Liu he ba fa (1980) Poster

(1980)

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6/10
Simon Yuen nears the finish line
ckormos124 December 2016
David Chiang is the only honest policeman in town. He manages to arrest the snake fist expert bad guy thanks to the help of a chimpanzee and a German shepherd dog who sacrificed his (screen) life. It becomes more of a problem to keep the criminal in custody. Though David has the lead the entire Yuen clan populates the rest of this movie. The plot is thin as is the case in most movies of this genre yet the movie manages to get the most out of it. The characters are also typically one dimensional but it works in this production.

Simon Yuen as usual steals the show. Here he is near the end of both his career and his life. He began as a trained Peking opera performer and joined Kwan Tak-Hing in the first of many movies about Wong Fei-Hung. Most famous in his drunken beggar role here he is neither drunken nor a beggar just an old guy but with similar style of stumbling kung fu.

Any fan of this genre has probably viewed every movie Simon Yuen has appeared in so my recommendation is meaningless. I rate it just average for the year and genre.
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5/10
An average film worth watching just for the talent
Leofwine_draca8 February 2017
Warning: Spoilers
I watched this Taiwanese David Chiang vehicle under the title SIX DIRECTIONS BOXING. It's a film in which the Yuen clan are heavily featured, most notably in the presence of Simon Yuen playing yet another version of his old DRUNKEN MASTER character. He doesn't get a lot of screen time here and he's doubled extensively in his fight scenes, but he's still a delight when he's around.

Chiang is the real star of the show and looks a little odd with his shaven head and flat cap. He plays a policeman tackling a snake fist expert although a lot of the running time is taken up with the animal cast members, most notably a friendly chimpanzee and dog. Chiang hangs out with Nancy Yen a lot and occasionally fights the stock villain gangster types, and it all builds up to a climax in which Yueh Hua cameos as the friendly police commissioner come to help out. The film is strictly average but genre fans will want to see it anyway just for the talent involved.
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SIX DIRECTIONS OF BOXING - lightweight kung fu tale with David Chiang
BrianDanaCamp10 November 2001
THE SIX DIRECTIONS OF BOXING (1980) is a below-average kung fu crime drama with an awkward script and low-budget production values, redeemed only by a handful of good performers and frequent well-staged fights. It was all filmed on location in Taiwan at a farmhouse, some country roads and a few small sets. It was directed by Tyrone Hsu and the onscreen title on the U.S. release is THE SIX DIRECTIONS BOXING.

David Chiang plays Captain Ai, a provincial constable assigned to the task of apprehending a gun-running outlaw named Chan and finding the hidden stash of weapons. The Captain relies on three allies: his loyal partner, his fiancee, and a retired kung fu master (Simon Yuen) who happens to be his fiancee's father. However, he must also contend with corrupt staff members and a local kung fu teacher working with the outlaws. After arresting Chan, Captain Ai must hold him prisoner until the Commissioner returns to town. Things get harder after the hostile Deputy Commissioner appoints a man in cahoots with the outlaws as Captain Ai's superior. That's the basic plotline and it runs out of intrigue long before the final battle. The characters are never terribly interesting, especially when saddled with unusually poor English dubbing as they are here.

The strongest villain in the piece, Outlaw Chan, appears only at the beginning and at the end. Overall, none of the characters ever appear to be in much danger, so no suspense is created. The fight scenes lack intensity and are rather gimmicky, with Simon Yuen doing some of his trademark `stumbling' kung fu and his daughter doing some fighting as well even though she's not very good. A chimpanzee and a dog are thrown in for comedy relief and to help out the cops in their investigation!

Lung Tien Hsiang, the actor who plays Chan, is very good at snake style fighting and would have been better served with more screen time and more intense combat. On the other hand, Simon Yuen (DRUNKEN MASTER, DANCE OF THE DRUNK MANTIS, SLEEPING FIST) has a generous amount of fighting screen time and is always fun to watch, although his more strenuous leaps and stunts are doubled by one of his sons (from the famed Yuen Clan). Two of these sons, Yuen Cheung Yan and Yuen Yat-Chor, contribute to the fight choreography here as well as make cameo appearances. Also on hand for a fighting cameo is Jack Long (THE 7 GRANDMASTERS), a formidable kung fu star in his own right.

David Chiang wears a cap for most of the film, covering up the fact that his hair was growing back after he shaved it for a Shaolin monk portrayal (see A SLICE OF DEATH). Chiang was never the greatest fighter among kung fu stars of the 1970s and tended to fare better in the more stylized swordplay films of the early 70s (NEW ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN, SEVEN BLOWS OF THE DRAGON) than in the purer, no-frills kung fu that came later. But he tries very hard here (as he always did) and acquits himself well in a scene where he learns a special technique from Simon Yuen to counter the snake fist.
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