Friday, April 17, 2026

My Rebellious Son (1982)

My Rebellious Son (1982)
aka: Raging Tiger
Chinese Title: 小子有種
Translation: You Have Guts, Kid!


Starring: Alexander Fu Sheng, Ku Feng, Tang Ching, Johnny Wang Lung-Wei, Cecilia Wong Hang-Sau, Ai Fei, Michael Chan Wai-Man, Tin Ching, Walter Tso Tat-Wah, Yuen Wah, Ng Hong-Sang, Wong Wai-Tong, Lee Fat-Yuen, To Wai-Wo, Kong Chuen
Director: Sun Chung
Action Director: Tong Gai, Huang Pei-Chih


My Rebellious Son was directed by Sun Chung, the man behind one of the all-time classics: The Avenging Eagle. He has a couple of other important films under his belt, like The Deadly Breaking Sword and To Kill a Mastermind. Unlike Chang Cheh and Lau Kar-Leung (and Chor Yuen after 1976), Sun Chung never allowed himself to be completely pigeon-holed into making just kung fu and/or wuxia films. When he did kung fu, he did it well…quite well…extremely well at times. But he also dabbled in true crime (Homicides– The Criminals, Part II); erotica (Dreams of Eroticism); and horror (Revenge of the Corpse). Heck, his other 1982 film, Human Lanterns was a mixture of horror and wuxia. My Rebellious Son ended up being his penultimate Shaw Brothers film, with him coming back to the studio for the low-budget follow-up to his own The Kung-Fu Instructor: The Master Strikes Back.

This movie revolves around a father-son pair of bone-setters (or physicians, for all practical purposes): Chang Tak-Tai (Ku Feng, of
Dynamo and Bruce and the Iron Finger) and Chang Siu-Tai (Alexander Fu Sheng, of Heroes Two and Five Shaolin Masters). The art of bone-setting has long been a tradition of the Chang family and the general cycle is for dad to practice until he reaches old age, and then retire and enjoy life while his son takes up the mantle. The problem is that Tak-Tai has reached old age (he was 52 here, but he was a convincing old man 11 years prior, to be honest) and is still a spry, energetic man. That means that he is still running the family clinic while his son is still just an assistant.

Tak-Tai is also a very demanding man, constantly brow-beating his son for every little transgression. Even when Siu-Tai is late because he’s helping a Westernized Chinese girl, Judy Shum (Cecelia Wong, of
Shaolin Mantis and Ol’ Dirty & the Bastard), his dad’s reaction is to berate him. So, there Siu-Tai loves and respects his dad, but often wants to put his dad into compromising situations in order to prove that he has what it takes.

For example, those dastardly foreigners and their Westernized Chinese sycophants have decided to prove to the locals that Western boxing, wrestling, and fencing is superior to Chinese kung fu. They manipulate the school run by Master Jiang (Walter Tso, of
My Young Auntie) into participating in an exhibition match with a big bruiser (Dragon Force’s Randy Channell). Siu-Tai gives dad an extra dose of anesthetic in his tea in order to make his dad pass out and step in, accepting the duel on behalf of the Jiang school.

The main conflict involves the foreigners wanting to steal a gold statute of the Goddess of Mercy from the local temple to give to one of the rich Englishman. The Englishman is supported by local Western Athletics Gym, run by the rich official/brown noser, Mr. Tang (Tang Ching, of
Wrath of the Sword and The Bloody Fight). His son, Robert (Johnny Wang Lung-Wei, of Martial Club); Robert’s friend (Lam Fai-Wong), and the archetypical interpreter, Mr. Chun (Tin Chung), act as the enforcers for Chairman Tang and they are determined to steal the statue. But Master Chang is part of the “Buddha Protection Squad” and is always around to stand up for the villagers’ rights to worship the statue.

Robert and Mr. Chun decide to bring in a bunch of Japanese kendo masters, led by Yamaguchi (Michael Chan, playing a Japanese fighter like he did that same year in
Five Element Ninjas). When Chang Siu-Tai tries to steal the statue himself in an effort to embarrass his dad and take his place, the Japanese fighters (dressed as ninjas) catch this and end up stealing it themselves. Will the Chang duo be able to recover the statue before it goes the way of so many other artifacts that fell into the hands of the British?

I found
My Rebellious Son to be a fascinating movie. I had watched My Young Auntie just a week earlier and this film often feels like a gender inversion of that movie. Instead of the bumpkin girl and the Western-educated boy her age getting into hijinks, one of the subplots involves Judy Shum falling for Chang Siu-Tai after he gives her medical attention when she falls from a horse. The thing is, her Western ways are a mystery to him, so her actively seeking him out is practically an affront to his more traditional view of courtship. It does culminate in a kung fu dance sequence, made a year before a similar one was staged in The Champions and 14 years before Wu Jing mixed wushu and the Tango in Tai Chi II.

