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Showing posts with label Action. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Action. Show all posts

Dean Martin Is...Matt Helm: 4 Movie Set

 

Four-disc set includes: The Silencers (1966)After the success of the James Bond films, Dean Martin swung his way onto the big screen as super-cool secret agent Matt Helm. This debut film in the series finds Helm and klutzy assistant Gail Hendricks (Stella Stevens) saving America's nuclear arsenal from Asian mastermind Tung-Tze (Victor Buono). With Daliah Lavi, Roger C. Carmel, Robert Webber, Arthur O'Connell, and Beverly Adams as "Lovey Kravezit"; based on two novels by Donald Hamilton 102 min. C/Rtg: PG Murderers' Row (1966)When criminal kingpin Julian Wall (Karl Malden) threatens to destroy Washington with a hijacked "helio-beam," it's up to ICE agent Matt Helm (Dean Martin)-who fakes his own death and poses as a Chicago gangster-to stop him, in this fast-paced, light-hearted sequel. Also stars Ann-Margret, James Gregory, Camilla Sparv, and Dino, Desi & Billy. 105 min. C/Rtg: NR The Ambushers (1967)Ace spy and lady-killer Matt Helm (Dean Martin) goes to Mexico with gorgeous female scientist Sheila Sommers (Janice Rule) to track down a mysterious, government-built flying saucer which was hijacked by exiled ruler José Ortega (Albert Salmi). Third Helm outing co-stars Senta Berger, James Gregory, Kurt Kasznar, Beverly Adams; loosely based on Donald Hamilton's novel. 102 min. C/Rtg: NR The Wrecking Crew (1969)The series' final film sees superspy Matt Helm (Dean Martin) teaming up with sexy sidekick Freya Carlson (Sharon Tate, in her final film) to find the criminal genius known as Count Contini (Nigel Green) who's behind a billion-dollar gold hijacking. With Elke Sommer, Nancy Kwan, Tina Louise, and a debuting Chuck Norris; Bruce Lee served as the film's martial arts adviser. 105 min. C/Rtg: PG Widescreen; Soundtrack: English. Region Free

Buy: https://amzn.to/36BgECc

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Dragons Forever (1988)

 

Dragons Forever (Chinese: 飛龍猛將) is a 1988 Hong Kong martial arts action-comedy film directed by Sammo Hung, who also starred in the film and co-directed by Corey Yuen. The film co-stars Jackie Chan, Yuen Biao, Deannie Yip, Pauline Yeung, and Crystal Kwok. It is the last film in which Hung, Chan and Biao all appeared in together, as later Chan subsequently focused on his solo film career.

A fishery is seeking court action against a local chemical factory for polluting the water. The mysterious chemical company hires lawyer Jackie Lung (Jackie Chan) to find information that will discredit the fishery. He employs his arms dealer friend, Wong (Sammo Hung) to woo the fishery owner, Miss Yip (Deannie Yip), to try to convince her to settle out of court.

Lung also brings in goofy inventor and professional criminal, Tung (Yuen Biao), to bug her apartment. Unfortunately, Wong and Tung are unaware of each other's roles and soon come into confrontation, while Lung tries to maintain the peace.

Wong falls for Miss Yip, whilst Lung woos her cousin, Miss Wen (Pauline Yeung), an environmental scientist who is going to testify on Miss Yip's behalf. The three men inadvertently discover that the chemical company is just a facade for a narcotics empire, ran by Hua Hsien-Wu (Yuen Wah). They soon come up against Hua's thugs, and ultimately infiltrate the factory for a showdown with Hua himself and his henchman - martial arts master (Benny Urquidez).

