Come Drink With Me: Viewer Comments

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Come Drink With Me
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    by DarkHumour


One of the best classic kung fu movies, starring Cheng Pei-Pei (a spirited swordswoman) and Yueh Hua (a beggar with a secret), trying to rescue the governor's son from a bunch of bandits. This movie has it all: action, romance, and even some song 'n' dance
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    by TheChosenOne
    facebook.com/richard.trondsen


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    by HardBoiled


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    by JJR


A classic that everyone should see.
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YA genre-creating masterpiece.Choco
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    by Cedman15


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    by SW3396


A highly influential classic that changed the genre. The fights are a bit dated now, but it's easy to appreciate the tension, plot, and camerawork.
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YCorrect rating in my opinion. I don't know where people get five starts from.I love you rater haters
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    by shaolin_masterkiller


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YSgt. T
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    by Sgt. T


A visually stunning film for the eyes, as every scene was filmed in detail. Of course this is what director King Hu is known for. The Dragon Dynasty DVD of "Come Drink With Me" is a must-have for all collections. The film itself shows the beauty and grace of Cheng Pei-Pei as she portrays the character Golden Swallow. Yueh Hua also turns in a great performance as the character Drunken Cat.

For some, the action sequences maybe a little too slow. However, people remember: this was filmed in 1966! This influential classic actually changed how future martial arts movies would be filmed. Along with the beautiful re-mastered print, the Dragon Dynasty DVD offers some great extras, such as interviews with the lead stars. This is one no collection should be without!

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YEven dated as it is, this one is an all time classic!Prayingmantis888
Ylove it too :)XslaveX
Yi agree with you,this is a stunning movie.kung fu kid
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    by RM52330


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    by RI44040


This movie is a little dated and may seem a bit slow and quaint compared to the hyper-kinetic action and editing of today's martial arts epics. BUT, taken in context, it IS a classic of the genre with excellent (period) production values and performances. Definitely "one for the library"!
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YPerfect rating and perfect reviewI love you rater haters
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    by bloodybill
    bloodybill.com


Classic. This is why I love this genre so much.
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    by CC320


Classic Angela Mao. Great girl kung fu!
AGREE?READER COMMENTSAUTHOR
YClassic Cheng Pei Pei, which is rather better.Jeffrey Frawley
YClassic flick, but not Angela Mao. :)TheDenizen
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    by 100pr00f
    Wutang-corp.com


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    by DG43897


One of the first movies Jackie made as a kid. Very good eastern of the year. A must-have for Jackie Chan fans!
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YIf Jackie Chan is in this, it is only as a nameless extra. An excellent film, but it is misleading to call it a Jackie Chan movie.TheDenizen
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    by TheDenizen


Historically significant and stunningly beautiful, "Come Drink With Me" features the original great teahouse fight that all other teahouse fights in martial arts cinema want to be. A classic.
AGREE?READER COMMENTSAUTHOR
YCheng Pei Pei is delightful, and the film is far ahead of its time in the coherence of the action sequences. This is very historically significant, but holds up even without that proviso.Jeffrey Frawley
YOne of the best, ahead of its time!Sgt. T
YOne of the few genre founding films, instead of a trend follower. A true classic.Prayingmantis888
YA must see for all martial arts fansAH1706
YSuch a cool film!Choco
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    by DeathShrike


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    by Kung Fu Classic Viewer


AGREE?READER COMMENTSAUTHOR
YSgt. T
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    by CT34797


Awsome action and Cheng Pei-Pei is the shizz! She really broke it down and has that Clint Eastwood cool with her fighting style.
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    by DA57123


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    by MB56452


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    by Ashley


This movie proves that women kick ass! I am giving this film 5 stars because it has a lot of great moments. The film is old and it does have some sloppy editing and fighting moves, but it does deliver a great story and great stars. I really do adore this picture because it proves that a woman can kick ass.
AGREE?READER COMMENTSAUTHOR
NInfluential and a very solid film, but a poor and sloopy reviewAH1706
YFEMALE POWER!!!! ARRGH! and yet I'm a man. :(XslaveX
YIt's true that there are some sloppy and unbelievable edits, but Cheng Pei Pei's grace and charm are magnetic. I like this film very much.Jeffrey Frawley
NI don't think this movie was a five star movie. It was good but in my opinion it wasn't all that good. I do like the Golden Shallow character though. It was not as mind blowing as Mad Monkey Kung Fu. But it was dam good for a 60's movie. I love you rater haters
NI agree that it is an excellent movie but this review is horrible. Poorly written with very little exposition. This is exactly why fangirls shouldn't write reviews.Bastard Ronin
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    by JG31381


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    by Movie Freak


Maybe it's just me, but this film is too outdated for me I guess. I can see why it's a classic and respect it for that, but it just didn't hit the spot for me.
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    by Black Belt Ninja


Director King Hu was ahead of his time in making this picture. The movie is an absolute blast from start to finish. I really enjoyed this film a lot.
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    by tasken_lander


