Magnificent Bodyguards

Magnificent Bodyguards
UK DVD cover
Traditional 飛渡捲雲山
Simplified 飞渡捲云山
Mandarin Fēi Dù Juǎn Yún Shān
Cantonese Fei1 Dou6 Gyun2 Wan4 Saan1
Directed by Lo Wei
Produced by Lo Wei
Screenplay by Gu Long
Starring Jackie Chan
James Tien
Leung Siu-lung
Music by Frankie Chan
Cinematography Chen Yung-shu
Edited by Vincent Leung
Production
company
Lo Wei Motion Picture Company
Release date
  • 27 April 1978 (1978-04-27)
Running time
78 minutes
Country Hong Kong
Language Mandarin
Box office HK$775,522

Magnificent Bodyguards is a 1978 Hong Kong martial arts action film starring Jackie Chan and directed by Lo Wei.[1] Chan, along with Luk Chuen also worked as stunt coordinators. This film was well received in Hong Kong, but Chan himself doesn't like it. He puts it down to Lo Wei not giving him any creative freedom. This was the first film in Hong Kong to be filmed using 3-D technology, and it features music from Star Wars.[1]

Plot

Lord Ting Chung is hired to escort a woman's sick brother to the doctor, but he does it for free. To get there they must pass through "Stormy Hills", an area of Ancient China controlled by criminals. Then the sick man turns out to be the king of the criminals and is not really sick; he is just trying to reclaim his throne from an imposter. The king had previously murdered Ting Chung's father, and now Ting Chung has to fight for his life to get out and also to avenge his father.

Cast

  • Jackie Chan as Lord Ting Chung
  • James Tien as Tsang / Chang Wu-yi
  • Leung Siu-lung as Chang
  • Wang Ping as Lady Nan
  • Lau Ming as Old Lady of Ma Por Inn
  • Lee Man-tai as Bearded Shaolin Abbot
  • Luk Chuen as King
  • Fang Fang as Liu Chin-lien
  • Ko Keung as Wen Liang-yu

Media

  • The Japanese Laserdisc is said to be the only version containing the 3D version. However, it's all in Japanese with no other language options and it's missing 10 minutes of footage.
  • On 22 March 2002, Eastern Heroes released it on DVD cropped from 2:35:1 to 1:78:1 and an English dub (edited to remove Star Wars music) with no other language options.
  • On 28 October 2005, Universal Japan released their DVD in 2:35:1. However, it has no English subtitles.
  • On 5 March 2007, Hong Kong Legends released their DVD in 2:35:1 in Cantonese with newly translated English subtitles. However, the Cantonese "mono" is a downmix from the 5.1 remix. Mandarin is the correct language.
  • In 2010, Fortune Star/Shout Factory released the film as part of the "Jackie Chan Eight Film Collection" DVD set. It is in 2:35:1, features the mono English dub, as well as the Star Wars music cues edited out of other versions.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Maçek III, J.C. (2 October 2013). "It's Pure Kung Fu Theatre and Somehow, 'Star Wars' in 'Jackie Chan Beginnings'". PopMatters. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
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