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SHAOLIN
DRUNKEN MONK (1982) Gordon Liu achieved international success with the 1978 Shaw Brothers release, MASTER KILLER, directed by his fight choreographer half-brother Chia Liang Liu (aka Lau Kar Leung). Following that benchmark film, Gordon Liu was considered a hot item. He had his pick of roles and starred in some sub-par Kung Fu comedies like CAT VS. RAT and FISTS AND GUTS. He worked again with his half-brother Chia Liang Liu (who handled the fight choreography) on the 1982 independent effort, SHAOLIN DRUNKEN MONK. Though their reunion film was not quite as fruitful as MASTER KILLER, the film does offer enjoyment for fans of Gordon Liu. Since Tai Seng has garnered the rights to several of Gordon’s overlooked Kung Fu pictures, they decided to dedicate a sub-line of DVD titles to him. Thus, the Master Killer DVD collection was born. Tai Seng released the first three Gordon Liu Master Killer titles on DVD including WARRIOR FROM SHAOLIN, FISTS AND GUTS, and SHAOLIN DRUNKEN MONK.
A flashback takes us back in time when Lao Chung was a child. His father was a master of the Big Mantis clan, and when he died, Lao Chung’s mother took over the school. This is when ambitious student Wong Kin Cheong convinced his fellow classmates to help get him to lead the clan. He promised them money and power when he got control of the school. Wong Kin Cheong pressures Lao Chung’s mother to relinquish control of the school, and she refuses. Eventually the treacherous Wong physically confronts her, and claims that if she won’t hand over the seal to the school, he will harm her son Lao Chung. She agrees, and Wong allows Lao Chung to escape. Rather than allow Wong mastery of the Big Mantis clan, she hangs herself. When Wong discovers her corpse, he orders his men to find Lao Chung and recover the seal. The disciples drown the boy, and make off with the seal his mother had given him. The Big Mantis school prospers under Wong’s villainous leadership. But Lao Chung did not drown. He was rescued by a villager, and eventually came to the attention of a master of the Eight Drunken Gods technique. This drunken master took this angry kid and began teaching him Shaolin Five Animals Fist techniques. From here we witness several odd training scenes until little Lao Chung grows into a talented fighter. The final form that the drunken master teaches him are the Eight Drunk Gods techniques.
SHAOLIN DRUNKEN MONK is different from most Kung Fu films in that the narrative is driven by tragedy. Lao Chung’s mother commits suicide to avoid disgrace in the Big Mantis clan. This motivates Lao Chung to seek revenge. Though on the surface this sounds typical of the genre, Au Yueng Chun differentiates SHAOLIN DRUNKEN MONK from the cliches by injecting a fair amount of dramatic moments (complete with emotional music). And unlike 95 percent of old school films, SHAOLIN DRUNKEN MONK does not have a happy ending--it is a very depressing ending for the main characters. In addition to the dramatic elements, there is also a high violence quotient. Characters commit suicide, people are poisoned, fighters are impaled with weapons. There is a hanging, a drowning, and an amputation. Though none of these violent scenes are excessively bloody, there is a fair amount of crimson in the film.
Despite the obvious budget limitations and plot weaknesses, there are a few things worth mentioning in SHAOLIN DRUNKEN MONK. Gordon Liu is one of the few old school martial artists who can also act. Director Au Yueng Chun shows us sides of Gordon that we don’t usually see. In the classic MASTER KILLER, Liu’s driven character is pretty much one-dimensional; Gordon’s a pretty serious guy in that role. In SHAOLIN DRUNKEN MONK, Gordon gets to show his full range of acting talents. He’s deadly serious in this film too, but he also gets to do humor and tender love scenes. On a purely emotional level, SHAOLIN DRUNKEN MONK is superior to MASTER KILLER (but it can’t match the story, fight scenes, or scope of that Shaw Brothers classic). Though the fight choreography in this picture is not the best or most plentiful, there are enough of them to interest fans of Gordon Liu. The climax features Gordon Liu employing a combination of Shaolin Five Animal Fist and Eight Drunk Gods technique against "Eagle" Han Ying’s Manchurian Mantis Fist. Gordon Liu’s martial arts are very admirable, and Han Ying makes for a truly vile bad guy that is nearly as good as Gordon. Liu also shares a whimsical student/mentor relationship with his drunken monk master. The unidentified martial artist who plays the one-handed fighter, Kam shows some amazing one-armed techniques. The actor’s arm is carefully hidden under his clothes, though he looks awfully like a real amputee. SIGHT
SOUND The audio is Dolby Digital Mono 2.0. The sound elicits a broad range of highs and lows, and is free from hiss, background noise, or other audio anomalies. SHAOLIN DRUNKEN MONK is mainly dialog driven with the sound effects, the score, and the English dubbed voices coming from the center channel. The mediocre dubbing is painfully obvious, but no worse than Kung Fu fans have come to expect. These sound effects are clear and natural, though a little flat. The clanging of weapons and impacts of the blows are amusingly exaggerated as usual. Chen Shien Chi composes some nice period music. When the film calls for some dramatic moments, the score changes to an appropriate emotional accompaniment. The score uses modern instrumentation but still manages to evoke a historical tone. All the sound elements (dubbing, sound effects, and score) are perfectly synchronized in the soundtrack, without one overshadowing the other. Unlike Crash Cinema, whose DVDs are plagued by incomprehensible audio, Tai Seng usually delivers in this area. FEATURES There is an audio commentary track by Ric Meyers, a Hong Kong film writer who has published several books on martial arts films and Hong Kong cinema. Meyers has a great film background, but he doesn’t seem to be too familiar with SHAOLIN DRUNKEN MONK. I was hoping he would provide some rare inside information about the making of this film (and he does, a little), but he doesn’t even know the actor’s name who plays the lead villain (its "Eagle" Han Ying)!!! He doesn’t know the names of the other actors who play Kam and Ying Ying. He does, however, know a lot about Gordon Liu and his family members. As we did in our review, Meyers compares SHAOLIN DRUNKEN MONK to his breakthrough film, MASTER KILLER. Occasionally, he slips into MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER 3000 mode and pokes fun at the film or laughs at it, but you can’t really blame him because the film deserves it. He goes on to talk about the lack of film preservation in Hong Kong and discusses how Ocean Shores acquired and dubbed these films for English speaking markets. He talks about how the Shaw Brothers refuse to release their films anywhere, and mentions Gordon Liu’s history with the studio. Overall, an enjoyable audio commentary, despite Meyer’s general lack of old-school knowledge. He has a smooth voice that is well suited to a commentary track. There are also English language trailers for upcoming Tai Seng special edition DVDs (all trailers are widescreen with Dolby Digital Mono sound):
There is also the requisite 30-second Martial Arts Theatre compilation trailer. The main menu navigation is pleasing, with animated loops that depict Kung Fu fighters brawling (complete with the sounds of bone-cracking blows and martial arts screams). CONCLUSION
-- Tony Mustafa
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