Lung, un jeune orphelin élevé au temple de Shaolin, se lance à la recherche d'un précieux manuscrit qui a été dérobé et qui renferme des techniques de combat gardées secrètes.
Bande-annonce
Casting
Jackie Chan
Yi-Lang
Dean Shek
Shaolin Student
James Tien
Luk
Ching Wong
Luk's Man
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From
Commentaires
10 commentaires
👍🤘😎😯😄
Good
source: Spiritual Kung Fu
Quan jing
This film is a good mix of action meet's comedy style. The ghosts in the film looked silly but the training and the fight scenes were pretty good. I personally like when "Wei Lo" is the director in a Jackie film. Because he makes Jackie look like a funny guy who can kiss some @##. Jackie's old film always have a great fight scene at the end and so did this one. This film is good for a big "Jackie Chan" lover. Because well his old film look weird and stupid sometimes. But I have to say that I liked most of them. This Film has about 7 action scene's. But if you want to see a really good "Jackie Chan" film with "Wei Lo" as a director or a producer go see "Snake and Crane Arts of Shaolin". But this film is good for comedy. So go see this film and experience the wonderful world of Jackie Chan.
Slightly better than Half a Loaf of Kung Fu, the first half of the movie is a good funny movie. The second half is barely comedic with super poor action happening quite frequently. Jackie's training with the ghosts is decent though. There's a great comedic bit with a giant pen and the movie does have a couple of really good scene transitions. Check this movie out for the comedy.
This isn't as mind-numbingly bad as some of Jackie's films for Lo Wei, but the director has a very weird idea of what makes for a kung fu comedy (it seems to involve Jackie shoving snakes and frogs down his shorts and peeing on ghosts). This movie deserves to be on Mystery Science Theater 3000, with its terrible idea of ghostly special effects (guys in white face paint, red wigs, and sparkly skirts hopping around, and a sparkler used to look like a falling meteor). The martial arts scenes are okay, but not great.
spiritual kung fu is jackie chan's second attempt at kung fu comedy after the decent but flawed 'half a loaf of kung fu', director lo wei thought he could make something funnier, and in my opinion it is, because spiritual kung fu has some brilliant fight scenes, some of the best from all his early movies, not only that but the movie is even funnier, immature but funny. chan is great here and is showing some promise of who he would become, the fight scenes in this are brilliant though and any self respecting martial arts fan will admit that, even if they didn't enjoy the rest of the movie. the special effects of the ghosts are atrocious, but it makes it that bit funnier
Lo Wei, the director of this rubbishy kung-fu comedy, as usual never let Jackie Chan shine properly in this slow-paced story about some ghosts that teach Chan Five Fists' kung-fu, for he is in search of a stolen book containing the means of learning Seven Fists kung-fu. Dreadful dubbing, awful special effects (mind you, this was Hong Kong with very limited budgets - something that HK fans are undoubtedly used to), not all that funny, and just plain dull. Not even the intricate fight scenes are worth looking at, and even these are a bit tiresome. Costumes - what were those ghosts wearing?! And of course there's the diabolical dubbing. Distributors should learn that the original language makes it a lot easier to appreciate even a bad movie, but it still wouldn't save this...
