--a sword fight in which Lien Chu (Chin Ping) and Kwei Wu (Jimmy Wang Yu) fight off hordes of bandits led by familiar actors from early Shaw Bros. films. The film is a sequel to TEMPLE OF THE RED LOTUS (also 1965) and was followed by another sequel, THE SWORD AND THE LUTE (1966).The basic plot line finds the two young leads in the process of eloping when they are interrupted by cries for help from four young women being kidnapped. They try to rescue the women from the Red Lotus Temple, which is installed with elaborate traps by bandits disguised as monks. Lien gets trapped and Wang Yu escapes to go plead with Lien's family, the Kans, for help. In this highly melodramatic section of the film, the family is scornful and doesn't trust him. Lien's former suitor, played by Lo Lieh, volunteers to go investigate and makes an ill-fated rescue attempt, prompting the Kans to finally step in. It's Grandma who calls the shots here and the entire family goes, including Lien's mother and aunts, all beautifully dressed. Dad (Tien Feng) gives the family heirloom, an iron-chopping sword, to his youngest daughter, Little Ling, who later uses the sword, to lethal effect, on a hapless guard. Most of the family members have perfect aim and the ability to leap up walls and balconies, often in unison! To make a long story short, they all go to the Red Lotus Temple and put up a series of fights. An older swordswoman, Scarlet Maid (Ivy Ling Po, one of the top female Shaw Bros. stars of the time), joins in to help them out.The film is notable for its rich, lavish, brightly-colored studio look, a characteristic of the Shaw Bros. studio costume films of the time (1960s). Several scenes have background choral songs that provide a narrative accompaniment. The film was directed by Sui Jang Hung, although Chang Cheh, later the studio's top kung fu director, is credited with Production Design. The fight scenes feature lots of acrobatics and high leaping (or 'vaulting'). The heroes win fights quite easily. Wang Yu fights, but doesn't employ the brutal moves, both swordplay and kung fu, that he'd develop in his later films, relying here on more of a slashing sword style that represents a transitional moment in the studio's methods of fight choreography. He overacts well, however, pleading and crying very convincingly. I can see why he wanted to play tougher guys in his later films.In the Tai Seng VHS edition, in Mandarin with English subtitles, the subtitles sometimes dip off the screen during the first hour. The full-frame transfer cuts off the subtitles on the sides anyway, making only the middle of each line visible. But until a letter-boxed DVD becomes available, this is the only way to see a film which remains one of the best early examples of Hong Kong's 'wuxia pian' genre, the type of stylized swordplay film that director Ang Lee sought to recall, in his own fashion, with CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON (2000).ADDENDUM: (9/25/07) Six years after I wrote the above review, a remastered letter-boxed DVD edition of TWIN SWORDS has indeed finally come out, courtesy of Celestial Pictures' line of restored Shaw Bros. classics. I'd picked up the sequel, THE SWORD AND THE LUTE, a year ago, but waited till after I'd gotten the new edition of TWIN SWORDS and watched it again before watching the sequel, which I've now also reviewed for IMDb and which is found only under its Chinese title, HUO SHAO HONG LIAN SI ZHI QIN JIAN EN CHOU. So now all three films in the trilogy, which began with TEMPLE OF THE RED LOTUS, are available on Region 3 DVD from Celestial. The DVD of TWIN SWORDS contains its original four-minute trailer, which asserts that it's based on a "famous Chinese classic," although I have yet to determine the literary source.

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