Monday, January 26, 2026

Taoism Drunkard (1984) - R.I.P. Yuen Cheung-Yan (1947 - 2026)

Taoism Drunkard (1984)
Aka: Drunken Wu Tang; Miracle Fighters 3
Chinese Title: 鬼馬天師
Translation: The Cat and the Moon Monster



Starring: Yuen Yat-Choh, Yuen Cheung-Yan, Yuen Shun-Yi, Zhu Hai-Ling, Lo Pi-Ling, Yuen Shun-Yi, Hilda Liu Hao-Yi, Yen Shi-Kwan, Mandy Chan Chi-Man, Tsui Oi-Sam, Tai Bo
Director: Yuen Cheung-Yan
Action Director: The Yuen Clan


On January 1st of this year (2026), Yuen Cheung-Yan passed away. He was best known as “Yuen Woo-Ping’s brother,” although he was a talented action director in his own right. He was also an established character actor, often playing small-but-memorable roles in a lot of movies, especially those that were connected to his brother in one way or another. He even made it to Hollywood, staging the fight sequences for the first two Charlie’s Angels films (not the reboot with Kristen Stewart) and the Ben Affleck Daredevil.

His career as an action director goes all the way back to 1968, at which point he would have been 21 years old. That was alongside Chan Siu-Pang on the
wuxia film The Flying Dragon Dagger. He went back and forth between work at the Shaw Brothers and indy films, ranging from the classic Vengeance! (1970) to In Eagle’s Shadow Fist (1973), an early role for Jackie Chan. In fact, it may have been Yuen Cheung-Yan’s working with Jackie in that role that ultimately helped Yuen Woo-Ping convince Ng See-Yuen to cast Jackie in Snake in the Eagle’s Shadow. It was Yuen Cheung-Yan who wore the monster suit for the Shaw Brothers classic The Mighty Peking Man. By the time of his passing, he had amassed about 111 credits as an action director or fight choreographer.

Taoism Drunkard
was Yuen Cheung-Yan’s first foray into directing. The film is part of the Yuen Clan “Sorcery Cycle,” which started in 1982 with Miracle Fighters. Cheung Yan’s more famous brother Woo-Ping had directed the first two entries: Miracle Fighters and Shaolin Drunkard. This third entry was produced by Lo Wei and Yuen Cheung-Yan took up the directorial reigns—Yuen Woo-Ping might have been busy on Drunken Tai Chi at the time. It certainly a B-movie classic for people who just like completely random films.

The film opens with a palm reader being approached by Master Ruthless (Yuen Shun-Yi, of
Shaolin Drunkard and Drunken Tai Chi), also known as “Old Devil”. Ruthless asks for his fortune, only to surprise the palm reader by having no lines on his palms—we later learn that he had been captured by the Taoist sect and sentenced to placed on a metal roller coaster and having his hands run across metal plates covered with acid as punishment for his evil deeds. He kills the fortune teller and reveals the hiding spot of his senior brother (Yen Shi-Kwan, of The Master Strikes and Once Upon a Time in China), who had betrayed him and turned him in to the Taoists. The two have a fight and Ruthless kills his brother.

Back at the Taoist Sect’s headquarters, the Drunken Taoist (Yuen Cheung-Yan—whom we’ll call Bucktooth) is driving around in his wicker Ratmobile, terrorizing the monks and just making a general nuisance out of himself. He goes to far when he breaks the arm on one of the god’s statues and his older brother, the head priest (Hsiao Hou-Tou, The Evil Karate and The Vampire Dominator), tasks him with finding a virgin born on a specific date in order to perform a ceremony to placate the god whose statue he destroyed. Otherwise he’ll be kicked out of the temple.

It ultimately turns out that the young man in question is Cha Lee (Yuen Yat-Chor, of
Young Taoism Fighter and Miracle Fighters), the grandson of an old witch (also Cheung-Yan) who had helped the Taoists to defeat Master Ruthless back in the day. She is training her grandson to be a powerful kung fu sorcerer and kung fu master, and is in possession of a special sacred text that Ruthless is after. Ruthless shows up to try to steal the text, which is protected by the Watermelon Monster (a giant bowling ball with teeth who talks like Gonzo from “The Muppet Babies”).

