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  • One of a handful of movies directed by prolific Taiwan-based producer Wong Cheuk-hon, "The Young Avengers" is average at best. What makes it worthwhile for hardcore fans of Asian martial arts cinema is that it's a very purely Chinese wuxia (literally "martial heroes" or "martial chivalry") film, completely devoid of Western influence. That means lots of stagey-looking swordplay, elaborate sets and costumes, etc. Wong seems to have realized that the choreography was this film's weak point, so he spices up the heavier fights near the end with some bloodletting--including one particularly effective scene in which a villain is raised clean off his feet and pinned to a wall by his heroic opponent's sword. The minimally informative subtitles (burned onto the print) fail to address many of the nuances of the story, but what we have here is a standard revenge tale with stereotypical characters. A milquetoast scholar (An Ping) and a fierce swordswoman (Ting Ying) discover that they have a common enemy: a corrupt general (veteran character actor Ma Chi, Taiwan's answer to Ku Feng) who has imprisoned the scholar's father and murdered the swordswoman's. They join forces to lure the whip-wielding general into a trap.

    No thrills or surprises here, but "The Young Avengers" is an interesting artifact of its time. There are far superior examples of late '60s Taiwanese swordplay films made on a modest budget (like Joseph Kuo's "King of Kings"), but few that are more authentic.
  • I personally blame The Forbidden Kingdom and Kung Fu Panda for loving martial arts films. But in a good way, and after watching the BBC documentary "Wild China," I am starting love China and Japan. Whenever I am at Wal-Mart, I would start buying martial arts films on DVD from Fusian Films; I had bought four already.

    In this classic martial arts film (featuring plenty of swordplay and fast-paced fighting), An Chi a young clumsy, skiddish scholar was taking money to bail out his falsely accused father. He was also rescued from bandits by a swordswoman in red named Yu Feng, who is looking to avenge her parents' death and save her 12 sisters from an evil lord and using them to create his own personal harem. So the two team up and An wants be Yu Feng's student in martial arts. Also he was also starting to fall for the deadly " 13th Sister," though she thinks of him a nerd, and even trying setting him up with the daughter of a small family they had rescued along the way.

    So, after watching this film a few times, I thought this is an excellent film with fast-paced action and a hint of comedy. And I don't have a favorite scene (as I said many times), because I love the WHOLE film from beginning to end.