TrueJoshNight
Truly Dreadful Film
GamerTab
That was an excellent one.
AniInterview
Sorry, this movie sucks
Leoni Haney
Yes, absolutely, there is fun to be had, as well as many, many things to go boom, all amid an atmospheric urban jungle.
ckormos1
I consider Liu Chia Liang (Lau Kar-Leung) the most important person in the history of martial arts movies. I call him the Grandmaster. No man can better tell any story about Wong Fei-Hung. Liu Chia-Liang learned martial arts from his father, a student of Lam Sai-Wing, who was a student of Wong Fei-Hung himself. Liu Chia-Liang honed his skills as stunt man and then action choreographer beginning in 1953 with the Wong Fei-Hung series of movies starring Kwan Tak-Hing. His personal golden age of directing martial arts movies began in 1975 with "The Spiritual Boxer." His other movies "Challenge of the Masters", "Executioners from Shaolin", "Heroes of the East", "The 36th Chamber of Shaolin", "Dirty Ho", "My Young Auntie", and "Legendary Weapons of China" are among the top ten martial arts movies of all time. I am often asked "What was the best martial arts movie ever?" and my subjective answer has been "Legendary Weapons of China". I am also often asked "What was the best fight scene ever?" Like the other question this is really impossible to answer. It is totally subjective and how does one even define the qualities that make the best fight scene ever? Yet, I can tell you this with no doubt, on May 7, 1976 (the release date of "Challenge of the Masters") the best fight scene ever filmed as of that day was the fight scene in that movie with Liu Chia-Liang against his brother Lau Kar-Wing. The runner –up would be his fight against Gordon Liu in the same movie.
MartinHafer
I have seen an awful lot of martial arts films over the years and the plot for this film is roughly the same as at least half of them. THE most common plot in all of martial arts-dom is the battle between the good martial arts school and the evil one. In some cases, the evil ones wipe out all but one of the good guys--only to eventually be destroyed by the lone survivor at the end. In others, the evil guys are more surly and less deadly--like this film. They beat up the good guys, break the rules and act nasty...but never get around to killing people. Ultimately, the one guy who goes off into hiding and non-stop training returns to vindicate his people--not kill off the baddies. This is what most would think of as the "Cobra Kai" scenario--and that is what happens in CHALLENGE OF THE MASTERS (or "Lui A-Cai yu Huang Fei-Hong").The film begins in a town where there are several competing martial arts schools, though the problems only occur between two of them--the guys in gray and the guys in black (which, naturally, is the evil one as black is ALWAYS the evil color). The baddies cheat and break every rule to win in the big contest and the bad guys are punished for following the rules! Gee...it sounds like WWE wrestling, actually! However, this is the not the worst of it. A wanted criminal is hiding among the baddies and he's a killer and thief (gosh) and eventually one of the goodies is murdered by him.So, it's up to the seemingly inept son of one of the goodies' leaders to leave for two years to train rigorously with the Master. And, much of the film shows him working out, getting his butt kicked and busting his butt to be good enough to capture the murderer and win the next contest his school participated in--which was coming in two years.Ultimately, he does have a lovely little showdown with the murderer. Interestingly, though, when the baddies found out this guy was a wanted killer, they said they were glad he was caught and praised his capture! Seriously. These guys are bad, but only to a point! And in the final contest, an unexpected result comes about and EVERYONE becomes good pals! Now from my description, it sounds like I was making fun of the film. However, I didn't mind the familiar plot because the martial arts in this Shaw Brothers film were top-notch. Not only that, but unlike most films in the genre, they used many types of combat and weapons--and did great with each. Wonderful sword, pole, spear and hand to hand fighting filled the movie from start to finish and you had to admire them. In the DVD extras, one of the stars talked about how they used real weapons and practiced the scenes again and again--and it showed. The bottom line is that there are a lot of ultra-crappy martial arts films out there and this is NOT one of them.Additionally, I loved that the DVD had both the dubbed version (yuck) and the original Chinese version with subtitles (yeah!). To make this even better, the print was pristine and made viewing the film a delight--something that cannot be said of most martial arts films. Too often, they are poorly dubbed, nonsensical and laughably bad--technically this one is among the best.
Matti-Man
Just need to point out that one of the other reviewers here has made a mistake. He's clearly thinking of "Challenge of the Ninja" (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0080172/ ) not "Challenge of the Masters"."Ninja" is the one with Gordon Liu (Liu Chia- Hui) marrying the Japanese girl and having to fight her relatives to prove whether Chinese or Japanese Martial Arts are best. It's especially memorable for the superb Chinese Sword vs Katana battle, still one of the great duels of Hong Kong movies, 25 years on.Not as polished as later films by Chia-Liang Liu, "Challenge of the Masters" is still a pretty slick accomplishment when gauged against other contemporary Hong Kong films. Though shot in 1976, the movie looks as though it were made 5-10 years later. There's no doubt that the young Chia Hui Liu (Gordon Liu) is a star in the making. As always, his physical presence is arresting, his technical skills second-to-none and, heck, he's just plain likable.His mentor Chia-Liang Liu does a reasonable job with the direction, but it's the fight choreography that shines here. His one-on-one fight with his protégé Chia Hui Liu in the bamboo forest at the three-quarter point is just excellent, and the interesting theme of martial arts binding its exponents together in brotherhood, is a refreshing change from all the revenge dramas that were coming out of Hong Kong (mostly from Chang Cheh, it would seem) at the time.
di kit
This movie was pretty darn good. One reason was that it showed lots of different techniques of kung fu. This chinese guy marries a japanese girl. They have an argument and through a misunderstanding these japanese fighters come to challenge him and he has to fight them all. It has sword, staff, hand-to-hand, and more types of fighting. Plus Lau Kar Fai actually has all his hair. So watch it okay?