But more than that, this film completely felt like a partial sequel to Jackie Chan’s
Drunken Master. Moreso, it feels like an initial script for Drunken Master II, which came out 12 years later. Knowing that both Wong Kei-Ying and Wong Fei-Hung were herbalists/healers, it’s hard not to see that in Chang father-son duo. And you see the seemingly impossible task of the son trying to please his father, but his happy-go-lucky personality getting in the way at every turn. Add to that an external conflict of an Englishman trying to steal cultural artifacts—specifically a golden statue here—with the help of Western-educated and dressed Chinese toadies and it feels extremely similar to DM2. To be perfectly honest, I now consider My Rebellious Son to be Drunken Master Version 0.1. It would make for a fascinating experience to watch Drunken Master; this film; and then Drunken Master II in rapid succession.

The action scenes were staged by Tong Gai and his brother, Huang Pei-Chih. Those two had worked extensively with Sun Chung, especially once Sun had started focusing on martial arts movies in the second half of the 1970s. The fights are pretty good. The fight between Fu Sheng and Randy Channell is a nice mix of kung fu and boxing, not too dissimilar from the fights in Jet Li’s
Born to Defence and Ip Man 2. There is a real good fight halfway through when a bunch of thugs attack the two Chang’s at their shop: kung fu, weapons (including the three-section staff), and zaniness is on display during this lengthy sequence. That is topped by prolonged fight between Fu Sheng and the Japanese masters (who include Yuen Wah), who ambush him with their katana blades. There is some great choreography in this scene.

The finale is a bit of a disappointment, although it feels like the inspiration for the bookending sequences of Jet Li’s
Fearless. Fu Sheng must face with the foreign fighters in a succession of fights. It starts with Wang Lung-Wei’s Robert, using a more modern kickboxing style (which would soon become the style of the time). It moves onto John Ladalski (Inheritor of Kung Fu and Bloodfight), which fight is played for laughs. The next fight is with the Western fencer (Mimmo Gasbarri, of Ninja in USA and The Super Ninja) has Fu Sheng matching him with the jian, or two-edged straight sword. That is very much a Fearless thing. The same goes for the final fight, which pits Fu Sheng against the sword-wielding Yamaguchi, which also feels like Fearless. I really liked the choreography in these sequences (except for the John Ladalski segment), but since this set piece starts 10 minutes before the film is to end, each individual fight feels very short by genre standards.

I wouldn’t say
My Rebellious Son is a great movie, but it feels like an inspiration for so many movies that came later—Drunken Master II; Fearless; Tai Chi 2; etc—and it does a good job on every aspect (fight direction, characters, etc.) that is should be watched by all fans.


Wednesday, April 15, 2026

2 Capsule Reviews - (Low)-Kicking Caucasian Women in 1981

Firecracker (1981)
AKA: Naked Fist




Starring: Jillian Kesner, Darby Hinton, Ken Metcalfe, Vic Diaz, Pete Cooper, Rey Malonzo
Director: Cirio H. Santiago
Action Director: n/a

Firecracker is essentially Roger Corman's Filipino equivalent* remaking his own T.N.T. Jackson from seven years prior. It is a near racial inversion, although there are no black people in the film. It is about a white girl karate expert who goes to the Philippines in search of her sibling, only to get involved with karate-kicking drugs dealers, led once again by Ken Metcalfe, who helped write this.

The movie starts with Chuck Donner (Darby Hinton, looking like Bob Wall by-way-of Marjoe Gortner) killing his opponent in mortal combat at an underground fight tournament. Cut to Susanne Cooper (Jillian Kesner, of Raw Force and Student Body), a blonde karate expert arriving in Manila. During the aforementioned fight, there was another blonde girl who was taking pictures of the event until she was forcibly escorted out by some Hired Goons. That is Susanne's sister and our heroine wants to know what happened to her. She goes to the bar/hotel where her sister, Bonnie, had been staying. That is run by a white guy named Pete (Pete Cooper, Stryker and Up from the Depths) who employs a Bruce Lee imitator named Rey (Rey Malonzo, Twin Fists for the Blackmasters). Their first meeting turns into a huge bar fight for no reason than to establish that Susanne is a badass.

