Hitman in the Hand of Buddha
Hitman in the Hand of Buddha | |
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借刀殺人 | |
Directed by | Hwang Jang-lee |
Written by | Park Yun-kyo |
Produced by | Hwang Jang-lee Han Sang-hun |
Starring | Hwang Jang-lee Eddy Ko Fan Mei-sheng |
Distributed by | Hwang Jang-lee Production Company |
Release dates |
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Running time | 91 minutes (Hong Kong version) 81 minutes (Korean version) 72 minutes (German version) |
Countries | Hong Kong South Korea |
Language | Cantonese |
Hitman in the Hand of Buddha (Korean title: 인무가인) is a 1981 Korean and Hong Kong martial arts film directed and produced by Hwang Jang-lee in his directorial debut, who also starred in the lead role, and co-directed by , who also wrote. This was the first and only Hwang Jang-lee's film to produce in his own film production company. Hwang Jang-lee as a hero role without the moustache which perhaps few occasion where Hwang appears as a good guy. The action sequence was choreographed by , Corey Yuen and Mang Hoi.
Plot[]
Wong Chin (Hwang Jang-lee) arrives in a small town for the work, along with his sister and stepbrother. Immediately he encounters villains, who try to take over the rice market and recover the debt from Wong Chin's stepbrother. This leads Wong Chin to fight against them, as they boil "Uncle 33" (Eddy Ko) for ruining his business deal. Uncle 33 decides to kick Wong Chin out of the town, meanwhile, Beggar Fan suggests Wong Chin go to the Shaolin temple. In Shaolin temple, Wong Chin would cause trouble and due his lack of patience he managed to learn the Buddhist fist technique from the abbot. Later Wong Chin learns about inner strength and patience which would prepare him for the last battle. Meanwhile, Uncle 33 and his gang harassed and killed Wong Chin's sister and murdered stepbrother. Wong Chin later takes revenge on them.
Cast[]
- Hwang Jang-lee as Wong Chin
- Fan Mei-sheng as Beggar Fan
- Eddy Ko as Uncle 33
- as Wong Chin's Step brother
- as Wong Chin's sister
- as Shan Hao (student of Uncle 33, villain.)
- as the shaolin abbot
- Corey Yuen as robber (cameo)
- Eagle Han-ying as shaolin monk (cameo)
- as Uncle 33's thug (extra)
- as shaolin monk
- as Ah Chi (shaolin monk)
Reception[]
The film was fairly a good reception. The imdb.com [1] gave the film 6.5 out of 10. The website Kung Fu Kingdom [2] quoted "This is the one to own for every classic kung fu enthusiast's collection!".
References[]
- ^ "Jie dao sha ren (1981) - IMDb". IMDb. 3 May 1981.
- ^ "Hitman in the Hand of Buddha (1981)". Kung-fu Kingdom. 9 December 2013.
External links[]
- 1981 films
- Cantonese-language films
- 1981 martial arts films
- 1980s multilingual films
- 1980s Cantonese-language films
- Hong Kong films
- Hong Kong martial arts films
- Hong Kong multilingual films
- South Korean films
- South Korean martial arts films
- South Korean multilingual films
- 1980s Hong Kong film stubs
- South Korean film stubs
- Martial arts film stubs