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  • BandSAboutMovies28 September 2022
    Warning: Spoilers
    Magic of Spell is the sequel to Child of Peach and, if anything, it might be even weirder than that movie and that makes me happier than I can even explain to you.

    Momotaro the Peach Boy is back and played by a woman named Lam Siu-Lau. Tiny Dog, Tiny Monkey and Tiny Cock are back too and their goal is to rescue the Ginseng King - a living ginseng plant - from a demon wizard who wants to use the plant person to become regain his lost vitality and youth. How would he do that? By bathing in the blood of thousands of dead boys in a hot tub as well as the pulped flesh of the ginseng royalty as well as perhaps Peach Boy's skin. He also kills Peach Boy's mother just so this can be even more frightening for kids and yes, this is a children's movie.

    This demon has quite the gang on his side. There's a transgender ghost with the most perfect hair. Samurai ghosts. Evil puppet skeletons. Buddha statues with laser beams. A strong man who can become a rock lord. And oh yeah, a green fish man who shoots a bazooka.

    That said, Tiny Cock can transform her body into a pecking rooster head that can peck out eyeballs.

    If you've read this far and are wondering, "How can this be?" It can. This movie kept blowing my mind and it made me wish every movie was sped up and had wirework. Your ears will also be delighted, as this movie steals at will from the soundtracks of The Shining and Phantasm.

    This movie starts with Peach Boy flying faster than an arrow to rescue a rabbit.

    All movies should aspire to be this unconcerned with being strange. Watching movies like Magic of Spell will reaffirm your faith that humans have some business being on this planet.
  • MAGIC OF SPELL (1986) is a Taiwanese kung fu fantasy film full of eye-popping magical effects and feats of strength and sorcery. It's loosely based on the Japanese folk tale, "Momotaro, the Peach Boy," and stars Lin Hsiao Lan, a spunky young actress who specialized in this type of film for a brief period in the late 1980s/early 90s. She invariably played male parts in these films. Of the five films of hers I've seen, MAGIC OF SPELL is easily the most entertaining. (The others are KUNG FU WONDER CHILD, A HEROIC FIGHT, TWELVE ANIMALS, MAGIC WARRIORS.) Here, Lin plays Momotaro, the "Peach Boy" (born, so the story goes, from a large magic peach found in a river), who lives peacefully in the countryside with his grandmother (actually the now-widowed guardian who had found him in the river), until a band of demons raids the nearby village, abducts all the children, and attacks Momotaro's home in the process. The old woman is played in gray wig and makeup by one-time Shaw Bros. fighting star Cheng Pei Pei (who was all of 39 at the time of this film!).

    Momotaro survives the attack and sets out for the demons' castle, intent on exacting revenge on the ancient sorcerer who ordered the raid because he needs the blood of children to keep him alive. Momotaro is escorted by the three animals from the story, a dog, a monkey and a pheasant, although they are played in human form by three adolescent actors (two boys as the dog and monkey and a girl as the pheasant) in color-coordinated costumes--black, yellow, and red. Also in the party is a young man who'd been a guest of Grandma's at the time of the raid, a traveling performer who does a kind of magic lantern show with shadow puppets. Along the way they encounter a walking, talking ginseng root (played by a boy in costume), who is coveted by the demons but manages to avoid their grasp and become an ally of Momotaro and his group, proving to be of invaluable help in an unexpected way at a key moment. Eventually, they all raid the evil wizard's castle for a rousing effects-and-martial arts-filled battle with the Wizard and his army of warriors and demons. (One of the demons is blue-skinned and big-eared, just as depicted in illustrated versions of the Momotaro story.)

    The opening credit sequence is all you need to see to get you hooked on this movie. We see Momotaro rescuing a child from a river with some clever stunt work and we see him flying alongside a hunter's arrow to beat it to its intended target, a cuddly rabbit, and pull it out of harm's way, after which he gives the young hunters a stern lecture. The special effects are done either by optical printer or created mechanically on set. There's a lot of wire work to supplement Lin Hsiao Lan's phenomenal acrobatic and martial arts skills. The effects may be relatively cheap but they're imaginative and frequent. The music score is lovely and includes a jaunty song sung by a young ensemble that we hear three times in the course of the film.

    The tape I saw was dubbed in Japanese and had no subtitles, so I can't say I followed everything, but I still found it immensely enjoyable. It helps to read the Momotaro story first, so I dug out my copy of "The Japanese Fairy Book," compiled by Yei Theodora Ozaki (Charles E. Tuttle Company, 1970) and read the original folk tale. Still, even with the story in hand, I didn't quite get who the ginseng boy was.

