 |  |  |  |  I am giving this one 4 stars. Although a good portion of this movie was unbelievably goofy and annoying, when the fight scenes started (after the dinner invitation by the lord in the movie) it got pretty darn good. The Wing Chun fight scenes are the best I have ever seen in a movie. Chinese humor is different than ours, doesn't make it right or wrong, just different. | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  Incredible fighting! Sammo Hung is not the star here, but he does steal the screen for awhile. Very inventive moves and styles. I think there are some cultural boundaries that impede my ability to get into some aspects of this movie, though. Also, I thought the end was sort of pasted on; it didn't flow as smoothly (in or out) as I would have hoped. | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  I love this film. The martial arts were amazing! A great flick for everyone and it's one of those pictures you can watch all the time. If you want a great martial arts flick, pick this one up. | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  Another review called this the most acurate martial arts film ever made. Since I'm not a practitioner of any martial art, I'm not sure what that means; however, this is a very good movie. The fights are done really well (although surprisingly bloody), and the story is actually quite good. The best thing about the film is Sammo Hung, but sadly there's not enough of him in it. Nevertheless, I recommend this film. | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  Astounding, simply astounding. Lam Ching Ying steals the show. His Wing Chun is some of the most effortlessly flawless kung-fu ever captured on film. Definitely one of the finest kung-fu movie ever made. | | AGREE? | READER COMMENTS | AUTHOR | | Y | I love it!! | Little Dragon Fan | | Y | Completely agree. The fight choreography in this film is absolutely amazing, maybe the best ever. | MS10197 | | Y | Right on! | Choco | | Y | cant agree with you more. | kung fu kid |
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 |  |  |  |  This is without a doubt the best kung fu film I've seen. Ever. Great action sequences, great story, humor and a bad ass fighting climax to boot. Sammo Hung is director of this film. I can't speak for Sammo, but this has got to be his greatest film that he's ever made. | | AGREE? | READER COMMENTS | AUTHOR | | Y | oh yes this classic fu film is legendary and is without doubt in my top 5 fu films of all time.yuen biao is awesome in this. | kung fu kid | | Y | I agree. This is Sammo Hung's greatest directorial effort. Lam Ching-Ying is amazingly brilliant. | MS10197 |
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| Often hailed as the best traditional Kung Fu movie ever. I myself wouldn't go that far. But it's probably in the top ten.
Even though this a Yuen Biao vehicle, and he truly shines in this. The standout performance really comes from Lam Ching Ying in my opinion. Just watching this guy move is a pleasure.
All the fights are 100% on point. And Yuen Biao, besides playing the lead character, is once again doubling left and right.
Sammo, true to form, takes a backseat to his co-stars as the comedic relief. But he also gets to show some of his stuff in the very enjoyable training sequences. And as per usual in a Sammo movie, you learn a little something in between fights. In this case, about Wing Chun and Peking opera.
If I must point out a flaw. It would be the abundance of goofy characters dispersed throughout the first half of the movie. And, although nothing out of the ordinary for a movie of this type and era, it is still, in my mind, what keeps the film from truly reaching the legendary status bestowed upon it by fans and critics alike.