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Stream: https://amzn.to/3tokmrx

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The Candy Tangerine Man/Lady Cocoa Double Feature (BluRay)

The Candy Tangerine Man: The film opens with pageantry pimp Baron (John Daniels) driving his customized two tone red and yellow Rolls Royce around down town - night time L.A. His ladies have been coming up short lately and he wants to know why. Turns out that two L.A.P.D. cops - Dempsey and Gordon (who have been after Baron for some time now) have resorted to rousting his girls every chance they get. Indeed in the next scene they have set Baron up with a copper in drag to entrap him with procurement of prostitutues. Of course the Baron is wise to their ploy and ends up grabbing the ecopper by the short and curlies. Starring John Daniels, Eli Haines, and Tom Hankason.

Lady Cocoa: A young woman is released from prison in order to help the government build a case against her gangster boyfriend. Lots of violence, explicit language and adult situations keep this blaxploitation film moving forward from beginning to end. Starring Lola Falana, Gene Washington, and Alex Dreier.

BluRay
Region A
Studio: Vinegar Syndrome
TBR
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Riot on 42nd Street

Once upon a time, there existed a sleazy haven for degenerates, junkies, prostitutes and thugs. That place was 42nd Street, the Deuce. In the 80s, the Deuce still clung to its unsavory origins. For better or worse, Glen Barnes (John Patrick Hayden) looks to keep his grindhouse operation legitimate and must fight the underworld criminals who hold sway in these parts. When Glen's entire staff is massacred on opening night, Glen must revert back to his violent history to exact a little revenge. Meanwhile, Glen's cop ex-girlfriend (Michelle Owens) tries to convince him to keep his nose clean while her partner, played by Jeff Fahey (PLANET TERROR), tries to snuff their rekindling romance. Co-starring Carl Fury (POSED FOR MURDER) and directed by Tim Kincaid (BAD GIRLS DORMITORY), RIOT ON 42nd STREET is a sleazy salute to a beloved bygone era.
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Hired To Kill [Blu-Ray]

NO MAN ON EARTH COULD GET HIM OUT OF PRISON ALIVE. SEVEN WOMEN WILL TRY.

Starring legendary actors Oliver Reed (Gladiator, The Brood) and George Kennedy (The Delta Force and The Naked Gun series), Hired to Kill is an essential slice of 90s action fare featuring guns, girls and a plethora of budget-busting explosions for good measure.

Action movie staple Brian Thompson (whose brief turn in 1984 s The Terminator led to a starring role in the 1986 Sylvester Stallone vehicle Cobra) stars as Frank Ryan, a mercenary sent to track down a rebel leader in hostile territory. Posing as a fashion designer, he won t be going it alone, as he ll be aided by seven beautiful but deadly female fighters.

Whilst the opportunity to see Oliver Reed chewing up the scenery behind an elaborate moustache merits the price of the admission alone, Hired to Kill is also noteworthy as being co-directed by Nico Mastorakis the man behind such cult favourites as Island of Death and The Zero Boys.

DIRECTOR-APPROVED SPECIAL EDITION CONTENTS

Brand new 2K restoration of the film, approved by writer-director Nico Mastorakis
High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) and Standard Definition DVD presentations
Original Stereo audio (uncompressed PCM on the Blu-ray)
Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
Audio Commentary with editor Barry Zetlin
Hired to Direct a brand new interview with director Nico Mastorakis on the making of Hired to Kill
Undercover Mercenary a brand new interview with star Brian Thompson
Original Theatrical Trailer
Stills Gallery
Original Freedom or Death Screenplay (BD/DVD-ROM Content)
Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Graham Humphreys
Fully-illustrated collector s booklet featuring new writing by critic James Oliver
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1990: The Bronx Warriors (Blue Underground) (DVD / Blu-Ray Combo All Region)

1990: The Bronx Warriors (Blue Underground) (DVD / Blu-Ray Combo All Region)
THE FIRST TO DIE WERE THE LUCKY ONES!

It’s 1990 and the Bronx has officially been declared a “No Man’s Land.” The authorities have given up all attempts to restore law and order. When a beautiful young woman runs away from Manhattan into this wasteland of motorcycle gangs and marauding warriors, her  corrupt father sends a ruthless mercenary to bring her back at all costs. But gang leader Trash has other plans, uniting the rival outlaws to wage an all-out guerilla war against their corporate oppressors.