    The 84-minute running time seemed a little short, as if some scenes were missing. In the original story, great attention is paid to Momotaro's individual encounters with the three animal companions, who initially don't get along and are ordered to do so-or else!-by Momotaro. In the film, we don't see Momotaro gathering these followers at all. In one scene he's attacked by the demon raiders and in the next he's off on his journey with all three animals (in human form) making their first appearance in the film walking quietly behind Momotaro. Later, during the big battle with the evil wizard and his minions, the animal children's limbs transform into their respective animal parts when called on to do the heavy fighting (e.g. the pheasant girl's hand becomes a beak which she uses to attack a demon's face).

    A widescreen subtitled DVD release of this unsung gem would be a real boon to fans of Asian fantasy films.

    ADDENDUM (January 25, 2009): Since doing this review, the film has come out in widescreen with English subtitles on VCD (video compact disc) from the Fortune Star Legendary Collection line. The misspelled on-screen English title reads "Magic of Stell." There is no additional footage in the print used for the VCD. In fact, it runs 81 minutes, three minutes shorter than my VHS copy, although running time discrepancies are often the result of a transfer from the PAL system to NTSC. I can't say that any of the questions I had were answered by seeing a subtitled edition. The participation of the three animals-turned-human-companions is never explained. The ginseng boy is called "Ginseng King" in the subtitles. The villains want to eat him to gain power. Momotaro selflessly treats his injuries and earns his undying friendship.
  • Forget Taoism Drunkard, forget Fantasy Mission Force, forget Shaolin Drunkard, forget Shaolin Drunkard and forget Young Taoism Fighter. Magic of Spell, AKA "Qumotong", a 1986-89 Tiawanese/Mainland-Chinese production, which to the best of my knowledge, has never been subtitled, and that was directed by a certain Zhao Zhongxing, or, as the boards here at this movie-database would have it, a certain Chung Wu Ching, go out and find this flick --- oh, nevermind, it's not available in the Western Hemisphere.

    Subtitles would perhaps serve merely to get in the way, so operatic, so wild, fantastic, visionary is the scenery disentangled before the viewers eyes. The plot: Good VS. Evil. Evil taking the form of a powerful white-haired and wild-maned sorcerer seeking for life-force enough to keep himself from degenerating into a crippled tyrant. which is countered by the chaste good of the heroine, Suichang (Lin Hsiao Lan) whose task it becomes to keep from the wizards clutches a 1,000 year old Ginsing root-child.

    At length, she becomes involved with the plight of this ginseng-child-creature when her elderly mother is attacked and killed by two marauding demons, sent by the evil wizard to put young Suichang out of commission. With vengeance foremost on her mind, she and a troop of seedy but able-bodied fighters storm the sorcerer's stronghold. However, in the ensuing mêlée the tyrant is able to power himself up, sucking vital energies from various people and even jewels. (via the mystic blood-red waters of his wading pool). The resultant conflict is full of kinetic and exciting acrobatics and visualFX -- more than enough to satisfy even the most ZU-jaded fan out there. True to form, Evil is vanquished at the cost of almost all cast-members -- even the root-boy sacrifices his Magical abilities (by leaping into the blood-be-dewed mouth of Suichang and settling in her stomach) to destroy the monster.

    Although the film ends somewhat ambiguously --as we are left wondering just who did survive and if this evil is actually destroyed as promised, there is still that satisfaxion that True Good has won out, even if it was itself eradicated in process.

    Highlights of this obscure flick include: a titanic, demon-clobbering peach, boulder-wielding wind demons; the screwy-looking ginseng-boy trying on some dainty slippers; the zany antics of two scrappy boxing puppetoon skeletons, a living parsnip with a penchant for making toy wind-mills; Suichang being suspend by unseen wires over a rapidly rushing river as she stoops to rescue a trapped infant rabbit; fight-scenes galore, and the patchwork-quilt-like score featuring tracks taken from what must be the most popular source of bootleg HK soundtracks: the score from PHANTASM (1979). 10 stars, already.
  • Magic of Spell defies categorization as there really isn't much to compare it to. I might describe it as a Manichean, Kung Fu version of 1984s 'The Never Ending Story' on mushrooms, except WAY more inventive and unique. After creating Drunken Dragon in 1985 (a unique and fairly insane movie of it's ownw), director Chung-Hsing Chao left ALL inhibitions by the wayside and created this amazing and unique gem of a movie! Clearly made with love, it dazzles and amazes, while never taking itself seriously at all.