Lots of shenanigans ensue, largely revolving around the horny widowed sister (Lo Pi-Ling, of
Calamity of Snakes) of Cha Lee’s girlfriend, Shiu Fang (Zhu Hai-Ling, of The Shanghai 13 and The Thunderbolt Commander). She’s anxious to get back in the dating game with her lover (Tai Bo, of Project A II and Ninja in the Dragon’s Den), although a practical joke involving séance and Shiu Fang leads her to believe that Bucktooth is her soul mate. There is also a subplot involving a sorceress/extortionist, Starry Devil (Hilda Liu, of A Fist Full of Talons and Golden Queen Commando), and her entourage. She is ultimately blackmailed into helping Master Ruthless after he douses her with a potion that will age her to death in a few minutes.

Taoism Drunkard
is the same style of film as its predecessors, although a bit more scattershot in the plot territory. I mean, all of these play fast and loose with the plot, but this one spins its wheels for much of the first two-thirds of the running time. Eventually, this one starts to focus itself when Starry Devil is blackmailed into helping Master Ruthless after he douses her with a potion that will age her to death in a few minutes. At that point, we have a running series of battles between Master Ruthless, Starry Devil and our two heroes (Cha Lee and Bucktooth) over the aforementioned text.

But there is plenty of Komedy to keep viewers interested until then, provided that they can ignore the lack of direction in the story. There are kung fu fights involving Giant Bongs and Komically-Oversized Swords. There is a séance played for laughs. There is a scene in which the sister’s lover tries to kill Bucktooth for taking his place as the paramour. And of course, there is the famous Watermelon Monster, which sounds screwy on paper, but is even nuttier when you actually watch the film.

The fight scenes were staged by the Yuen Clan, who would include: Yuen Woo-Ping, Yuen Cheung-Yan, Yuen Shun-Yi, Yuen Yat-Chor, and Brandy Yuen. I’m not sure if all five of them were on hand for the film, but there is a good chance that such was the case. The fights are generally wired-up and filled with gimmicks. When Ruthless fights his senior brother, the latter wears a vest of spikes which makes him throw himself backward in an attempt to skewer his enemy. Later fights are bit more standard. Starry Devil fights with long silk sashes that work like a lash, although they have razor sharp coins on them that can slice through human flesh. There is some pure kung fu in Cha Lee’s earlier fights with Ruthless, or when Cha Lee goes buck wild on Starry Devil’s entourage. It all climaxes with a big fight involving flying explosives that leave their victims wearing pig masks and a heat-seeking bowling ball. Personally, I prefer all the fights in
Shaolin Drunkard to the ones in this one, but it’s all goofy enough to merit a watch with like-minded friends

Monday, January 12, 2026

Capsule Reviews - 2 Hwang Jang Lee movies (part I)

The Eagle's Killer (1981)
Chinese title: 拜錯師父叩錯頭 
Translation: Worship the Wrong Master, Kowtow to the Wrong Person




Starring: John Cheung Ng-Long, Hwang Jang Lee, Cheng Kang-Yeh, Fan Mei-Sheng, Chin Pei-Ling, Chiang Kam, Kao Yuen, Pan Yung-Sheng, Mai Kei
Director: William Cheung Kei
Action Director: Gam Ming (Tommy Lee) 

This is a surprisingly bland and forgettable movie from the guy who gave us
 Bruce Lee's Secret and Ninja vs. the Shaolin Guards, which is an important film for me. Nineteen Eighty-One was a little late (outside of South Korea) for slavish iterations of the Seasonal Formula. This film is nothing more than an uninspired rehash of Snake in the Eagle's Shadow, with Legendary Superkicker Hwang Jang Lee essentially reprising his role as Thunderfoot, now referred to as Ghost Hand.

John Cheung (of Project A II and Police Story II) plays Tai, an orphan who works as a cook at a kung fu school run by a charlatan (Pan Yung-Sheng). After a bit of nonsense involving Tai humiliating the newest student, a rich fat kid (Chiang Kam, doing the same thing he did in SITES), Tai is kicked out of the school and goes on the search for a new master. He runs afoul of the local Rich Asshole Kid (Cheng Kang-Yeh, of Heroes of the East and Executioners from Shaolin) after some business involving the latter stealing Tai's fish. Tai's kung fu isn't very good, but it's enough to get his butt out of trouble. The Rich Kid and more of his men show up and get the drop on Tai, although he's just skilled enough to avoid being drowned in the river.

