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One-Armed Boxer

R 1972 1h 30m Adventure List
Reviews 85% Popcornmeter 500+ Ratings
A martial-arts student (Yu Wang) learns the iron-fist and death-grip techniques to avenge his teacher's death.
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One-Armed Boxer

Critics Reviews

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Ed Travis Cinapse Huge swaths of the runtime here are non-stop martial arts battles featuring a host of different styles and secret powers and general weirdness to keep you hooked. Jul 24, 2022 Full Review Douglas Davidson Elements of Madness Though time hasn’t been as kind to the content of the narrative, there’s no doubt that [director Jimmy Wang] Yu’s "One-Armed Boxer" remains an influential component in modern action cinema. May 22, 2022 Full Review Oz eFilmCritic.com Rated: 4/5 May 22, 2004 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Marc great fighting sequenses with some interesting characters :) Rated 4 out of 5 stars 09/27/22 Full Review Audience Member With one arm tied behind his back, Jimmy Wang Yu had already played the One-Armed Swordsman in two films for Shaw Brothers, One-Armed Swordsman and Return of the One-Armed Swordsman. He also became incredibly popular after The Chinese Boxer, the movie that kickstarted the unarmed combat genre. Then, he broke his contract with Shaw Brothers and lost the lawsuit that resulted, which meant he needed to go somewhere other than Hong Kong to work. That's where former Shaw Brothers executive Raymond Chow comes in. He started the rival studio Golden Harvest in 1970 and Wang Yu became his star, writing, directing and playing the main role in One-Armed Boxer. Yu Tian Long (Wang) is the best fighter to come out of his local martial arts school. However, when he stops the Hook Gang from roughing up customers in a restaurant. The evildoers are part of the Ching Te school, which is the most prominent martial arts academy in town. Yet more than that, they run all sorts of businesses, legal and illegal. After being defeated in combat twice, the Hook Gang return to their master Chao Liu (Yeh Tien) and tell him that Tien and others from the Ching Te school attacked them for no reason and insulted their group. Chao heads off to the school and is easily defeated by Master Han Tu (Ma Kei). Chao has no honor and uses his money to get revenge, hiring a group of martial artists from Shanghai that includes Okinawa karate expert Erh Ku Da Leung (Wong Fei-lung) and his students Chang Ku Chua and Pan Tien-Ching, two lamas from Tibet (Ko Fu and Cho Lung, who are the disciples of the Fung Sheng Wu Chi from Master of the Flying Guillotine, which is about him trying to get revenge for his students against Yu Tian Long), Muat Thai fighters Mi Tsu (Blackie Ko, who went on to be a car stunt expert) and Ni Tsai, judo master Kao Chiao, Taekwondo master Chin Chi Yung and yoga fighter Mura Singh. They murder every single student in the Ching Te school, as well as the Master, leaving only Tien Lung alive yet only with one arm after Erh Ku Da Leung chops his arm clean off. Hsiao Yu, a nurse, and her father bring our hero back to health and explain a special sklill that could help him get revenge, a method that will make his fighter super powerful even with just one arm. He only has to destroy all the nerves in his arm so he places his arm into an open flame in an incredible scene that shows just how devoted he is to avenging his master. The end of the film is an example of why I love martial arts movies. Tien Lung fights every single one of the killers in a quarry while the Hook Gang throw bombs at him. There's blood spraying everywhere and non-stop kicking, punching and violence. When this was released in the U.S. by National General Pictures, it was called The Violent Professionals and used the theme from The Big Boss, a Bruce Lee film that was also made by Golden Harvest. As for the original film score, it outright takes the theme from Shaft — minus the talking about Shaft — over the opening credits, which is pretty much as outlandish an act of theft as it gets. This movie is just magical. I was on the edge of my seat throughout and was astounded by how intense the fights were and I was beyond on the side of the hero, despite how brutal and cool Erh Ku Da Leung is, a man who takes an arm when someone breaks an arm. If you haven't gotten into kung fu yet, this is a great place to get started. Consider this movie highly recommended. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/06/23 Full Review Audience Member One-Armed Boxer is pretty silly and ridiculous but feels almost like a b-movie exploitation film (especially the international version with the Shaft theme music). Some may find the dated qualities amusing while others may find it bothersome. I for one found it very amusing. The fight scenes are incredible even though they did not reach the level of polish or athleticism that some later films of the era had but this is understandable considering how early this film was in the history of Chinese kung fu films.There are still loads of outrageous moments of awesomeness with lots of over-the-top action. The story and pretty much everything else about the film may be rather bland, odd, and dated (like the montage which was one of the weirdest montages I've ever seen) but overall the film is still massively enjoyable. However, you really have to be a kung fu fan to appreciate it. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/28/23 Full Review Audience Member Saw this for the first time last night, having already seen its sequel, Master of the Flying Guillotine, several years ago. It was excellent. Some of the fighting was a bit disappointing and not as tight as I would have hoped, and a standoff between rival schools halfway in takes far too long. But everything else worked well. Yu Wang was great as the hero. Just like its sequel, they come up with an excuse to show off several different fighting styles. In this case, villains from foreign countries come together at the request of a local drug dealer. Seeing Yu Wang deal with them all was quite fun. And good lord... when they first discussed making his one remaining arm stronger, it sounded like the doctor was just going to give him steroids. They had something much more painful in mind, ouch ouch ouch... Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/27/23 Full Review Audience Member Jimmy Wang Yu. he started it all. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/20/23 Full Review Audience Member The One Armed Boxer is so bad ass that it even lifts the theme from Shaft as its main song. Sorta out of place but really adds to the Grindhouse feel of this. Yu Wang is one bad..okay I'll shut my mouth. I love the sequel to this. Master of the Flying Guillotine is one of my favorite kung fu movies but this one is a damn good start. Not as slick but there is some really good stuff here that doesn't feel repetitive like it does w/ some kung fu movies. The villains are great & there is some mad kung fu throughout. Yu Wang wears many hats as writer, director & star giving us a legend in the genre. So fucking bad ass that it's hard to believe that all this trouble started w/ someone trying to steal a bird Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/27/23 Full Review Read all reviews
One-Armed Boxer

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Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis A martial-arts student (Yu Wang) learns the iron-fist and death-grip techniques to avenge his teacher's death.
Director
Jimmy Wang Yu
Producer
Raymond Chow Man-Wai
Screenwriter
Jimmy Wang Yu
Production Co
Golden Harvest
Rating
R
Genre
Adventure
Original Language
Chinese
Release Date (Streaming)
Jan 8, 2017
Runtime
1h 30m
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