Co-written and directed by Enzo G. Castellari (THE INGLORIOUS BASTARDS), this action-packed post-apocalyptic cult classic is  a delirious mix of elements from THE WARRIORS and ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK. Starring Vic Morrow (TWILIGHT ZONE: THE  MOVIE), Christopher Connelly (MANHATTAN BABY), Fred Williamson (VIGILANTE), and Mark Gregory (ESCAPE FROM THE  BRONX), 1990: THE BRONX WARRIORS has been newly transferred in High Definition and includes exclusive new Extras created especially for this release!
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Westworld (1973)

An amusement park for rich vacationers. The park provides its customers a way to live out their fantasies through the use of robots that provide anything they want. Two of the vacationers choose a wild west adventure. However, after a computer breakdown, they find that they are now being stalked by a rogue robot gun-slinger.
In a near future, the Delos Company offers the vacation of the future in the present days in the amusement parks Medievalworld, Romanworld and Westworld for U$ 1,000.00 per day. The vacationers can feel in the Middle Age or in the Roman Empire or in the Wild West and have joust, sex, duel against gunslinger and whatever he or she wants interacting with robots.

Peter Martin (Richard Benjamin) and John Blane (James Brolin) travel in the hovercraft to Westworld and sooner Peter duels against a Gunslinger (Yul Brynner). However, when there is a malfunctioning of the machinery, the robots get out of control jeopardizing the guests.

"Westworld" is a very successful sci-fi of my generation and a sort of grandfather of other robots films, such as "The Stepford Wives", "Blade Runner" and mainly "The Terminator". There is a scene in this last franchise that is an updated rip-off of Yul Brynner's character chasing Peter.

The story has flaws, but is engaging and suspenseful, holding the attention until the very last scene. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "Westworld – Onde Ninguém Tem Alma" ("Westworld – Where No One Has Soul")
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Shao Lin men (1976)

Superkicker Dorian Tan Tao-liang plays a Shaolin student who must find a Manchu traitor responsible for the murder of the abbot. Jackie Chan is a spear fighting expert who decides to help Tan because the traitor killed his brother. Part of their mission is to help a scholar make it safely across the river without getting killed from the Manchus.
The Hand of Death aka Countdown in Kung Fu/Shao Lin Men didn't make much of an impression in 1976 but it's become something of a historical curio as it unites the Three Brothers, Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao under the direction of John Woo at the beginning of their careers. Woo even plays a supporting role. However, don't expect to see them teamed up along similar lines to later efforts like Dragons Forever or the Lucky Stars series: Sammo Hung is the villain's buck-toothed sidekick, Jackie Chan the hero's sidekick and Biao odd bit parts and a lot of stunt doubling. Instead the lead is taken by Dorian Tan, a nondescript and one-note but inoffensive lead who's better at the kicks than the acting, though Chang Chung's swordsman, the first of Woo's tragic fatalistic professional killers, compensates so admirably in that department that it's a shame his career never took off. The film is slightly above average for its time, a decidedly formulaic but more than competently staged period piece that sees yet another Manchurian despot decide to wipe out the Shaolin temple and Tan's survivor teaming up with Chan and Chung to guide a revolutionary scholar (Woo) to safety and have their revenge on James Tien's traitor. But as usual, the plot's just an excuse for a string of action sequences, here choreographed by Sammo Hung, and while they may be a long way from the Bruce Lee level they're entertaining enough to more than hold your interest en route to the grand finale battle. It's not a deathless classic but it's easily one of the best of Chan's pre-stardom movies, filling an hour-and-a-half excitingly enough without outstaying its welcome.
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Injo Shuuyoujo Prison Amazones

Description: Erotic action that the stage was dominated by violence and prison whip female prisoner. Check-in begins at lower body is naked, in prison or a catfight between the daily torture of a female prisoner. You may also find the third and second part on this blog.
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Grand Theft Auto (25th Anniversary Edition) DVD