Tai is found by a random kung fu master (Choi Fai) who agrees to teach him. Almost immediately after that, a killer (So Hon-Sang) shows up and murders the master. Tai and the Killer get into a scuffle over the money Tai had given the now-defunct master for his lessons and after a lengthy comic fight-and-chase, the killer gets a taste of his own medicine at the hands of Ghost Hand (Hwang Jang Lee), a famous assassin. Ghost Hand agrees to take Tai on as his student, but actually plans on selling Tai into slavery instead. After a sodomy gag involving a bunch of muscular men running a train on the Rich Asshole Kid, Tai is rescued from another attack by an old master (Fan Mei-Shang), whom Tai had previously befriended. The old master agrees to teach Tai kung fu. But the Rich Asshole Kid's dad wants to avenge his son's humiliation and starts hiring killers to take out Tai and the master...

If this film has anything over the films it rips off, it's that it actually resolves the underlying conflict that leads to Hwang Jang-Lee getting hired. In Drunken Master, the film ends with Jackie Chan defeating Thunderfoot, but ignores the fact that somebody had to have hired him in the first place. This one does have our hero facing off with the Rich Kid and his dad before the climax, so all lose ends are tied up by the end...well, except for the question of whatever happens to the old master's blind sister. Everything else is ripped off somehow from SITES and DM, with the exception of the sodomy gag, which is just odd. And the humor in the first half gets old very quick.

The action was staged by Gam Ming (Tommy Lee), with help from Bruce Tong and Lung Fong (Jimmy Lee). Tommy Lee showed in movies like Goose Boxer and Mysterious Footworks of Kung Fu that he could do really good work in a Drunken Master rip-off. This movie, however, has some of his most uninspired work. It doesn't help that the the action doesn't really pick up until the last half hour. The fight with the four killers in leopard-print vests is pretty good. The finale with Legendary Hwang Jang Lee is not bad, but it feels derivative of other movies. Hwang is using the Eagle's Claw like he did in Invincible Armour; SITESand Hell's Wind Staff. His bootwork is muted for the most part: he does the basic kicks well and he does the one where he wraps one leg around his opponent's neck and then does a glute kick to the opponent's face. But don't expect his trademark aerial kicks. The Eagle's Killer is for die-hard Hwang Jang Lee fans only.


Five Fingers of Steel (1982) 
Aka: Blood Child
Chinese Title: 血雙
Translation: Blood Double/Pair




Starring: Yuen Miu, Kwon Young-Moon, Yen Shi-Kwan, Lee Yi-Yi, Chan Lau, Chu Tit-Wo, Lam Hak-Ming, Lau Hok-Nin, Hwang Jang Lee
Director: Vincent Leung
Action Director: Hwang Jang Lee, Yuen Miu


This is the spiritual follow-up to Young Heromade by the same studio with a very similar cast (Yuen Miu, Kwon Yung-moon, Chan Lau, and of course, Legendary Superkicker Hwang Jang Lee). This film benefits from having a more involved plot than that movie and it takes some very dark turns, even by genre standards.

The film opens with a young woman (Lee Yi-Yi, of Bruce Strikes Back) sitting in front of the governor's office, tending to her baby. When the guards come outside, they notice that the baby is not only dead, but it has been brutally murdered. The woman is arrested on suspicion of murder and then the film flashbacks to the story proper.

Master Lung (Chu Tit-Woh, of Tiger Over Wall and Sword Stained with Royal Blood) has just opened a security escort service. At the opening ceremony, the party is crashed by the top students of the High Kick school: Yu Hu (*snicker* - Lau Hok-Nin, of Tiger Over Wall and Hell's Wind Staff) and Ah Chu (Lam Hak-Ming, of Dirty Ho). Those two perform a lion dance and then start attacking the guests (while in Lion dance mode) which eventually breaks out into a huge fight between them, Lung Chan (Yuen Miu, of Young Hero) and Captain Yu (Yen Shi-Kwan), who is Master Lung's nephew. The two sides are more or less fighting to a draw until Master Lung steps in.

The Master of the High Kick School, Choi Hu-Fung (Kwon Yung-Moon, of Young Hero and The Rebellious Reign), hates the idea of his students getting humiliated. So, he and his flunkie, Mr. Chan (Chan Lau), decide to scheme and conspire to get the new security service closed. Mr. Chan talks the governor (Pak Sha-Lik) into hiring the new escort company to transport some gold to another city. On their journey, the members of the High Kick School, including Master Choi, dress as bandits and ambush the caravan. They kill everybody and mortally wound Master Lung, while Lung Chan is kicked off a cliff and left for dead. Captain Yu is accused of conspiring with the bandits and is arrested. Master Lung manages to crawl back to the company but promptly dies. The High Kick School takes over the property of the escort company in order to pay off the debt of the "stolen" gold. And to add insult to injury, Master Choi rapes Master Lung's daughter, who is the woman we saw in the opening scene. Guess who gets pregnant?

