 |  |  |  |  The mighty Chen Kwan Tai stars as an ex-gambler/new Shaolin student who has one thing on his mind, and that's revenge on his murdered family! The Shaolin monks don't trust him but still take him in and send him to the bitter monk who trains the iron monkey fist, which is quite brutal. The film has a great tone, good story and some good fights. As a fan of Chen Kwan Tai films, this is another classic to look into. | | AGREE? | READER COMMENTS | AUTHOR | | Y | Chen Kuan Tai's acting and direction are quite good. His moves film very effectively. | Jeffrey Frawley |
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 |  |  |  |  My favorite Chen Kuan Tai film to date. A classic revenge flick that makes you wait for the final confrontation, and when it gets there it delivers. | | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  Chen Kuan-Tai's labor of love, "Iron Monkey" stands out as a solid independent fu flick. A monkey fist expert himself, Chen tries hard to demostrate all aspects of the style, rather than only focussing on monkey imitation, which gets old after awhile. A short while. The plot is standard training for revenge, but the fight scenes are plentiful and watchable. | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  I bought this many years ago, before I knew very much about the genre or recognized its stars for their abilities: I was incredibly lucky! This was obviously made on a very limited budget, and it is possible the cinematography could have been improved, but Chen Kwan Tai put together an extremely well qualified cast in a compelling story with a very good script. As is usually the case in Chen Kwan Tai films, the first appeal is seeing the formidable Mr. Chen's moves. Somewhat untypically, the supporting cast and villains are quite well cast. It is amazing how believable a fighter Leung Kar Yan (Beardy) is, considering he had no martial arts training before entering film. Accounts say he was remarkably good at repeating whatever forms a martial arts director showed him - sometimes quite involved sequences. | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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| Fans of classic Shaw Brothers films will be pleased to recognize Chen Kuan Tai, Wilson Tong, and Chi Kuan Chun. Even "beardy", Leung Kar Yan, is in this as a bad guy. It's clearly a low-budget film, filmed at actual locations and few, if any, sets. "Iron Monkey" was filmed at near the height of this genre's popularity so the fight scenes are not that fast as say, "Flag of Iron" or "Legendary Weapons of Kung Fu". However, there is emphasis on the animal styles, specifically monkey and eagle. Those who are offended by animal cruelty should skip the opening title sequence. There are scenes of an eagle and monkey obviously thrown together to fight. If owning or seeing something like this is more than offensive, than you can pass this altogether. The fight choreography isn't bad and the plot is similar to any other revenge flick of the time. Chen Kuan Tai's monkey is also different than others you may be used to. It's more high up and not low to the ground. The training sequences are also enjoyable to watch, especially when Chen Kuan Tai learns from a monkey. |
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 |  |  |  |  This is like the classic "36 Chambers" story, but Chen Kuan Tai is more brutal and vicious than most Shaolin training films. "Iron Monkey" is a bonafide classic. | | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  Chen Kwan Tai stars as the 'Iron Monkey'. After his family is killed for being rebels to the government, he roams the jungle and steals food from the Shaolin Temple. He is accepted into the Temple and then learns the difficult art of Monkey Fist Kung Fu (though the training scenes are not too demanding). Then pretends to be a traitor and joins the Government army, so he can get close to the General to take out his revenge. The story line is very thin, but it is action you want, action is a plenty as Monkey Fist and Eagle Claw have the final battle. | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  Chen Kuan Tai's performance is what stands out in this movie. This story has been told many times before, but he makes it worth watching. Definitely recommended for those that like old school kung fu. | | AGREE? | READER COMMENTS | AUTHOR | | Y | Without Chen Kuan Tai, this would have been very ordinary. With him, it's quite good. | Jeffrey Frawley |
