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  • Actually, the "Romeo & Juliet" part of the story mostly serves to frame the film, which is otherwise an action-rich quest for a clan treasure. On the way, Ti Lung meets a number of enemies, makes a couple of friends and finds out what his father was really up to all these years. The movie gets silly in places -- though no odder than, say, that Queen Mab speech, which purports to be a classic -- and there are a couple of truly bizarre performances amid equally strange sets and effects. Still, the pacing is good, the action is plentiful and the various plot lines tie up pretty well. Also, Venoms fans might be amused to see Lo Meng armed and Sun Chien survive the ending.
  • Leofwine_draca23 April 2020
    Warning: Spoilers
    CLAN FEUDS is a sprawling, occasionally crazed martial world story with an anything-goes approach. It's very much in the style of a Chor Yuen production but somehow manages to pack even more plot into its running time than that director's films; the plot literally gallops five miles down the road every five minutes of running time or so. Ti Lung is the eponymous hero, the scion of a clan trying to reunite both sides after an ill-fated Romeo and Juliet romance threatens to tear them apart. Aside from the heavy plotting, there are endless supporting roles for Shaw favourites including no less than two Venoms, Lo Meng and Sun Chien, alongside other regulars like Lily Li and Jason Pai Piao. Phillip Ko is a typical badass, this time playing a blind assasssin. The film is unsurprisingly chock full of action and death, from regular bouts of lavish swordplay to gruesome murders and cheesy FX. It's a hoot, in other words.
  • This film could serve as a good example of the creative stagnation that started to engulf the Shaw studios in the 1980's. Good actors, some good fight scenes, some crazy characters, and some good art direction. Unfortunately the story plays exactly as if it had been done years before.

    The complex story line involves two lovers from feuding clans getting discovered. The man, the son of the clan leader, is sentenced to death but is secretly replaced by a volunteer! Even the clan leader doesn't know that this has taken place. The son is taken away but his brother, (played by Lo Meng of the 5 Deadly Venoms) who is equally ignorant of the deception, attacks the girl's clan in a rage over the affair. Ti Lung retrieves Lo Meng from the girl's clan headquarters but the two get banished from their own clan. While on the road they get involved with several shady characters who are either looking for the clan's lost gem or the clan's legendary kung fu manual. Meanwhile all the martial clans have decided to destroy Ti Lung's clan and to achieve that task they hire a master who has perfected the poison hand. You can tell he has a poison hand since his hand has claws, is covered with warts and is very green. Along the way Ti Lung meets a mysterious cave woman (wearing a leopard skin), her crazy mother and later a prince who has a harem of women. There's also a blind assassin accompanied by a mute fighting girl. Lots of plot confabulations occur.

    A well mounted production but it suffers from a rambling story line and some poor editing. The action comes at a good pace but doesn't hold the film together. The fights are good but some of the best martial artists in the cast are under used. The lighting is sometimes very gaudy in that special Shaw way but the new print shows these off well.

    OK but you might find your attention wandering.