Teenage car-nappers (Ron Howard and Nancy Morgan) go wild in this car crash comedy classic!Can a young runaway couple in a stolen Rolls Royce get hitched in Vegas before two sets of parents, a jealous boyfriend, a private dick and mob of bounty hunters catch them? Ron Howard directs and stars in this Roger Corman-produced feature-length car chase, the calamitous run to the altar causing the crash of 3 Cadillacs, a Mercedes Benz, a Porsche, 7 cop cars, 4 trucks, numerous Lincolns, low riders, and 33 screaming street machines! See Ron wrestle his red hot Rolls up on two wheels in this riotous inspiration for the best-selling video game.
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Rambo III (1988)

John Rambo's former Vietnam superior, Colonel Samuel Trautman, has been assigned to lead a mission to help the Mujahedeen rebels who are fighting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, but the Buddhist Rambo turns down Trautman's request that Rambo help out. When the mission goes belly up and Trautman is kidnapped and tortured by Russian Colonel Zaysen, Rambo launches a rescue effort and allies himself with the Mujahedeen rebels and gets their help in trying to rescue Trautman from Zaysen. Written by Todd Baldridge
Rambo III is a action film as simple as that. a hero that does nearly impossible things and thats the attraction of a action hero he's not a real person it's a movie. movies like this just want to entertain you for 90mins. to 2hrs. and no matter how impossible or unrealistic things are you take it for what it is. that's the idea of wild action films they take you to another place, as a film lover i try not to have such high hopes for things, i want to see it with just a open mind . some things you will like and some you don't. rambo III is one i like. people talk about plot and what this film does and does not do . this film gives you just what you think it will.
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Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985)

John Rambo is removed from prison by his former superior, Colonel Samuel Troutman, for a top-secret operation to bring back POW's still held in Vietnam. Rambo's assignment is to only take pictures of where the POWs are being held, but Rambo wants to get the POWs out of Vietnam. Teamed up with female Vietnamese freedom fighter Co Bao, Rambo embarks on a mission to rescue the POWs, who are being held by sadistic Vietnamese Captain Vinh and his Russian comrade, Lieutenant Colonel Padovsky. Rambo starts killing every enemy in sight while still focusing on his intentions to rescue the POWs. There are also corrupt American officials involved in the mission, including Marshall Murdock, one of Rambo's superiors.
Sylvester Stallone has one of the most recognizable faces in the world for a reason; this genius has created two pop culture Icons Rocky and Rambo. Anywhere, in the world these two characters will be reconized. Stallone has many detractors, but his vision, writing, and acting out these characters has made him rich and sucessful in a highly
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Rambo First Blood (1982)

John J. Rambo is a former United States Special Forces soldier who fought in Vietnam and won the Congressional Medal of Honor, but his time in Vietnam still haunts him. As he came to Hope, Washington to visit a friend, he was guided out of town by the Sheriff William Teasel who insults Rambo, but what Teasel does not know that his insult angered Rambo to the point where Rambo became violent and was arrested, as he was at the county jail being cleaned, he escapes and goes on a rampage through the forest to try to escape from the sheriffs who want to kill him. Then, as Rambo's commanding officer, Colonel Samuel Trautman tries to save both the Sheriff's department and Rambo before the situation gets out of hand.
The character of John Rambo became more popular in films such as "Rambo:First Blood,Part II" and "Rambo III".The character were treated like a comic book hero spawning action figures and a short lived animated series which lasted only a short while.There are not that many people who has heard of the Rambo character.He's well known
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Hero of Shaolin DVD