Susanne goes to the fight club we saw earlier, which is run by a drug dealer named Erik (Ken Metcalfe). Erik keeps Chuck as a sort of enforcer and a Filipino guy, Grip (Vic Diaz, of Caged Heat II and Live by the Fist), as the liaison with the heroin suppliers (one throwaway scene shows us that Erik is an addict himself). Susanne beats one of Erik's men in combat and is later invited to participate in to-the-death fights. Chuck falls for her and they eventually have sex--Attention, Men! According to this movie, the best way to comfort a woman who has learned of her sister's murder is to engage in kinky sex involving switchblade knives! Meanwhile, Chuck is amassing an army of martial artists that he plans to use in order to get rid of Grip and eliminate the middle man in the drug acquisitions.

So, this film is basically T.N.T. Jackson, the white girl version. It shares much of that film's plot points--the boss's main squeeze being an undercover agent, the love interesting turning out to be the murderer, the missing sibling, the internal intrigue in the main drug gang, etc. This film also features a topless fight when a pair of would-be rapists attack Susanne, who gradually has her clothes ripped off until she's in her bra and panties. One of the assaulters rips off her bra with a hook, leaving her topless. There are lots of fights, but like its predecessor, they are not very good. Much like Jeannie Bell, it seems that Jillian Kesner was hired based on her willingness to show her tits (they get a good workout here) than on her fighting skills. Her kicks almost never rise above belt level (despite her character being a 6th dan black belt) and her punches are sloppy. There is some Arnis stick work and it's not very interesting, although it does play a part in the film's final gory kill. If you want boobs and fights (regardless of quality), you might enjoy Firecracker. Viewers with more higher standards may want to avoid.


Lovely But Deadly (1981)




Starring: Lucinda Dooling, Vincent Roberts, Pamela Jean Bryant, Richard Herd, Mel Novak
Director: David Sheldon
Action Director: Rex Kimbell

When high school student Arthur Lovitt (Vincent Roberts) drowns while strung out on drugs, his sister, Mary Ann "Lovely" Lovitt (Lucinda Dooling, The Alchemist) takes matters into her own hands. She is a karate expert and starts making her way through the drug ring in the school. The main drug pusher in school is the star football player Mantis Managian (Rick Moser), whom the police cannot touch because he's likely to get a football scholarship. Really. Consider how lawyers are often trying to get star athletes off the hook for S.A. charges because of their promising future, that isn't too far from our reality.

Anyway, Lovely starts flirting with Managian, which pisses his current cheerleader girlfriend, Gloria (Pamela Jean Bryant, of Private Lessons and H.O.T.S.), to no end. This is done with the intent of getting herself whore'd out to the higher-ups in the drug ring. You see, Managian gets his stuff from a rich broker named Warren Leng (the late Mel Novak), who in turn gets it from a local businessman named "Honest Charlie" Gilmarten (Richard Herd, All the President's Men and The China Syndrome). Gilmarten receives the shipments at the local shipyard, whose owner is in cahoots with him. Managian also supplies Gilmarten with high school-age girls to satisfy his libido on a regular basis. Anyway, Lovely finds herself fighting with Gloria and the rest of the strung-out whore-cheerleaders, Gilmarten and his enforcers, and ultimately the entire city drug ring. The police are useless, but the school's karate club will be at her disposal if she needs them...

Lovely But Deadly is a mix of high school drama, martial arts movie, and vigilante film, with a smidgen of exploitation (a few random moments of female nudity). There are a number of fight scenes, although the choreography is quite sloppy. Lucinda Dooling can throw a higher kick than Jillian Kessner of Firecracker, but the choreography is uninteresting. There are a few catfights that are more grappling and pawing than actual fighting. The focus of the film is drugs and the evils of them, but the film glosses over the fact that the bad guys are practically running a high school prostitution ring in the process. I found that rather odd. In the end, fans of 1980s cheese may enjoy this ironically, but everybody else can skip it.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

BJJ: Woman on Top (2023)

BJJ: Woman on Top (2023)



Starring: Angela Morena, Yuki Sakamoto, Jiad Arroyo, Jela Cuenca, Alexa Ocampo, Keanna Reeves
Director: Linnet Zurbano
Action Director: Rey Comia, Miguel Vasquez, Anna Mitra, Ivan Oleta


So, I was at a Brazilian online movie store when I came across this film, which I’d never heard of. When I saw the name and took at look at the poster/DVD cover, I was curious and went to the IMDB, whose plot suggested this was a spicy film about a woman who discovers a “second use” for Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. I watched the trailer on YouTube and it seemed like that was the case and decided to plunk down a few BRL (Brazilian Reais) and purchase it. If I had only known…

Elise Guererro (Angela Morena, of
Butas and Sabel is still Young) is a pretty young lady attending Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (or BJJ from here on out) lessons. When it’s her turn to spar, the combination of her lying on the ground and facing a larger male opponent triggers her and she runs screaming from the dojo.

