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  • Warning: Spoilers
    Wong Tao had amazing kung fu skills and this film, and others, shows he could act as well but her never really made it out of the second division of HK stars. Pity. This film has a pretty standard plot but Wong Tao's acting (as a tortured soul after accidentally killing his best friend) combined with Tommy Lee's excellent action direction make this a good film. Not a classic perhaps but worth watching or adding to a collection. Mine is the Hollywood East - Shaolin Cinema - version which is a reasonable print with the usual terrible dubbing. Lo Lieh is good and its almost worth watching for Cheng Fu Hung (a popular character actor in such film) playing a Mongolian thug with very peculiar chest hair! Hwa Ling only did a few films but is pretty and looks like she has a dancing background. The prostitutes have hearts of gold and as the other reviewer mentions, suddenly launch into an anti-opium speech. The final fight on a back lot is rather disappointing but this in many ways is more a drama than a straight fight film. I enjoyed it.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    FATAL NEEDLES, FATAL FISTS is a Taiwanese kung fu story from director Lee Tso Nam, a reliable genre figure who made some of the more entertaining kung fu movies of the era. This isn't one of his best movies but it's watchable enough for genre fans, albeit not featuring much in the way of new material.

    Things start off on a very strong footing as the viewer is introduced to a heroic double act in the form of Don Wong and Lo Lieh. Wong is your stock young hero type but Lieh is the real treat, snappily dressed in his dark robe and fedora and playing a good guy, which was very rare by the late 1970s. The bad news is that one of these guys is destined to die and it's not Wong.

    After Lieh's sudden and unwelcome departure, the film's quality drops. Wong becomes a drunkard and the movie becomes an exercise in melodrama. Later it picks up with the introduction of some stock villains and action scenes which are cheaply staged but plentiful. The title refers to some fun acupuncture attacks perpetrated by the chief villain which, along with Lieh's presence, are the only memorable thing about this one.
  • FATAL NEEDLES FATAL FISTS (the actual on screen title) is a kung fu film with an above-average storyline and top-notch cast which compensate for fewer fights than usual. The film marks the fourth collaboration between star Wong Tao and Taiwan-based director Lee Tso Nam and certainly deserves to be as well-remembered as their earlier team-ups: THE HOT, THE COOL AND THE VICIOUS, EAGLE'S CLAW and CHALLENGE OF DEATH.

    The film takes the time-honored ploy of the hero who hangs up his gun/sword and applies it to the kung fu genre. Here the hero, Meng Hu (Wong Tao), is a town constable who gives up fighting after he inadvertently causes the death of his captain (Lo Lieh) during a tavern bout with the Four Devils, a band of thugs. The guilt-stricken Meng wanders drunkenly through the countryside until he winds up near dead outside the home of a town magistrate whose daughter nurses him back to health. He stays on to work as a servant and when a Mongolian bandit and his nasty crew show up and cause trouble, he does nothing to help when the fighting starts.

    The bandit, Chung Tung (Chang Yi), seeks to use the town for an opium route and pressures the ailing magistrate to look the other way. Several fights ensue but the magistrate's men, led by his son (Jimmy Lee), are no match for Chung Tung and his trio of henchmen led by Chin Piao (Tommy Lee, who's also the film's action choreographer). Meng, under the assumed name of Chin Chai, refuses to help and is labeled a coward. Eventually, of course, he is provoked into action and proves an equal match for the villains. Chung Tung reacts by planting acupuncture needles in the magistrate's face and torso which only he can remove safely--and only if the magistrate cooperates. This creates a tricky situation for Meng and the others and leads, of course, to a final series of exciting kung fu battles between Wong Tao and his formidable co-stars.

    The action slows somewhat in the final stretch as a couple of characters deliver long monologues. A sympathetic prostitute comes to offer key information to the heroes at the risk of her own life and stops to launch into a lengthy anti-drug tirade. All the extra dialogue taxes the capacities of the voice actors doing the English-dubbing, but they pull though and do a fine job.

    Wong Tao, always the most underrated of kung fu stars, gives one of his most intense performances as a tortured soul burdened with frequent flashbacks to the death of his close partner in the film's earliest sequence. Even though he is dubbed a coward for much of the film, it's not that he's afraid to fight or that he's committed to nonviolence, but that he feels he has no right to live and develops a death wish. As a result, in several harrowing scenes he allows himself to be beaten and even stabbed when attacked. When he's finally shaken out of his depressed state by the brutal beating of a servant buddy by the bad guys, it marks a stirring return to action. While the film lacks the overall thrills of the star-director team's earlier efforts, it is nonetheless well-produced and remains consistently gripping and engaging.

    ADDENDUM (6/13/15): Watching this again after 13 years, I was struck by how strong the drama is and how much attention is paid to characterization and character relationships. The characters have many more dramatic scenes than normal for a film in this genre and the English voice actors clearly relish the opportunity to invest more in the characters than usual. Also, there are three strong women characters in the film and all are played by fine actresses, although they're all unfamiliar to me. Hwa Ling plays the magistrate's daughter and Cheung Ping plays Madame Lee, the brothel manager, but I can't identify the one who plays the prostitute who helps the hero. The only quibble I have is that the final battle between hero and villain is written and staged almost as an afterthought. It needed some stronger flourishes in order to end the film on a more satisfying note.
  • Policeman Meng Hu (Don Wang) gives up his job after being ridden with guilt for his partner being killed. He refuses to fight anymore, until a local opium dealer tries to strong arm his way into letting his shipments in the town. This is one of Director Tso Nam Lee slower movies action and story-wise, but don't let that dissuade you in the least.The fight scenes, while not as numerous, are still great. It's still pretty good stuff and can easily hold it's own against Tso's other great kung-fu films such as, "Hot, Cool and Vicious", "Shaolin Vs. Lama", "Exit the Dragon, Enter the Tiger" and "Fist of Fury 2"

    My Grade: B

    DVD Extras: Commentary by Hong Kong film expert, Ric Meyers, and martial artist Bobby Samuels; a promo for the Martial Arts Theater line; and Trailers for "Running out of Time", "Dragon Inn", "Armageddon" (the Chinese one); "the Duel", "Body Weapon", "Fist Power", & "Deadful Melody"
  • Tso Nam Lee, the legendary director of the blazingly kinetic Kung Fu Classic, 'The Hot, the Cool and The Vicious' demonstratively proves himself to be no less adept at gritty drama in his underappreciated Martial Arts drama, 'Fatal Needles Vs. Fatal Fists', which features a truly compelling performance from the charismatic, Don Wong as iron-fisted Cop Meng Hu!? While oft disparaged for its lack of wall-to-wall Kung Fu, Lee's playfully eccentric, emotionally engaging actioner, 'Fatal Needles Vs. Fatal Fists' maintains interest on the strength of, Meng Hu's existential predicament alone, but ardent Kung Fu fanatics shouldn't despair as the fleet martial action, while less prolific, is excitingly performed by masters,Don Wong, Loh Lieh, and Chang Yi! I was genuinely moved by reluctant fighter, Meng Hu's increasingly fraught psychological malaise, his pronounced melancholia making for a far more nuenced protagonist than one might usually expect to see, much more than just another anonymous 70s Kung Fu curiosity, 'Gou hun zhen duo ming quan' is some damn fine entertainment, and comes highly recommended!