Lung Chan is nursed back to health by a hermit fighter named Mr. Wong (Hwang Jang Lee, who needs no introduction). Wong was humiliated by Choi Hu-Fung years before and "went off the grid" in order to train for revenge. He eventually heads back to town just in time to rescue Ling, his sister, from killing herself. He tries to bust Captain Yu out of the joint so they can team up with Mr. Wong and get revenge against the High Kick School...

Rape! Murder! Kidnapping! Infanticide! Lots of horrible things happen to the good guys before the finally manage to organize themselves to seek revenge. This time, the fights are staged by Yuen Miu and Hwang Jang Lee, who do a good job with the fights, which mix shapes and kicks. The finale pits Hwang and Kwon Yung-moon in what would be their third fight together--after Ring of Death and Young Hero--and it's arguably the best (although it ends on a downbeat note). Hwang gets a better showcase for his kicks than he did in Young Hero and Kwon's kicking skills, while different aesthetically than Hwang's, are no less impressive. Yuen Miu also looks a little better and depends a smidgen less on acrobatics than he did in Young Hero

Recommended for the fights and its dark tone.

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Capsule Reviews - 3 Ninja Movies

Red Blade (2018)




Starring: Yuka Ogura, Himena Yamada, Kanon Hanakage, Tak Sakaguchi, Satsuke Mine, Joey Inagawa
Director:
Takahiro Ishihara
Action Director:
Makoto Sakaguchi, (opening sequence) Yuji Shimomura, Tak Sakaguchi, Yoshitaka Inagawa, Ryoma Muto

I didn't really know what to expect when I sat down to watch this. So, I was pleasantly-surprised when I got something close to the "Ninjas Only"-era version of Dr. Wai and the Scripture with No Words (or a shot-on-video version of The Pagemaster, but moved to the Sengoku era). I am real sucker for these kinds of stories where normal people from our world get a chance to go on fantastic adventures (or perform martial arts in the same forest where most Japanese action films made after Versus are set).

Mako (Yuka Ogura) has a crappy life. She gets bullied at school by queen bee Miki (Satsuke Mine) and her gang. Her parents are always arguing. Her personal issues are ruining her track-and-field performance. And things reach a tipping point when her dad agrees to be the fall guy for whatever corruption his company is guilty of*, which makes the news and gives her bullies even more reason to be assholes. Mako's only solace is cutting class and going to a library. She finds a light novel (or manga) about ninjas doing ninja things and becomes enamored with it.

One day, she meets a pair of kunoichi from the novel: Hiro (Himena Yamada, of Shogun's Ninja) and "Ultraman Blazar") and Yu (Kanon Hanakage, Rise of the Machine Girls). Suddenly, she is transported into book world where she meets their master, the super-deadly ninja Saizo (Tak Sakaguchi, who needs no introduction). He agrees to teach her ninjitsu and months pass--albeit little time in her own world (similar to The Beginning Place by Ursula K. Le Guinn). After completing her first job, she returns to our world. But then she discovers that the main villain of the book, Kansuke Harada (Joey Iwanaga, of The Furious and Rurouni Kenshin: The Final Battle), is also the same corporate cutthroat that got her dad arrested. And she must stop him in order to keep the worlds from merging and changing everybody's destiny.

Like I said, I'm a sucker for these sorts of plots, so I was invested. I did find it amusing that the book characters realize that they're in a book and interact with Mako as such. There is a training sequence which shows Mako failing to do the most basic ninja arts and then gradually getting better. It's not Invincible Shaolin or 36th Chamber level of creativity, but it follows the logical progression. I also like that the three ninja girls (including Mako) have their ninjato (ninja swords) and their own personal weapon of preference: Yu has a pair of twin daggers (or kunai, the video quality was such that I couldn't really see), Hiro wields a pair of kama (or sickles), and Mako wields a knotted rope weapon, probably a kyoketsu-shoge. Watching her twirl the weapon around is always fun.