I’m a kung fu movie fan of the kind where, providing there’s enough spectacular kicking and punching on show, then I’m happy to forgive a movie a lot of its problems.
That being said, I was very excited to hear about Terracotta’s new imprint label Classic Kung Fu, and their plans to bring a series of films to UK DVD for the first time. Sadly, the label’s first release has proven to be something of a let down.
The story being told in 1984’s Hero of Shaolin is fairly typical. Four brothers, three of whom are Buddhist monks while the eldest (Alexander Lo Rei) has been refused entry to the order, find themselves framed for the murder of the abbot. They go on the run, pursued by both their evil former master and by bounty hunters.
Unfortunately, simple as this story is, Hero of Shaolin - perhaps better known as Ninja Vs Shaolin Guard – struggles to tell communicate it in an engaging manner. The brothers are broadly drawn and lack personality, beyond Eldest Brother’s seriousness and Third Brother’s contrasting, supposedly comic, silliness.
An attempt at a love story fares little better. As a character development it’s flat and perfunctory, and it certainly adds nothing to the action scenes either, as love interest Ah-mei is the only character who doesn’t get in on the fights.
The mugging performances don’t help. This isn’t uncommon with kung fu movies of this vintage, but it’s still irksome, and especially when an English language dub is the only audio option.
Alexander Lo Rei may prove to be a notable, memorable onscreen presence, but perhaps that’s thanks to his ridiculous eyebrows rather than his acting.  He’s also great fighter, but certainly have the charisma of a Jackie Chan or a Gordon Liu.
The most distinctive character, a creepy eunuch of dubious affiliation, sadly has little to do and disappears from the film in pretty short order.
The filmmaking is also quite slapdash. Hero of Shaolin was clearly made on a low budget, but there are errors that have more to do with a lack of care than a lack of cash. The editing is particularly problematic, with cuts often being poorly paced and awkward. It frequently feels as though a few frames from the end of one shot and the start of another have been lost, giving the film a jagged abruptness.
This may be less prevalent in the film’s many fight scenes, but even there, when its arguably most needed, the editing isn’t entirely fluid.
Many of those criticisms would fall by the wayside if the film impresses with its action choreography and performances. It’s certainly true that there’s a lot of action, packing a good hours worth into a slim 86 minute running time. Most of this action is rather well executed, with the notable exception of some infrequent but extremely obvious wire work.
This film is at its best during longer exchanges of technique, whether that’s horseplay between the brothers, or Lo Rei’s climactic battle with his former master. It’s in these sequences that director Mai Chen Jsai gets to have some fun.
One particularly notable shot looks straight up from the ground as one of the brothers fights a female ninja over the lens. This is an angle we don’t often see on a fight.
There’s also a fair amount of variation in the choreography. Comedic scenes near the start establish the relative levels of mastery between the brothers before things turn serious – at least until a rather silly, but hugely entertaining, fight in a graveyard towards the end.
Ultimately, the film does become little more than a series of tenuously linked fights, but it’s hard to hold that against it when the quality is at its peak: the Abbot’s seated fight with the ninjas is a standout; as is the confrontation with the female ninja, who gets to perform some of the best action in the film.
While the final fight suffers from its editing as well as a lack of well-stoked anticipation for the villain, the final fight scene proves pretty effective. It’s an excitingly choreographed one-on-one contest, and there’s some clever prop use built in. This fight seems to have been influenced by some of Jackie Chan‘s early Golden Harvest work, and that’s never a bad thing.
All of the martial arts performers acquit themselves well, though the overly technical style and pacing of the combat might feel slow moving, especially when compared to some of its contemporaries. Hero of Shaolin was made around the same time as Shaw’s 8 Diagram Pole Fighter and Sammo Hung‘s Wheels on Meals, bI’m a big fan of the UK distributor Terracotta. They’ve done a lot for the profile of Asian films and filmmakers in the UK, and I was excited to hear that they would be adding a series of classic kung fu films to their schedules. Sadly this is disappointing release, even beyond the fact that this film itself is no classic, .ut both of those pictures leave this one looking rather stiff and old hat.
On the positive side, Hero of Shaolin is presented in widescreen at approximately 2.35:1, which would appear to be how it was intended. The broad frame compositions sometimes work wonders, particularly in larger scale action scenes.
For most martial arts films, all available soundtracks are a dub of some kind as they were usually shot without sound, but this disc features on a rather cheesy and badly synced English language track. For some that will be a draw, but I’ve never found English dubs anything but annoying. I’d be intrigued to know whether Cantonese or Mandarin tracks were ever produced and, presuming so, why one or the other isn’t on this release.
Even taking into account the film’s age, Hero of Shaolin could look a lot better. On a 37 inch screen, run through my blu ray player, the image quality was soft overall and the detail was limited.
There are also some infrequent, occasionally serious examples of print damage – see below – and compression artefacts.
I’d still guess that this is the best looking home release this film has ever seen, but I would have liked to see more care and, ideally, a proper restoration, and particularly since this was the first title in a new collection.
I’d say the picture quality here is comparable to the early work of Hong Kong Legends, on discs which are now around 15 years old.
There are very few supplements. A trailer for Hero of Shaolin - under another alternate title, Guard of Shaolin – shows how much worse the picture quality might have been. The only other film-specific extra is a stills gallery, drawn straight from the transfer, and this does little but show off the compression artefacts more clearly.
There are also some extras related to Terracotta in general, with a page of online links and trailers for other releases – though nothing hints what else may be coming up in the Classic Kung Fu series.
Overall, this is a disappointing and underwhelming package, offering an average film with a weak transfer. I was hoping for a fine launch for what I was hoping would be an exciting new imprint. Hopefully Terracotta and Kung Fu Classics will pull something better out of their bag next time.