But still a classic and a definite must have. |
| | AGREE? | READER COMMENTS | AUTHOR | | Y | I feel you on that one. You just can't deny how much of a show stealer Lam Ching Ying is in this. Awesome performance. | Bastard Ronin |
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 |  |  |  |  Yes it's hard to say something special after all that has been said. I like the second half of the movie a little more than the first, but it does not detract anything from the fact that this is an OUTSTANDING kung fu film. | | AGREE? | READER COMMENTS | AUTHOR | | Y | You gotta love it! | Little Dragon Fan | | Y | One of Yuen Biao's and Sammo Hung's best movies together! Great action and good comedic performances! | Sgt. T |
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 |  |  |  |  This film seriously rocks. Some of the best fighting in any martial arts film. Decent story, too. The only reason why I don't give it 5 stars is because of some of the goofy humor, which I don't prefer in my kung fu flicks. | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  Yuen, Hung, and Lam are fabulous - and the incorporation of Chinese Opera into the mix really makes it cook. Watch it after the opera "The Amorous Lotus Pan" for a real kick. | | AGREE? | READER COMMENTS | AUTHOR | | Y | i think this is one of the greatest martial arts movies ever made possibly the best. | kung fu kid |
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 |  |  |  |  Another Sammo Hung classic with Yuen Biao as the star. Excellent display of Wing Chun showing both short and long range versions. Has some funny moments. | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  Classic! One of the best (if not THE best) martial arts films ever made! A must have for every fan of action films. | | AGREE? | READER COMMENTS | AUTHOR | | Y | Totally agree. This is one of the greatest ever made. Lam Ching-ying is absolutely incredible. | MS10197 | | Y | I especially loved the performances of Lam Ching-Ying and Sammo Hung! | Sgt. T |
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 |  |  |  |  Great story, great plot! Lam Ching Ying is excellent as the wing chun teacher. Lots of great fight scenes and Sammo Hung even adds some realistic "application" to real fighting into the plot. Definitely a must have. | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  The best kung fu movie I have seen. My advice is if you haven't seen kung fu movies before don't watch this first because you won't find many better than this, watch some other ones first and then watch this to see how good this movie is!!!! | | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  One of the best choreographed martial arts movie of all time. Lam Ching Ying really shows off his Wing Chun... Yuen Biao gives a great performance. Sammo Hung plays a small role but enough to show off his skill. | | AGREE? | READER COMMENTS | AUTHOR | | Y | Agree. The choreography is the most amazing I have ever seen. What a great classic. | MS10197 |
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 |  |  |  |  I don't give many 5's, but this is one that is a 5!!! If you like pure no special effects wire flying GREAT Kung Fu action, this is the movie. This movie really pays tribute to Chinese kung fu with it's pure display of Wing Chun. The fight scenes are probably second to none for it's realism. You can feel the power of the blows as they fight!! I own a martial arts movie store and I tell any customer if you like a pure old school kung fu movie, this is it!!! The story is good and Sammo adds his great knack for comic relief, and personally I think this movie shows off Sammo's great ability and teaching skills!!! I've watched this movie probably at least 15-20 times!!! | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  Arguably Sammo's finest directorial effort, The Prodigal Son tells the tale of Leung Jarn (Biao), a self-absorbed and over-protected martial artist who boasts an incredible record of over 300 fights, without a single loss. Unbeknownst to him, his moneyed parents and servant (Peter Chan Lung) have been "fixing" his fights, and literally paying off his opponents. With a head filled with over-confidence, and no real skills to match, Jarn challenges a traveling opera performer (Lam Ching-Ying) to a duel, and promptly loses, thus beginning Sammo's masterpiece! Unerringly, Sammo and the cast seamlessly blend the best Wing Chun fights seen on film with comedy and dramaÉAll culminating into a truly spectacular battle between Yuen Biao and Frankie Chan - It's safe to say that this is one of the greatest kung fu battles of all time. Don't miss "The Prodigal Son." | | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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 |  |  |  |  Considered to be the finest Wing Chun movie ever made, this Golden Harvest production remains a firm classic with martial arts fans worldwide. Although Yuen Biao and Frankie Chan star and deliver worthy performances of their own, it is the late, great Lam Ching-ying who totally steals the show. His performance as the asthmatic Peking Opera performer is incredible, and is one of the best roles he's ever taken in his long and illustrious career. Hung again delivers fantastic martial arts to the mix, and the final reel, pitting Yuen Biao against Frankie Chan is considered by many to be one of the best fight finales ever filmed. It takes no genius to figure out that I highly recommend this gem, which deserves all the recognition it gets. | | LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW! |
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| Prodigal Son is clearly a cut above your average Saturday morning revenge-based chop-socky adventure, but the size of that cut is relative to what you like to see in a kung fu flick.
You like fighting? Of course you do. What kind of insipid, braind-dead dolt doesn't want to see fighting in a martial arts movie? Certainly not I. There's combat here, and there's a fair amount of it, and Sammo Hung is the captain of this ship so you can be sure it's good (he makes an appearance as a guy who has only one good arm to do battle with). Don't expect modernized "action fighting", though...this is strictly a martial arts movie.
You like comedy? Then go watch The Simpsons or fall off a cliff or something. Prodigal Son makes a few stabs at being humorous, but it isn't often successful. Yuen Biao gets knocked into a river a couple of times, a guy gets his face painted while attacking an opera performer, and "Pork Pie" gets over-zealous while practicing calligraphy. Maybe you'll think it's hysterical, but personally, when I want to laugh I'll take my car out for a spin on Friday nights and stampede drunk teenagers into telephone poles.
