User Reviews (3)

Add a Review

  • This is an unusual movie for Shaw Brothers in that Joseph Kuo is the director and Ivy Ling Po is really the only Shaw Brothers star. I believe this is the second or third time I have watched this movie over the past nine years or so therefore I must post a review. Oddly the only thing I remember about this movie before watching it again is Liu Ping's bad "spray tan".

    It begins with the need for another mighty power book of kung fu secrets that could enable world domination. Every time this plot hits the screen I have to ask: If you can defeat the master and take his book do you really need it as it didn't seem to help him any?

    This movie is also heavy on the "chi". The rationalization is that if you have a powerful chi you can do telekinesis, move objects with your mind. This a super power similar to Luke Skywalker looking at his light saber and it jumps into his hand. I have a big problem with this power regardless of the Star Wars universe or the martial arts universe. If you could lift a sword with your mind you could also fire a bullet out of your pocket. Telekinesis is a poorly thought out power. If I had the ability I would be a walking Gatling gun just by having a pocket full of bullets.

    Twice a practical effect of a sword or spear on a wire is used. Both times it was a great effect. Using wires for props came after using the wires on the stunt men but it creates more imaginative possibilities.

    I rate this movie above average and will likely watch it again some day.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    THE MIGHTY ONE, the mighty Long Wu Tian (Lu Ping), leads a gang of notorious killers known, quite appropriately, as "The Notorious Five of the Dragon Valley." They rape and pillage at their leisure and the movie opens with an implied rape and a couple of murders that leave a pair of children orphans. The two grow up separately (though we're never shown how they came to be separated, we do see the girl stuck in a tree where Long threw her and the boy nailed to a door frame with a knife through his hand). Long longs for the second volume of the Mighty Creed, which has only 3 of the 5 Mighty techniques illustrated within: whoever has the other 2 techniques, one assumes, has his number... Heung (Ling Yun) and his sister Xiao (Ivy Ling Po) are eventually reunited and go after Long. Unfortunately for them, he has more magic tricks up his sleeve than Merlin the Magician: He uses the "slip away" technique (invisibility and transmigration) and The Slip (whereby he's able to slide a sword pinning him to a wall THROUGH his body without any apparent damage being done), as well as his Magic Staff. Heung isn't a slouch, either: he's able to levitate tables (and three of the five Notorious Five, who are levitated onto the floating tables) and has strong telekinetic power. The undercranked "fast motion" fight scenes are hilarious: whenever an actor takes an extra step to get into position to deliver a technique, he literally looks like he's hopping- at super speed. There's also a great deal of flying. Lung Fei ("Betty" in KUNG POW) has a bit part as a villain. Overall, THE MIGHTY ONE is a textbook example of what one can (and can't) do with some cheap camera effects and a willing cast. Fun, if nothing else.
  • THE MIGHTY ONE (1972) stars Ivy Ling Po, the only major Shaw Bros. star in the cast. It was directed by Joseph Kuo, who later gained fame for numerous 1970s kung fu classics made in Taiwan, including MYSTERY OF CHESS BOXING, BORN INVINCIBLE, 7 GRANDMASTERS, and the 18 BRONZEMEN series. I'm assuming this one was made in Taiwan because the sets and locations look different from those in the usual SB swordplay productions of the time and because none of the SB regulars are in the cast. The actor who plays the villain, a red-faced, white-haired evil kung fu master in a black-and-red outfit, is Lu Ping, who is identified in the disc's Special Features bio as having been a top star for decades in Taiwan (he was about 40 in this one). IMDb doesn't list many credits for him, though. He has the biggest part in the film.

    Ivy pops in and out of the action as does her co-star and fighting partner, Ling Yun, who was active in kung fu movies, both at Shaw Bros. (SIX ASSASSINS, FIVE TOUGH GUYS, KILLER CLANS) and elsewhere. They play older versions of characters seen as children in an eight-minute opening sequence. No one else seems to age in the film. One actor among the villains, Lung Fei, made dozens of Taiwan-based kung fu films in the 1970s and early '80s. IMDb also lists Blacky Ko as a cast member, although if he was in the film I failed to spot him.

    The plot involves the villain going around the country terrorizing renowned kung fu teachers, a premise that looks forward to director Kuo's later films, including 7 GRANDMASTERS and MYSTERY OF CHESS BOXING (aka NINJA CHECKMATE, also reviewed on this site). The final showdown is something of another Kuo trademark as the two heroes combine their best efforts to take on an all-powerful villain in an extended fight scene filmed on location.

    There are a lot of fight scenes, most of them quite gimmicky, featuring a variety of exotic weapons, high leaps over opponents and, in an original touch, a bit of telekinetic kung fu. However, there's not a lot of actual martial arts expertise on display. Ivy wasn't exactly the greatest fighter among Shaw Bros. female stars and I think it would have made for a better film if they'd cast Cheng Pei Pei or Shih Szu instead. Ivy's specialty was lavishly mounted Huangmei Opera (e.g. LOVE ETERNE, LADY GENERAL HUA-MULAN) and for a star of her stature, this film was something of a comedown--although she did make the spectacular swordplay adventure, 14 AMAZONS, the same year.

    This one's moderately entertaining and a little different in tone and style for a Shaw production of 1972, but is ultimately too lightweight to be of note. I wonder if this was made by a different company and picked up for release by Shaw.