Invincible Shaolin

1978 [CHINESE]

Action / Drama

Plot summary


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Director

Top cast

720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
975.84 MB
1280*534
Chinese 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 46 min
P/S 6 / 16
1.77 GB
1920*800
Chinese 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 46 min
P/S 16 / 26

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Leofwine_draca7 / 10

A little too much training, but the climax is great

Another day, another Chang Cheh movie, this one both part of his 'Shaolin' cycle and a Venoms flick to boot. The light plot involves an evil Manchu general exploiting divisions between the North and South style Shaolin fighters, essentially getting them to kill each other while he gloats in the background. I'm a huge Venoms fan and it's very nice to have them all together here, although it's spoilt by the endless training sequences which seem to go on for about an hour; the film has a low budget feel as a result. Still, the gruesome climax goes some way in fixing things, and the experience is an amiable one.

Reviewed by BrianDanaCamp8 / 10

The Five Venoms are back in a clever tale of Shaolin vs. Shaolin

INVINCIBLE SHAOLIN (1978),directed by Chang Cheh, is almost a perfect kung fu film. It's got a cast of some of the best fighter-actors working at Shaw Bros. at the time, including the five who were collectively known as the Five Venoms; it employs some excellent training sequences; and it pits three of its cast against three equally matched opponents in the film's final 15 minutes for some of the most breathtaking duels seen in any of these films. The plot involves a Manchu general (Wang Lung Wei) and the devious machinations he undertakes to root out and neutralize potential foes of the regime who are practicing kung fu at Shaolin Temple. On the pretext of recruiting trainers for his soldiers, he pits three experts from the northern branch of Shaolin against their counterparts from South Shaolin. When the South Shaolin experts die by an act of treachery, with the deaths publicly blamed on wounds inflicted by the North Shaolin men, the South Shaolin master recruits three more experts, two of whom also die in fights with the North Shaolin men. The master then recruits two more, joining the one survivor, but sends each off separately to hidden masters to train in specific techniques to combat the experts from North Shaolin. Thus, enmity is created between the two branches of Shaolin, all to serve the interests of the Manchu rulers.

We get a series of hard-hitting kung fu battles right at the beginning, followed by scenes of extensive training in different techniques. We see Lo Meng, as one of the new South Shaolin champions, forced to do push-ups on top of a well, with eggs placed under his hands. Every time he succeeds in doing them without breaking the eggs, the master gives him a new challenge, which causes him to break the eggs again. Only when he finishes the final variation without breaking the eggs will he be ready. Another expert (Kuo Chui) has to learn stick fighting, while another (Wei Pai) has to practice close-quarter combat. Each training sequence is methodically structured so we can see exactly what kind of fighting technique they're being trained in and what the end result will be. When we see the final fights, we understand exactly how these fighters developed their skills.

In the meantime, the three Northern Shaolin experts train the soldiers and romance three local girls, two fruit vendors from the adjacent town and a maid from the palace. (Kara Hui Ying Hung, a female fighting star in her own right—MY YOUNG AUNTIE, LADY IS THE BOSS—plays the maid, while Niu Niu, from BRAVE ARCHER 2 and THE SWIFT SWORD—plays one of the vendors.) In the course of these scenes, the Northern Shaolin men, played by Lu Feng, Chiang Sheng and Sun Chien, meet and have brief interactions with the Southern Shaolin men, whom they determine are worthy of respect.

Eventually, the three South Shaolin champions show up at court to confront the Northern Shaolin men. By this point, all six are wracked with doubts and suspect they should all be allies rather than opponents. They fight anyway, with not so predictable results. The fights are sheer poetry in motion, particularly when Chiang Sheng and Kuo Chui face each other. It's like watching two great dancers in a duet. The action is photographed on large, well-lit indoor sets with beautiful décor in the background. Eventually, the final confrontation expands to include the General and his men, leading to a spectacular battle which spreads throughout the palace. Wang Lung Wei, as the General, was no slouch in the fighting arts either and makes quite a formidable foe. I've seen all of the films featuring the Five Venoms and believe this is one of the best, on a par with—and maybe surpassing—THE FIVE VENOMS (1978),the film that started it all. This film once played in the U.S. under the title, UNBEATABLE DRAGON. I watched it in its remastered version, in Mandarin with English subtitles, on an R3 DVD from Hong Kong's Celestial Pictures.

Reviewed by macnjnc8 / 10

Unbeatable Dragon is one of Director Chang Cheh's better offerings

If you are a big Chang Cheh movie fan this movie is one of his better directorial jobs. Somehow this movie saddens you because most of the major characters (the venoms) are pitted against each other. Because of a cunning plot by the Ching government North Shaolin and South Shaolin are against one another when they are really factions of the same school operating individually. Because of a court order the Ching government uses the best teachers from both the North and South Shaolin to train it's guards. A head Ching official arranges a contest at Ching headquarters to see which school teachers are superior to the other. North Shaolin proves to be far better in this friendly duel. The head Ching official then kills the 3 South Shaolin teachers and frames the North Shaolin teachers for their death, returning their bodies to South Shaolin. South Shaolin is now furious and sends 3 more students to try and defeat the North Shaolin teachers. Another "friendly" duel is arranged and tempers flare. Two more South Shaolin students are killed by North Shaolin teachers. Realizing that South Shaolin is obviously no match for North Shaolin the teacher appoints 3 more students to undergo intense training on particular styles to offset the strengths of the North Shaolin students. These training scenes are some of the best ever to grace the martial arts screen. One South Sholin student (Lo Mang) learns Mantis style, another student (Phillip Kwok) learns Lightskill and the Pole and the last student (Wei Pei, snake) learns a style that specializes in combat in close to the opponent. After they master these skills they are now ready to take revenge they swore to their dying master. At the last minute the two schools realize there is a plot by the Chings to destroy both the schools; but because they swore to their teacher they fight anyway. A classic martial arts film, one of the best Chang Cheh movies ever made. 8/10 on the scale.

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