The film jumps to five months earlier and we find Elise at a college party where she is visibly uncomfortable with all the debauchery—mainly drinking—going on. She asks one of her friends to take her home, but said friend gives her, “Don’t be such a killjoy!” speech. When Elise heads up to the bathroom to freshen up a little, she accidentally walks in on Marco (Jiad Arroyo, of
Pabuya and Us x Her) and Riza (Alexa Ocampo, of Bugaw and The Marianas Web) getting’ it on. Although Elise quickly makes her exit, the fact that Marco keeps on looking back to the door will carry some significance. Later on, Elise is given a roofie and some masked figure takes her up to an empty bedroom and tries to rape her. When a traumatized Elise returns to the thick of the party to report what happened, Riza slut-shames her (Marco carries a torch for Elise and Riza knows it) and has everybody pour beer all-over the poor girl.

Elise drops out of college and isolates herself for several months. One day, while exposing her feelings to her deceased father (i.e. talking to the sky and hoping he hears), Elise meets some strapping young man carrying a small birthday cake and balloons. That turns out to be Ace (Yuki Sakamoto, of
Pabuya and Wanted: Girlfriend), a jiu-jitsu instructor who lost his fiancée, Diane, a few years earlier. He has a ritual of buying a cake on his deceased love’s birthday and buying balloons that he writes messages on and releases to the sky. He kindly invites Elise to write a message to her dad on one of the balloons and take part in his little ritual. He later gives her his card, which is enough for her to sign up for lessons.

Back to the present, Elise still is dealing with the trauma of her sexual assault even after a few months of training. Ace calls her into a special class where he opens up about how he was abused by his dad and how he learned BJJ in order to take back the narrative and strengthen himself. This is enough to get her to confess her own trauma and he helps her to start putting herself more into her training. A special bond develops between master and student, while Marco is still pining for Elise in the background (despite screwing Riza on a regular basis)…

So, I thought
BJJ: Woman on Top was a film about a girl who learns jiu-jitsu to take back her sexuality and even incorporate it into the same. No, not really. This is basically a movie about a girl who has been traumatized, but who develops self-confidence and falls in love with her instructor. Almost like if Redbelt had focused Emily Mortimer’s character getting her confidence back and then pursuing Chiwetel Ejiofor’s ebony tonfa to show her thanks. For the most part, the sex (of which there is a lot) and the jiu-jitsu are treated as separate elements of the story, except for maybe the circumstances leading to Elise’s and Ace’s first love scene together.

The sex itself is what I’m going to assume is standard softcore fare (I am really not an expert on that genre). Lots of female nudity, but no actual full-frontal. Lots of faces in ecstasy and a wide variety of (otherwise standard) positions--including lots of simulated cunnilingus--all set to one love ballad or another. And it feels almost fitting that the first two letters of the title of this softcore romp reference a sexual act (that does show up briefly).

But as I said above, there isn’t actually any jiu-jitsu choreography incorporated into the sex itself, contrary to the IMDB synopsis. The only exception is the opening scene, in which two random people (Paul Pegasus and Honey Jade…now
those are two porn names if I’ve ever seen any) are sparring in an overtly erotic manner. What this means is that BJJ: Woman on Top is just some average softcore drama with some jiu-jitsu window dressing, but no real exploration on how the different choke holds, arm bars, and leg locks could incite passion or serve as a enhancement of the same.

There is a bit of jiu-jitsu sparring thrown in here and there. The film ends with Elise discovering who her rapist is—it’s no surprise, given the small cast—and confronting him about it. I honestly don’t know who’s dumber, the man who keeps his “rape kit” under his bed, but close enough to the edge that any one of his girlfriends might see it; or the woman who confronts the man about it in his own house, instead of sneaking out with the evidence and immediately taking it to the police. The two end up going at it, jiu-jitsu style, but as you can expect, this is no
Flash Point or Special ID. Rey Comia and Miguel Vasquez were responsible for the fight scenes, while I assume Anna Mitra and Ivan Oleta were responsible for training the actors behind the scenes.

If you want martial arts-tinged sex (like the erotic applications of the praying mantis style),
BJJ: Woman on Top is probably not the film you’re looking for. If you want to see gorgeous Filipino girls in various states of undress, then that is another story. It’s not really my cup of tea and it was just some random one-off movie that I checked out because…I dunno…curiosity got the best of me, I guess. 



My Rebellious Son (1982)

My Rebellious Son (1982) aka: Raging Tiger Chinese Title : 小子有種 Translation : You Have Guts, Kid! Starring : Alexander Fu Sheng, Ku Fe...