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Live Like a Cop, Die Like a Man (1975)

Fred and Tony are members of an elite 'special squad' of police in Rome, Italy whom are licensed-to-kill, undercover cops whom thrive on living dangerously.
Ruggero Deodato is a director known for making hard films, filled with violence and cynicism. His impressive cop thriller, "Live Like A Cop, Die Like A Man", is no exception. Alfredo and Antonio belong to a special branch of the Rome police department. They are given the hard cases, having to deal with the lowest criminal scum around. Their methods of dealing with the criminal element are certainly not standard procedure, as we see early in the film. The 'bad guys' who have the utter misfortune of having to deal with Fred and Tony, do not get handcuffed and have their rights read to them. Deodato, most known for a contemptuous piece of cinema called 'Cannibal Holocaust', has fashioned a stylish crime drama, filled with interesting and unusual characters. The viewer gets to know the two vigilante cops, who seem to be operating on the same wavelength. They cruise around on a motorcycle together, kill and torture bad guys together, even live together. They share the same cynical attitude towards life and death. There is a real bond there, and that relationship elevates this to a higher level. It is fun to watch these two in action, cocky and sexist bastards that they are, but somehow likable. Filmed with a great deal of energy and style. The opening scene, a wild motorcycle chase through the streets of Rome, sets the tone for the rest of the film. And the music is worth mentioning, some great background music, typical of the 70's time period, compliments the action. Deodato often had a strange habit of using the most inappropriate music to go along with the extreme violence happening on the screen. Soft ballads were often heard as people got beaten and murdered, or sexy disco music complimented a brutal rape, such as in "House On the Edge Of the Park". It somehow makes the brutal imagery all the more sick and twisted. For 'Live Like A Cop' actor Ray Lovelock who portrays Antonio, sings the main theme for the film. Great stuff. In America at this time, a TV show called 'Starsky & Hutch' was doing well. A cop show that featured two handsome partners, one blond and the other dark haired, much like the two heroes of this film. Perhaps that TV show was an influence, but the movie was made before 'Starsky & Hutch' was shown on Italian TV, so who knows? Up until recently "Uomini Si Nasce Poliiziotti Si Muore" was super-rare, almost impossible to find on video. Highly recommended for fans of 70's exploit films and crime films. There were countless cop thrillers to come out of Italy in this time, but this stands out as one of the best, and certainly one of the most brutal. 
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Naked Comes The Huntress (1978)