You like stunts? Well, the money-grabbing shot here is Lam Ching-Ying doing a backflip over a burning flag with which Yuen Biao is fending off a pair of assassins. And when I say "burning flag", I don't mean like in those street demonstrations held by people whose social lives make mine look exciting by comparison, where the fire in question would barely set off a smoke alarm. I mean BURNING burning, with nary a patch of cloth visible and a great big swath of flame left behind to mark its path through the air. Fuckin' cool. You won't see any car chases or leaps from atop mile-high skyscrapers, though...this ain't one of those Fantasy Mission Farce-style time warp movies.
You like drama? Look somewhere else. Lam Ching-Ying doesn't have eyelashes, but if he did, he wouldn't bat a single one of them at the sight of his entire opera troupe butchered in their beds. Yuen Biao's character gives us little reason to wish hiim well in his seemingly endless crusade to acquire some decent kung fu training. And the big baddie who just loves to fightt really ain't such a baddie at all.
You like gorgeous women? Sorry, no dice there either. Pork Pie's daughter is a rather bulbous young woman named Twiggy (Ah...irony. Is there anything so bitter yet so sweet at one and the same time?) and the actress who plays her seems to have abandoned all sense of shame in accepting the role. The only other...ah...um...er..."woman" of prominence in this movie is an opera performer who, after fighting off the unwanted attentions of a lusty young nogoodnik, turns out to be a man. If you haven't seen it and you're now bitching me out for that little spoiler, don't, because, unless you possess the intellect of a gnat, you would have seen it coming a mile away even if I hadn't told you. So shaddap!
Last but certainly not least, do you like climactic, exciting endings? Really? Me, too. But here's where the movie kind of half-succeeds and fizzles instead of exploding in your face. There's a great, expertly-choreographed, hard-hitting, one-on-one fight to finish things off, but, getting back to that "drama" bit, it won't exactly have you jumping out of your seat, cheering the hero on. In fact, his opponent isn't even a real villain...he's just a poor shmoe in a predicament quite similar to the one our boy Yuen found himself in not long ago. At least in a cookie cutter revenge movie there's good reason the for the good guy to beat the shit out of the bad guy, no matter how trite it may be. Here, it's just two guys fighting because they can. They do a damned good job of it, but it just doesn't have the impact it could've had if the story had taken a slightly different direction.
But hey...don't let ME stop you.
You never have before...right? |
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| A great kung fu classic, with interesting characters, good acting, and a decent plot. Some of the most realistic Wing Chun kung fu that you'll see on the silver screen (or the boob tube), as well! Yuen Biao plays the spoiled son of a fairly wealthy man who wants to protect him from getting hurt in a street fight, and so ends up paying half the people in the town to "play possum" when challenging his son to a fight. Consequently, Yuen Biao builds a reputation and an ego on the basis of 300 street fights (all of which have been "thrown" by the opponent). His bogus undefeated streak comes to an end when he tries to get tough with a traveling Peking Opera performer (the always wonderful Lam Ching Ying - increasingly one of my favorite HK actors) who plays the female role in their show, and who manages to beat up Yuen Biao and all his friends, simpering around and speaking in falsetto all the while! Yuen Biao is sobered by the knowledge that his vaunted martial arts "skill" is all show and no substance, and he decides to make a pest of himself until Lam Ching Ying will agree to take him on as his pupil. Comedy, drama, fantastic training sequences, and a bunch of great, realistic and stylistic fights ensue. Recommended! |
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| I just Love this guy! Yuen Biao shines in this movie. Having thought he was the best fighter in his home town, he is reveled as a fake by a true master of wing-chun (Lam Ching Ying). Then he dedicates himself to becoming a student of this master. He joins the Opera company (his father buys the company so his son can still pursue his potential master). After meeting with a Manchurian Prince who travels the country looking for fighters to test his skill Yuen's master starts to warm up to his would be student. This leads to Lam and Yuen tricking fellow Wing-chun master (played to humorous hilt by Sammo Hung) to taking yuen as a student. The Movie asks several questions and the least of which is just who is a prodigal son. Also this movie shows wing-chun training principles with more eye to truth than most martial arts movie that show training. There is plenty of humor and great action in this movie which is a great Yuen Biao vehicle. |
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