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 |  |  |  |  Outstanding performance by Chen Kuan Tai demonstrating the Monkey style. It is an old school classic. The plot is average and nothing new in the genre. But CKT is just great to watch in this one! | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  What can you expect from Chen Kuan Tai? Lots of action and great kung fu. The plot is used much in the Hong kung fu genre, but hey who cares about the plot. The final confrontation is already your money's worth. | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  This movie was a mixed bag with the hero playing a villain as well in order to get close to the bad guys. Good acting throughout. I just love Chen Kuan Tai for his graceful movements and intensity. This film will get varying reviews for its storyline, however, remember a lot these films are portraying real events in early Chinese history. | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  Iron Mokey is one of my favorite old 70's kung fu flixs. Chen Kuan Tai is superb in the movie. The technique he mastered is displayed by him in an astonishing way. The fight scenes are fantastic, especially when he takes out the whole ching army& the general who masters the evil claw style. Definitely own this movie in your kung fu collection. If you are a fan of Chen Kuan Tai you'll enjoy this old school flix | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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| A truly superb classic 70s kung fu film. When a kung fu movie starts out during the opening credits with a live animal fighting another live animal on an empty sound stage, followed by the film's stars fighting each other in their signature animal form on the sound stage, while a serious-sounding narrator gives you the history of each animal form --- you know it gotta be good! If you like that truly classic-style flick, buy this video immediately. Chen Kwan Tai is superb, as always. The plot is straightforward and engaging and leaves you in suspense throughout. Spectacular intricate fight sequences are scattered liberally throughout the entire film, from beginnng to end. One of the Kwan Tai's many opponents, I believe, is a Venom.
This movie, made in 1977, should not be confused with the altogether different 1993 film of the same name. From my "classic" perspective, this film (the 1977 "original") is far superior. This is one of my favorite kung fu movies of all time. It contains one of my favorite kung fu films lines, uttered by the aging monkey fist master to his new would-be student on the first day of training, "The monkey fist technique is most complex..." If you are a lover of 70s classic kung fu, you will want this movie. Do not confuse this movie with the newer 1993 film of the same name. While that movie is good in its own right, I still prefer the "classic" 1977 movie hands-down. If someone tells you they like the newer version better, they are probably too young to appreciate classic Venom-style choreography and/or never had a opportunity, as I did, to enjoy the movie in a packed "hootin' and hollering" theatre during the original theatrical release. |
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| "The Iron Monkey" is one of those late 70's kung fu flicks with at least a dozen but stills and Buddha bless yous. It tells as an often-heard story about a young man who enters the Shaolin temple to study martial arts. Why? To avenge his murdered family of course. Also, this movie isn't from any major HK producing companies, but from some smaller one called Ching Hua Film Co. All this leads you to expect a very lame, very low-budget film. Then again, "The Iron Monkey" seems to got some potential as well: the director & actor Chen Kuan Tai [from Shaw Brothers fame] and also many supporting roles from familiar faces i.e. Leung Kar Yan ["Warriors Two"], Wilson Tong ["Snake Deadly Act"] and Chi Kuan Chun ["Eagle's Claw"].
"The Iron Monkey" isn't too bad for an old school fan like me. While the fighting is just average, nothing special, the plot involves some nice twists and the great screen presence of Chen Kuan Tai is used to the fullest. The sets are OK; nothing like in some of those worse independent productions where it looks like the whole film is shot in the producer's backyard or in your neighbour's garden. In "The Iron Monkey", there are no major flaws, except that they forgot to dub about some 20 seconds of the movie at one point [everyone's suddenly speaking Cantonese for a while]. Also the print I saw [UK cassette from "Eastern Heroes"] had quite bad picture quality, especially the colors were fucked up. But this doesn't spoil the film too much, so if you are in mood for some fun old skool chop socky, give "The Iron Monkey" a try. |
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 |  |  |  |  I like this movie, its an old school kung fu flick, with alot of killing, the movie starts with his whole family being murdered, and his lil brother being killed by his own dad, thats one of my favorite scenes, Then he goes to shaolin for training and this where the dullness sets in, But he finally leaves shaolin to revenge his families death, kills alot of folks brutally, the end scenes when he takes out the generals is some great old school kung fu fighting, but dullness in the middle brings the movie down, if u wanna see an shaolin training movie get shaolin master killa a much better film. | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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