Three friends (Chen Sing, James Tien & Wong Ching) turn up in Manchuria to find fortunes and prosperity of some kind. Almost devoured by the perils of the land, the trio stumble upon a young, naked girl in the snowy landscape. She is Mien Mien (Lee Ying-Ying) who is actually using her still, naked body to attract the minks that she and her father hunt for a living. The trio of men are subsequently invited to her home where they work for the family in exchange for food and shelter. Soon the alluring nature of Mien Mien gets the lust in Wong Ching's character going but Mien Mien is saved by Chen Sing, the elder of the trio. Love is in the air but not in the eyes of the father who wants to marry the daughter to the younger James Tien character. Deception and betrayal soon enter...
A slightly bizarre, and all the more entertaining for it, film, more of a drama / thriller, than a martial arts film, although there are a couple of nicely (sammo hung) choreographed sequences. The film moves at a quick pace and has several twists and turns which work really well, keeping you on your toes. The use of the rural location, mainly in winter, works really well and adds something else to the ambience of the film's first act. Oh, and carrie lee is kinda cute...
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The One Armed Swordsmen (1976)

The martial world is now awash in one-armed knights, who aren't inclined to make any permanent alliances among themselves.
Hmmm, not a patch on the original from Shaw Brothers. The fighting is average and looks very clunky. The story line is as to be expected from a 70's Kung Fu film, confusing and daft. Stupid voices for women,dubbed in posh English accents for men. i turned this off early and i love martial arts flicks. Get the original, its so much better than this average movie, don't be fooled, i bought the wrong flick what i wanted was the Shaw brothers movie. i have just started commenting, I'm only doing foreign and martial arts films this is just the beginning of my movie collection, i personally own most modern martial arts flicks. Hope you don't waste time watching this one, its for die hard fans of 70's Kung Fu only.
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Cobra Thunderbolt (1984)

A crippled war veteran creates an advanced battle tank and gets the attention of terrorists. They kidnap his wife for the exchange of the vehicle's blueprints, so he asks his daughter and best friend for help to battle the bad guys.
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Lady Battle Cop (1990)

I've been trying to watch this movie for a long time. Onna Battle Cop was releases only in VHS in Brazil with the USA title Lady Cop. At the local release date, there was a lot of others Japanese tokusatsu series and movies available.
Lady Cop looks like a female Kidou Keiji Jiban, which is a fantasy-techno-non-futurist Robocop. They are all the same thing: someone gets hurt and a ultrascret project saved their lives , turning into a robot. So its time to get a good weapon and... revenge! The camera tricks (like wearing a mask) are really bad for a movie. The special effects are low budget, but its OK. The strange thing is that doesn't look like a Toei's movie, but a Toei's series. There's a lot of theme songs and in the end of the movie appears "The battle is just beginning". Does it supposed to have a Onna Battle Cop 2? My guess is that it supposed to be a pilot for some TV series. Even the end of the movie looks like an TV tokusatsu ending (like Juspion or Kamen Rider Black, posing like great heroes on a black background).
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For Y'ur Height Only (1981)

Mr. Giant has kidnapped the brilliant Dr. Van Kohler and is planning to use the Doctor's invention, the N-bomb, to hold the world hostage. The only one who can foil Mr. Giant's evil scheme is Agent 00, a 3-foot-tall filipino martial arts master, expert marksman, top-class romancer and all-around superspy. Can Agent 00 rescue Dr. Kohler before it's too late?
This is easily one of the funniest movies I have ever seen. Weng Weng is agent 00, and he's two foot 9". From the opening "montage" of him running around looking cool to the extreme shocker/twist ending, this film had me roaring with laughter and cheering on Weng Weng as he battles the Crime Syndicate and Mr. Giant. There are endless scenes of Weng Weng looking around and then sneaking up on people and then killing them. And he's ruthless. He laughs and smiles after killing bad guys. The bad guys are great, too. "All forces of good are our sworn enemies," one says at one point. There is something about this movie, and I can't really put my finger on it, but its really a magical film. One that should be enjoyed by all.
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