Rotten Tomatoes
Cancel Movies Tv shows FanStore News Showtimes

The Chinese Boxer

Play trailer Poster for The Chinese Boxer 1970 1h 30m Action Play Trailer Watchlist
Watchlist Tomatometer Popcornmeter
Tomatometer 2 Reviews Popcornmeter Fewer than 50 Ratings
A Chinese boxer seeks vengeance against a group of murderous Japanese thugs.

Where to Watch

The Chinese Boxer

Critics Reviews

View All (2) Critics Reviews
Cole Smithey ColeSmithey.com ...racist propaganda with a toxic sense of self-hatred as filtered through stylized martial arts fighting. Well and thoroughly fucked. Rated: ONE STAR Mar 14, 2022 Full Review Ed Travis Cinapse Don't come to The Chinese Boxer looking for Shaolin wisdom, or graceful wuxia enlightenment. Lei Ming rips, tears, and gouges his way to bloody vengeance and audiences will find a whole lot of satisfaction in witnessing it. Dec 12, 2021 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (2) audience reviews
Audience Member Written, starring and directed by Jimmy Wang Yu, The Chinese Boxer moved martial arts films away from fantasy and weapons into a world where one man and his fists could do plenty of damage. JImmy Wang Yu was a martial arts superstar in Hong Kong before even Bruce Lee and this movie proves exactly why. I've honestly never seen a bloodier hand to hand combat film, as nearly every punch sends mouthfuls of blood everywhere when they're not blasting people through walls. Diao (Hsiung Chao, Five Fingers of Death) was thrown out of the kung fu temple and spent years learning judo, defeating each of the students of the school upon his return until the master defeats him. Not being a man of honor, he sends for Japanese karate mercenaries, who are also defeated, until he sends samurai who not only destroy the school and murder all of the kung fu students and the master but also have the gall to take over the town and make it a city of sin. Lei Ming (Jimmy Wang Yu) has survived, however, and he's willing to do anything and everything to take his town back. You may think you've seen this before — and you have — but that's because every other movie like this came after. A training sequence, much less one where the hero punches his hands into burning sand to toughen them? Yep. A room full of men with weapons and one unarmed hero? Here. A man fighting for the honor of his dead master? This is where it all began at least in film form. There's also the bad guy KItashima (Lo Lieh, nearly a Shaw Brothers supervillain) who can chop tables in two and provides a more than perfect secondary villain for our hero to fight. And it all looks astounding, because it shares a cinematographer — Hua Shan — with one of the most kinetic and strange movies that Shaw Brothers put out, The Super Infra-Man. Just one look at the fight in the snow and you'll know that this is a movie to be studied just as much as it was stolen from. It's gorgeous and the 88 Films blu ray release makes it look even better. The Chinese Boxer also has audio commentary by critic and author Samm Deighan, an interview with Wong Ching, a feature from David West and the U.S. Hammer of God TV commercial. You can get it from MVD or Diabolik DVD. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/06/23 Full Review Audience Member A fast-paced film with well-choreographed fights, an interesting depiction of various fighting arts including Karate, Judo, and Martial Arts, while telling a story of a young man who avenges his fallen clan from corrupt outsiders. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 01/28/23 Full Review Read all reviews
The Chinese Boxer

My Rating

Read More Read Less POST RATING WRITE A REVIEW EDIT REVIEW

Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis A Chinese boxer seeks vengeance against a group of murderous Japanese thugs.
Director
Jimmy Wang Yu
Producer
Run Me Shaw
Screenwriter
Jimmy Wang Yu
Production Co
Shaw Brothers
Genre
Action
Original Language
Chinese
Release Date (Streaming)
Mar 17, 2017
Runtime
1h 30m
Most Popular at Home Now