The fight scenes were staged by Makoto Sakaguchi, who also staged the action in Rise of the Machine Girls and Sion Sono's Prisoners of the Ghostland. The fight sequences are generally pretty good, although nothing spectacular. The last fight was pretty cool, although it gets a bit melodramatic, before leading into a final twist. My major issue with the action is that the foley team and sound effects editors did an awful job of inserting sound effects for the impacts of punches and kicks, and then mixed it so you can barely here the effects in the first place. It makes the fights feel very weak.

Also, the action never gets better than the 10-minute opening sequence in which Tak Sakaguchi kills about three dozen ninja. That scene is choreographed in a way similar to vintage Japanese chanbara films in which it is attack-block/evade-death blow. Very quick and direct, like most samurai films tend to be. But the camerawork and overall staging is dynamic and the action sequences with our ninja girls never reach that level of excitement. This sequence was designed by Tak Sakaguchi and Yuji Shimomura, with help from Yoshitaka Inagawa (Re:Born) and Ryôma Mutô (Demon City). After this scene, the rest of the film is fun fluff, but keep your expectations in check.


Black Fox: Age of the Ninja (2019)




Starring: Chihiro Yamamoto, Maimi Yajima, Sakurako Okubo, Mami Fujioka, Yasuaki Kurata, Yûki Kubota, Hideo Ishiguro, Kanon Miyahara, Masayuki Deai, Kôji Nakamura
Director: Koichi Sakamoto
Action Director: Koichi Sakamoto

As I have surmised elsewhere, I wonder if Koichi Sakamoto's approach to filmmaking is to use Tokusatsu as his bread and butter and then use the money he makes from those to fund his own martial arts-heavy fare. Black Fox is interesting in that it gives me the feeling of a pilot to an unmade martial arts show with Tokusatsu overtones, right down to the fact that the main bad guy is sorta shown, but is still hanging around and ready to send new villains after our heroines.

The first of those heroines we meet is Miya (Maimi Yajima, of Black Angels and Zombvideo), a young lady who is being chased through a forest by a band of warrior monks led by bad-bitch Uto (Kanon Miyahara, of Shogun's Ninja and Tatsujin Warriors). Miya apparently falls to her death and Uto leads her band of ass-kicking monks in rice hats out of forest. Miya survives her fall and makes her way to the inner sanctum of the Fox Ninja Clan. The first person she meets there is Rikka Isurugi (Chihiro Yamamoto, of Under Ninja and "Ultraman Geed"), the granddaughter of the clan leader, played by the legendary Yasuaki Kurata. We learn that Miya has been looking specifically for the Foxes in order to request their services in eliminating the Warrior Monks, who are all under the command of Lady Haku (Mami Fujioka).

We learn that Miya was raised by her father, who had both raised her and experimented on her until she developed the super power (yes, "super power") of firing lightning, Raiden (or Electro) style. But the warrior monks, in the employ of Shigetsugu Kuboto (Yuka Kubota, of "Kamen Rider Gaim"), killed him in order to whisk her away and use her as a weapon for the local Daimyo (who would become the series's Lord Zed had this become a show). The warrior monks storm the Foxes headquarters and a huge fight breaks out. Although Rikka is powerful enough to defeat Uto in combat, she is too kind-hearted to kill her outright. This incurs the ire of her grandfather, who refuses to accept the notion of a merciful ninja. He eventually sells out Miya when he finds out who Shigetsugu is working for.

So, Rikka is left with no choice but to rescue her new friend by herself. But her late father, an inventor, left her with a special inheritance: a black leather ninja outfit that feels like the Sengoku equivalent to a Super Sentai costume and a non-lethal energy sword. Will Rikka, her martial arts skills, and her equipment be able to defeat all of the Warrior Monks, Shigetsugu's legions, and Kuboto himself? And what exactly are Kubotu's plans for our Nihongo Storm girl?

I was expecting more and better action from a Koichi Sakamoto film. The film has its moments, but those moments are often overshadowed by 90s-TV-show CGI effects, especially once the titular Black Fox starts fighting with her energy katana. There is a warrior monk, Jin (Masayuki Deai, of "GoGo Sentai Boukenger"), who does a lot of kicking in his fights, but he doesn't get much altitude in his bootwork. The final fight between the Black Fox and Shigetsugu is pretty decent and I like her patented multi-stroke finishing move (the kenjutsu equivalent to the Power Rangers joining their weapons and firing them at the end of each fight). The build-up to that fight, which involves Miya and her lightning abilities, does strain credibility, however. Yasuaki Kurata gets to fight a little bit during the raid on his headquarters, so watching him crack a few skulls is welcome.