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    by William Giordanella


This is a classic which every martial arts fan should own. This movie is great from start to finish. Also, Dragon Dynasty should be commended for the awesome job they did remastering this film.
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    by Se13an


Excellent early kung-fu film. King Hu truly set the stage for all kung fu films to follow. While there were still a few rough spots in the fight scenes, for its day it was truly groundbreaking and manages to stay a very entertaining and exciting kung fu film even after 42 years. Cheng Pei-Pei and Yueh Hua are excellent as Golden Swallow and Drunk Cat. I love kung fu movies that have such great names--in the U.S. we get Bob and John, but kung-fu movies get Golden Swallow and Drunk Cat. A true kung fu classic that will delight any fan.
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YI def. agree- this is an entertaining flick.JV47842
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    by DR4403


A must-see for the beauty and grace of swordswoman Cheng Pei-Pei--the best at what she does!
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    by AB868


An oldie but a goodie.
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    by HG6505


Great story. I was a little disappointed with some of the fight scenes, they just didn't seem to have enough energy, but King Hu definitely impressed me with this one.
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    by JL46206


This film could earn a five stars easily if not for some minor flaws in choreography! I loved it when first viewed it 40 years ago, love it more now. The soundtrack was beautiful and very compelling, the first scene with Chen Hung Lieh in white robe was awesome! One of the best swordplay movies, highly recommended! Love Cheng Pei Pei forever!
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    by Jeffrey Frawley


King Hu was one of the most visually pleasing directors of his time, and Cheng Pei-Pei is still one of the most talented, appealing and endearing actresses to have appeared in Hong Kong film. "Come Drink With Me" is probably their best collaboration, and it remains an engrossing, completely un-dated masterpiece.

This is an excellent film.

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    by MM15775


For some unfathomable reason, I had deferred viewing this film until recently. I possess most of King Hu's other films and have viewed and studied them numerous times. Perhaps it was the general unavailability of this particular release that influenced my decision. In any case, I purchased the pristine Celestial release and, wow!!! I have to admit, the fill blew me away. It's aged particularly well. The film's plot makes sense, the action is not outlandish, and Cheng Pei-pei is riveting--she has real screen presence. The cinematography bears all the hallmarks of Hu's painterly style. I'd say this is a MUST HAVE for all Wuxia Pian fans, but you already knew that.
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    by LH26488


Fight scenes are slow and pretty weak by today's standards.
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    by Iron Mantis




In terms of importance alone, "Come Drink With Me" is a five-star movie. King Hu changed the way martial arts films and Hong Kong cinema in general were made with this highly influential film.

Cheng Pei Pei, best known to western audiences as Jade Fox from "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon," is absolutely beautiful in this movie and puts in a great performance as the film's main protagonist, Golden Swallow. Drunken Cat is another entertaining character, though the actor who portrayed him didn't seem very drunk at all. The film's music is also memorable, and is likely to get stuck in the head of the viewer for the rest of the day after watching it.

Though the film is very important, it doesn't quite hold up after forty years, which is what kept it from recieving a perfect score. It is still entertaining, but some viewers of newer martial arts and wuxia may feel disappointed with the slow action of this classic.

AGREE?READER COMMENTSAUTHOR
YGood review. Cheng Pei-Pei was beautiful, graceful, and deadly. Yueh Hua was also quite good in his portrayal of Drunken Cat. As a whole though slow, the total movie was excellent.Sgt. T
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    by KJ21890


Excellent. Classic Cheng Pei Pei.
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    by DP31950


Strong film! I enjoyed this the first time I saw it, and this is a [good] addition to my collection. Thanks HKFlix!
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    by Eastern Kicks
    www.easternkicks.com




If you ever wanted to know where Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon came from, you only need to know one name, King Hu...

When western audiences saw Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon in 2000 they were truly dazzled by it's effects and stunning imagery. To Eastern audiences, however, it must have seemed somewhat old-fashioned. Brought up from childhood with ancient tales like the Outlaws of the Marsh (The Water Margins) and Journey to the West (Monkey), surrounded by Wuxia (swordplay) and martial arts in novels, films and TV programs, they'd seen it all before. More specifically, they had seen it all in a trio of films made over thirty years earlier by a gound breaking director called King Hu. His 'Inn trilogy' would take these magical worlds and make them a reality for the first time. Yet it took Ang Lee's homage to bring his name to public attention, sadly some three years after his death.

Before Come Drink With Me Hong Kong swordplay movies were quite a different breed, far closer to the stylised theatrical acting and fighting seen in Chinese Opera productions. A breath of fresh air, it dealt these films with a maturity and a scope of vision never seen before.

In Come Drink With Me Cheng Pei-pei plays the legendary Golden Swallow, come to free the Governors son, her brother, from the clutches of a villainous gang of bandits aiming to swap him for their captured leader. In one of the greatest set pieces in Hong Kong cinema, Golden Swallow enters an inn frequented by the bandits who are not only unaware of who she is but also that she is in fact a woman. (One element of the story we must take with a pinch of salt, as it's difficult to see the beautiful young Cheng Pei-pei, then only about 18, could be thought of as anything else.) Gradually, as the outlaws goad her, she shows just how powerful she is. Catching coins flung at her on a chopstick. Easily deflecting a wooden bench and a heavy wine jug hurled at her with just one hand. When two members throw coins above her she impales them to the ceiling using three chopsticks, then casually opens her fan to catch them as they fall. When a bandit asks for his money back, she chucks them on the wall, forming the shape of a swallow and revealing her identity. Amazed, they still inadvisedly decide to take her on, disturbed only by the sudden appearance of a beggar known as Drunken Cat (Yueh Hua), and promptly lose.

Drunken Cat seems to be a bumbling fool, but he soon reveals there's more to him. Saving Swallow form an assassination effort that evening, he proves himself just as adept at jumping up to high gantries and over rooftops. He also hints the bandits location in song under the guise of entertaining the inn's customers. Something of a guardian angel, he helps her unseen during her confrontation at the bandits hideout. Vastly outnumbered, she still gets the better of their No. 2 Jade Faced Tiger, but falls victim to one of his poison darts (fired from his fan) on her escape.

Drunken Cat saves her from being found by the outlaws, hiding her in his home. There is no cure for the poison, however, meaning he must suck it out (in a very sexually charged scene - particularly for Hong Kong in the mid 60s). As Swallow is recovering she realises that Drunken Cat is a great master, the most powerful martial artist she has ever known. His mortal enemy is a rouge Abbott who has allied himself with the outlaws. Both shared the same master, but it was Drunken Cat who took their teachers powerful bamboo spear. Drunken Cat organises the exchange, and the stage is set for the final showdown not only between Swallow and the bandits, but himself and the Abbott.

Come Drink With Me was King Hu's first wuxia/swordplay movie, and to it he brought a truly fresh approach and vision, made possible by his incredible skill as a filmmaker. Influenced by the work of Akira Kurosawa, Hu brings a bloody, violent reality to fight scenes that had previously been far more stylised affairs based on those in Chinese Operas. Full of scope and complexity that hadn't been seen before in Hong Kong films. The acting is more restrained showing that, like Kurosawa, Hu also had a more 'European' sensitivity. In fact, Hu deliberately picked young actors, new to filmmaking, so he could mould exactly the performances he wanted from them.

Considering the resources available at the time, Hu's technical ability surpasses that of nearly any other director. His use of camera tricks brings magical, superhuman powers to life in such a way that you believe the impossible. Frequently using techniques such as reversing and speeding up film and most importantly very clever editing - he had a great awareness of just how much, and more often how little, was needed to convince the viewer of what has happened. He also innovated the use of trampolines, using real martial artists to jump high into the air. The effect is more realistic than the more stylised wirework which dominated the eighties.

His technical ability also shows itself in how well made the film is generally. The use of pulleys manoeuvring the camera around a scene are as sophisticated as anything happening in the west. Hu uses the entire screen, not just the centre. With compositions that fill the screen, Hu often plays with the audience rather than patronises them, a character might be seen fleetingly in a corner. The result shows how beautifully a story can be told.

One of her first movies, Cheng Pei-pei (Thundering Sword, Golden Swallow, Wing Chun) makes such a convincing female swordsman it's easy to see why this film catapulted her into a long run of similar roles. Yuan Ha (Killer Clans, The House of 72 Tenants) also delights by not overplaying what initially appears to be a comic role, which would have undermined his later revelation. In fact, initially his performance is not unlike that of Masaaki Sakai in the famous Monkey series form Japan. (Yueh had played that role two years earlier in the film that influenced the series, Monkey Goes West.) The cast itself reads like a who's who of Hong Kong movies. Ching Siu-tung, who would later make some of the most innovative wuxia movies since Hu including A Chinese Ghost Story, Swordsman II and Duel To The Death appears as the child spying on the outlaws in their temple hideout. The assistant action director Han Yingjie was a young Sammo Hung, and one of Hung's best friends Jackie Chan also appears as one of the children. Yuen Siu-tui, who would later play a Drunken Master of his own opposite Chan, plays one of the bandits. Sui-tui's son, Yuen Woo-ping, would become the action director on Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon and if the connection needed to be made any clearer, Cheng Pei-pei played that films villainous Jade Fox.

It's impossible imagine what kind of impact it must have had when first shown in Hong Kong, but with the terrific restoration job that has been done on it, Come Drink With Me looks as fresh as ever. Not only does it not reflect its 36 years, if anything it looks more modern than Crouching Tiger. A must for anyone who loved that film, not just fans of the genre.

(This review is part of a special feature about King Hu's 'Inn trilogy' to appear on HKFlix affiliate site http://www.easternkicks.com)

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