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      Mo

      2007 1h 45m Comedy Drama Fantasy List
      Reviews 64% 500+ Ratings Audience Score Mo learns that he has Marfan syndrome and must accept that he will never be able to do many things that people around him take for granted. Also, he will have to prepare himself for major heart surgery. Read More Read Less

      Audience Reviews

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      Audience Member The greatest Hong Kong horror film Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/20/23 Full Review Audience Member A very fun and grotesque Hong Kong horror film. This film is better and more entertaining than other Hong Kong horror films. It's a good movie to watch for the shock factor and the laughs. The special fx are typical and are great. Great to watch for a late night laugh. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/16/23 Full Review Audience Member Deciding to broaden my Shaw Brothers collection, I decided to purchase of few of their horror productions as opposed to their numerous period kung fu epics. Thoroughly enjoying their "Black Magic" series I was eagerly awaiting viewing "The Boxer's Omen" as it had the reputation of being even crazier and more bizarre than all their other horror productions balled together. Well it does live up to that reputation but those descriptions don't always prove to be a better movie as shown with this absolute mess of a film. As with many other Shaw Brothers productions, I was oblivious to the fact that "The Boxer's Omen" was a sequel before I purchased it. It is actually a follow-up to a film called "Bewitched" (which hasn't been given a stateside release) which documented the account of a Shaolin Monk taking on an evil black magic sorcerer. It is touched upon in this film in a memorable flashback sequence but the film is easily viewed on its own. The plot itself is an absolute mess of bizarre images and plot devices that vaguely tie together and make little to no sense. The basic plot has a kickboxer whose brother is paralyzed by a sadistic opponent. He promises his brother vengeance but his life gets complicated when he is visited by the apparition of a dead monk. Apparently he was a brother of the monk in a past life so he travels out of the country to visit his talking corpse (yes it's as strange as it sounds) in order to train to defeat an evil black magician that could destroy his chances at beating his kickboxing opponent. That's about as much as I could gather from its insane storyline. Fans of outrageous scenes that will dazzle the senses will get an eye full as just about every bizarre aspect of every other black magic Asian horror film is upped ten-fold. We get flying magician heads strangling people with tendons, Fuzzy stuffed animal looking spiders piercing eyes (ala Lucio Fulci's "The Beyond"), corpses raised from the dead in alligator carcass, attacking alligator skulls, bat crucifixions, bat skeletal dances, brain stirring in a skull and talking mummified corpses. Does any of this make sense? Nope but it would be more entertaining if the special effects weren't so lamentable causing more unintentional laughter than shock value. "The Boxer's Omen" may dazzle the senses with all its bizarre imagery but the film as a whole is a failure with its incomprehensible plot, pilfered music from "Alien", "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" and "Phantasm" awkwardly placed throughout and shoddy special effects that induce laughter. Basically it's entertaining for all the wrong reasons a horror film should be for. It's worth a look for fans of the bizarre but cult fanatics are better off hunting down the Indonesian horror film "Mystics in Bali" for a more fun wild ride down Asian Black Magic lane. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 01/17/23 Full Review Audience Member This Shaw Brothers netherworld nightmare is a montage of trashy white magic and sickening occult rituals that may test some audience's gag reflexes though for others that may be exactly why they're here. Either way it's hard to argue it's stimulating (at least momentarily) to see the usually tight-fisted Shaw Brothers intermittently escape their claustrophobic studio sets and film on location in both Thailand and Nepal. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 02/02/23 Full Review Audience Member You take the basic premise from KICKBOXER - a brother vows to avenge his brother who was maliciously paralyzed in a kickboxing match. Then you throw out all of that middle training nonsense and replace it with loads of hilarous, wacky, wild, gross & cool Chinese & Thai black magic duels from movies like ENCOUNTERS OF THE SPOOKY KIND, CENTIPEDE HORROR and THE SEEDING OF A GHOST and that should give you a pretty good idea of what this Asian Extreme classic is like. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 02/20/23 Full Review Audience Member The most bat-shit insane climax I've ever seen. Surreal, gooey, gory, fantastical, colorful madness!! Imagine putting "The Holy Mountain" and "Riki-Oh" in a blender. God lord!! Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/08/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Movie Info

      Synopsis Mo learns that he has Marfan syndrome and must accept that he will never be able to do many things that people around him take for granted. Also, he will have to prepare himself for major heart surgery.
      Director
      Brian Scott Lederman
      Producer
      Jordan Yale Levine, James Martin Jr.
      Screenwriter
      Brian Scott Lederman
      Genre
      Comedy, Drama, Fantasy
      Original Language
      English
      Release Date (Streaming)
      Mar 10, 2017
      Runtime
      1h 45m