In the end, Sakamoto fans may get a little out of his patented choreography style, but he's done far better work elsewhere.


Ninja vs. Shark (2023) 




Starring: Julia Nagano, Koshu Hirano, Kanon Miyahara
Director: Koichi Sakamoto
Action Director: Koichi Sakamoto

Ninja vs. Shark feels like one of those "Ohtaku Fan Wank" films that Japan was churning out by the dozen at the end of the aughts. You know, the sort of fan-service film that felt deliberately made and marketed to Western fanboys of Japanese pop culture and trash cinema in general. Although you can argue that it started with Versus (2000), the sort of film I'm referring to really got moving in 2008 with Tokyo Gore Police. Four the next four or five years, we got a slew of films starring pretty girls (often AV actresses) in school girl outfits showing their tits, being bathed in fake blood, and fighting ninjas, zombies, monsters, or any combination of the three. So, stuff like The Machine Girl; Robo Geisha; and Dracula Girl vs Frankenstein Girl. This film feels like a return to that sort of film in a lot of ways.

The film opens with a girl being murdered at sea and her mutilated corpse washing up ashore. She is a member of the Okitsu Village, who has been plagued with disappearances and sea-related killings. Although everybody knows that the devil-worshipping ninja cult known as the Crimson Devil Clan, led by Mizuchi, the villagers like to use Sayo (Julia Nagano) as the scapegoat. She is considered to be the village jinx after she murdered her drunken, abusive, and incestuous father for killing her mother--I guess it didn't help that dad was the mayor's brother. Anyway, Sayo's only friend and protector is Shinsuke (Shun Nishime), but only he can do so much.

The village mayor knows that they won't last long against the Crimson Devil Clan, so he hires a wandering fighter named Kotaro (Koshu Hirano) to be their bodyguard (the word yojimbo is used a lot in the dialog). When we meet Kotaro, he has just gotten done raping the wife of the mayor of another village for not paying him for his services. He kills the mayor and his flunkies, which the Okitsu Village mayor is willing to turn a blind eye to in order to secure his services. Kotaro sets up shop at Shinsuke and Sayo's house and starts digging up the bodies from the cemetery to find out what killed them.

When Sayo gets attacked by a shark the next day, Kotaro rescues her and figures out what is happening: the local "Sea God" is an actual entity and can manifest itself as a shark. And Mizuchi has found out how to control it using black magic--he can also transfer his soul into the bodies of younger men (thus the disappearances), Angel Heart style. Mizuchi also gets a new ally in the form of Kikuma (Kanon Miyahara), a kunoichi from the Mountain Ninja Clan, of which Kotaro used to be a member. She wants revenge against him for abandoning the clan and spurning her advances. She and Crimson Devil Clan kidnap Sayo to sacrifice to the Sea God. Only Shinsuke and Kotaro can rescue her...

Ninja vs. Shark feels like the Japanese equivalent of an Asylum film, especially in the sense that the titular battle doesn't account for more than 3 to 5 minutes of actual screen time. And like the Asylum, when that battle does happen, it is mostly questionable CGI. And the denouement is right out of a Sharknado film. However, where this film gets a leg up on the Asylum is the filler: instead of washed-up 80s singers or 90s sitcom actors (or Eric Roberts) standing around staring at screens for 80 minutes, the filler here is ultraviolent swordplay. Koichi Sakamoto and his Alpha Stunts team did the action design and it is "alright" by Sakamoto standards--certainly no Broken Path or Drive. Some of the fighting at the end is pretty good, like when Kotaro uses a katana against Kikuma's two-fisted tanto daggers.

Yeah, this is one of those movies like Machine Girl where you can spout off a list of the off-kilter things that show up in the story and the viewer can decide if they want to watch it or not: Ninja Magic! Zombies! Ultraviolence! Giant Land Sharks! Possession! Swordplay! Shark Men! Zombified Necrophiliac Lesbianism! My thoughts on this are that it was okay, but the version I watched on Youtube (via 24-7 Samurai Ninja channel) had all the bloodiest moments censored, so I wasn't able to appreciate its nuttiness to the fullest.

Taoism Drunkard (1984) - R.I.P. Yuen Cheung-Yan (1947 - 2026)

Taoism Drunkard (1984) Aka: Drunken Wu Tang ; Miracle Fighters 3 Chinese Title : 鬼馬天師 Translation : The Cat and the Moon Monster Starri...