| Young Hero from Shaolin 2 (1986) is one of those rare sequels that is much better than its predecessor. Unfortunately that doesn't mean it is really spectacular, but at least in comparison, they decided to improve on the first film.
This time in the continuing story of Fong Sai Yuk, the emperor has tired of Shaolin's growing influence and power, so he enlists a local commissioner to arrange a conflict between the monks and the surrounding martial schools. The crux of the story unites Fong Sai Yuk and fellow Shaolin student Wu Wai Kin (I'm guessing at the spelling), who has returned to his murdered fathers martial school in order to get revenge on a corrupt baddie named Dragon Head, the man responsible for his fathers death. Dragon Head gets help from the evil commissioner and a fighter named Lu Ti Ping, who has a vendetta against Fang Sai Yuk. Kidnappings,... lion dances,... and, of course, kung fu.
What makes this a more entertaining film than the first is the fact that it has better ideas and inventiveness going on. It isn't exactly genius plotting, but at least it keeps moving without grinding to a halt. After inquiring about the Spinning Palm Technique, Fong Sai Yuk and Wu Wai Kin are walking home and decide to race, Wai Kin taking the bridge while Sai Yuk Crouching Tiger style hops across the lily pads on the water. It is pretty superfluous but entertaining, a little bit thrown in to keep you interested. The fight choreography is still pretty bland, but at least the fighting is frequent. Except for a bloated ending that sort of limps along, the final twenty minutes is almost all pure action scenes... Hey, sometimes I'm a simple man, and that is all I ask for, some action. It doesn't have to be great; like a baby in a crib, just give me something shiny to look at and I'll be happy with my 2AM kung fu viewing.
Directed by Ngai Hoi Fung (Master with Cracked Fingers and Bruce Leung's Ten Tigers of Shaolin), it looks like any another run of the mill mainland feature, with some choppy editing, a barely there story, and more attention paid to the fight scenes, though even they aren't up to Golden Harvest or Shaw Bros. standards. |