Drunken Master (film): Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Arrogant Kung Fu Guy]]: Fei-Hung, before some [[Character Development]].
* [[Arrogant Kung Fu Guy]]: Fei-Hung, before some [[Character Development]].
* [[Badass]]: Fei-Hung (After mastering drunken boxing), Beggar So, and Yan Ti San.
* [[Badass]]: Fei-Hung (After mastering drunken boxing), Beggar So, and Yan Ti San.
* [[Drunken Boxing]]: [[Exactly What It Says On the Tin|If it wasn't obvious.]]
* [[Drunken Boxing]]: [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|If it wasn't obvious.]]
* [[Drunken Master|Drunken Masters]]. [[Exactly What It Says On the Tin|If it wasn't obvious]].
* [[Drunken Master|Drunken Masters]]. [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|If it wasn't obvious]].
* [[Jackie Chan]].
* [[Jackie Chan]].
* [[My Kung Fu Is Stronger Than Yours]]: One reason Fei-Hung returns to Beggar-So and takes his training more seriously is his defeat at the hands of another martial artist, Yan Ti San. (Thunderleg, in the English dub)
* [[My Kung Fu Is Stronger Than Yours]]: One reason Fei-Hung returns to Beggar-So and takes his training more seriously is his defeat at the hands of another martial artist, Yan Ti San. (Thunderleg, in the English dub)

Revision as of 15:14, 9 April 2014

Jackie Chan's fourth starring role, and the one that put him on the map.

Wong Fei-Hung is a young, irresponsible martial arts student who, in the space of one day, manages to anger his kung fu instructor by demonstrating that the instructor was an incompetent in front of the entire class, antagonize his aunt by making advances towards her daughter, and a local nobleman for beating the crap out of his (very snooty) son. As punishment, his father sends him to train under Beggar So, who has a reputation for crippling his students. Naturally, Fei-Hung doesn't like this idea, and so he escapes, only to run into Beggar So, who gives him brutally rigorous training. At first, Fei-Hung hates his mentor, but he comes to respect him and becomes a much more proficient martial artist. At the end, Fei-Hung uses his new knowledge to defeat an assassin after his father.

Later, there was a sequel of sorts in the form of Drunken Master II, released in North America as Legend of Drunken Master. Wong Fei-Hung accidentally comes into possession of several valuable Chinese artifacts, which smugglers are trying to sell to Evil Brits. In 2005, Time Magazine declared this movie one of the 100 best movies of all time, and Roger Ebert rates the climactic foundry fight as one of the best fight scenes ever committed to film.

Needs More Love.

This movie provides examples of: