The Miracle Fighters | |||||||||||||||
Native Name: |
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Director: | Yuen Woo-ping | ||||||||||||||
Producer: | Leonard Ho Raymond Chow | ||||||||||||||
Starring: | Bryan Leung Yuen Cheung-yan Yuen Yat-cho | ||||||||||||||
Music: | Tang Siu-lam | ||||||||||||||
Cinematography: | Ma Koon-wah | ||||||||||||||
Editing: | Peter Cheung | ||||||||||||||
Studio: | Peace Film Production (HK) Co. | ||||||||||||||
Distributor: | Golden Harvest | ||||||||||||||
Runtime: | 99 minutes[1] | ||||||||||||||
Country: | Hong Kong | ||||||||||||||
Language: | Cantonese | ||||||||||||||
Gross: | HK$8,482,128 |
The Miracle Fighters (;) is a 1982 Hong Kong martial arts fantasy comedy film directed by Yuen Woo-ping and starring Bryan Leung, Yuen Cheung-yan and Yuen Yat-cho.[2] The film's action sequences features various elements of fantasy, including magic. It was followed by two thematic sequels, Shaolin Drunkard (1983) and Taoism Drunkard (1984), which are similar in style with unrelated storylines.
During the Qing Dynasty, Han Chinese and Manchu people were not allowed to marry each other. After he is found to have taken a Han wife, the Emperor commands Ko Hung (Eddy Ko) to kill her.[3] However he refuses, and he has to see his wife die. Ko Hung engages in a battle with the Sorcerer Bat (Yuen Shun-yi). To escape, he also takes the infant prince with him. Ko Hung later accidentally kills the prince.
Ko Hung soon finds an infant under a tree. He adopts the boy and names him "Shu-kan", which is literally translated as "Tree Root". To cover up what he has done, he puts the prince's jade on Shu-kan. Over a decade later, the Sorcerer Bat tries to kill Ko. He also tries to kidnap Shu-kan and pass him off as the prince. Ko becomes heavily injured, and Shu-kan (Yuen Yat-cho) goes to find medicine to heal him.
Shu-kan meets two elderly Taoist priests, Kei-moon (Bryan Leung) and Tun-kap (Yuen Cheung-yan). Kei-moon and Tun-kap are disciples of the same master (Yuen Siu-tien), and are always quarreling with each other. There the two teach Shu-kan their martial arts and magic skills. The Sorcerer Bat tries hard to get rid of the two to get Shu-kan, but later he manages to kill Tun-kap.
Kei-moon then tells Shu-kan to enter a competition to obtain the Supreme Command. Shu-kan, using the skills he learned, enters the competition where he goes through many different obstacles before he faces off with the Sorcerer Bat. He eventually kills the Sorcerer Bat, wins the competition and brings the supreme command with him. As he returns, he and Kei-moon discover that Tun-kap actually faked her death to fool them to obtain the Supreme Command. The two elders then quarrel again over the Supreme Command. They then decide who will take it in a game of rock paper scissors. First, they both hand gesture "rock", then "paper" but Shu-kan gestures "scissor" and beats them both. With the Supreme Command, Shu-kan commands them to stop quarreling.
Cast | Role |
---|---|
Kei-moon / Old Man 奇門 | |
Tun-kap / Old Woman 遁甲 | |
Yuen Yat-cho | Shu-kan 樹根 |
Ko Hung 高雄 | |
Sorcerer Bat 蝙蝠法師 | |
Brandy Yuen | Clown in the jar 罈子裡的人 |
Huang Ha | Rainmaker |
Tino Wong | One of Sorcerer Bat's men 蝙蝠法師手下 |
Master 師父 | |
According to assistant director Fish Fong, "maybe over 20,000" snakes were used for the film, and most of them died because of the dry ice used in a scene towards the end suffocating them.[4]
Rick Baker and Ken Miller give the film a positive write-up, stating that it is "one of the most original, inventive and well-directed comedy-kung-fu movies ever".[2]