Swift Shaolin Boxer (1978) poster
6.7
Your Rating: 0/10
Ratings: 6.7/10 from 3 users
# of Watchers: 7
Reviews: 2 users
Ranked #105522
Popularity #99999
Watchers 3

When two separate imperial agents stay in the same room at different times are both offed, foul play is afoot. After passing his five challenges required to qualify for the mission, Agent Ho Kun is dispatched to the town where the murders took place, to stay in the aforementioned room and complete the mission bestowed upon his ill fated colleagues. Upon discovering that some of the local contacts are employed by the antagonist of this tale, things start to get complicated. (Source: Letterboxd) Edit Translation

  • English
  • magyar / magyar nyelv
  • עברית / עִבְרִית
  • dansk
  • Country: Taiwan
  • Type: Movie
  • Release Date: 1978
  • Duration: 1 hr. 29 min.
  • Score: 6.7 (scored by 3 users)
  • Ranked: #105522
  • Popularity: #99999
  • Content Rating: Not Yet Rated

Where to Watch Swift Shaolin Boxer

Tubi
Free (sub)

Cast & Credits

Photos

Swift Shaolin Boxer (1978) photo
Swift Shaolin Boxer (1978) photo
Swift Shaolin Boxer (1978) photo
Swift Shaolin Boxer (1978) photo
Swift Shaolin Boxer (1978) photo

Reviews

Completed
The Butterfly
4 people found this review helpful
Mar 4, 2024
Completed 2
Overall 7.0
Story 5.5
Acting/Cast 7.5
Music 6.5
Rewatch Value 7.0

"My sword is getting thirsty"

The Swift Shaolin Boxer, even by 1970’s Taiwanese kung fu standards, was completely bonkers. There were triple crosses, maybe quadruple, I lost count somewhere along the line. And for around 45 minutes I had no idea what was going on and who were the good guys and the bad guys and why it all mattered. The fights were fun though and used a variety of styles, weapons, and accoutrements.

Angela Mao worked at an inn that was the headquarters for the bad guys. The translation said rebels, but the rebels were usually the good guys, right? Not when Lo Lieh was the leader and ordering people to be murdered. Whatever their game plan was and it was never disclosed, they were the baddies. The good guys sent Hsieh Hsing and later Wang Kuan Hsiung with letters or lists, something that people were willing to kill for. Ultimately, Barry Chan showed up twenty-five minutes into the movie in a field of flags and began dueling with people. He faced people using swords, staffs, a giant, and kung fu fighting, finally facing Chia Ling. After winning the contest he was allowed to work for the emperor and off to Angela’s inn he goes. Was Angela a bad guy? Was Barry a good guy? The bad guys were terrible at communicating to each other who was on their team because they kept fighting each other.

The fights for the time and place were actually pretty good and for the most part avoided kung fu posing although there were way too many misses. The choreography was over the top though----lots of wire fu, trampoline bouncing, gymnastics, reverse shots, and undercranking. Several people fought in an umbrella labyrinth. Why was there an umbrella labyrinth in the middle of nowhere? Who knows? Not only did the grown-ups fight, but when Wang went into a secret monastic lair in a mountain he had to fight child monks wearing gold sequined outfits with special abilities. Why were their child monks? Who knows? One of my favorite tropes-hopping vampires made an appearance and got the chance to fight, too. There was also a killer flute. Music so bad it kills!

The story became more convoluted and hilarious by the minute, fortunately the fights kept coming. I’m always happy to see Angela Mao and her fierce gaze and quick feet. Barry Chan may not have been the strongest fighter but he acquitted himself well in this movie. And Lo Lieh made every kung fu movie better by being on screen even when he was relegated to only a few minutes at the beginning and then at the end. Did I ever figure out what all the fighting was about? To quote one character, “Who knows?”

4 March 2024

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
Sweet0Girl
0 people found this review helpful
Nov 6, 2022
Completed 0
Overall 4.0
Story 5.0
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 1.0
Rewatch Value 1.0
This review may contain spoilers
This movie was all over the place and the simple plot about a town being overtaken by bandits who don't want to follow the Emperors rules started to not make any sense. Angela Mao was wasted here. I did like Barry Chan though. Really good in this.

The ending fight scene was ok but overall the fight scenes were not that great. Also, I have no clue what the writers were thinking with the final scenes. The ML does the dumbest thing I think I've ever seen in a movie. I was like WTF am I watching. I can't say what it is b/c it would completely spoil the movie.
Was this review helpful to you?

Recommendations

There have been no recommendations submitted. Be the first and add one.

Recent Discussions

Be the first to create a discussion for Swift Shaolin Boxer

Details

  • Movie: Swift Shaolin Boxer
  • Country: Taiwan
  • Release Date: 1978
  • Duration: 1 hr. 29 min.
  • Content Rating: Not Yet Rated

Statistics

  • Score: 6.7 (scored by 3 users)
  • Ranked: #105522
  • Popularity: #99999
  • Watchers: 7

Top Contributors

38 edits
6 edits
1 edit

Popular Lists

Related lists from users
Everybody's Kung Fu Fighting!
321 titles 13 loves 7
Dangerous Women
137 titles 3 loves

Recently Watched By