Arrow Video: The Iron Fisted Monk (1977) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Arrow Video

One years before embarking on a more polished version of his caricature of fay guy stereotype buddy comedy martial arts action with Warriors Two, Hong Kong stuntman and choreographer Sammo Hung and Golden Harvest head Raymond Chow put their heads together for what is known as the directorial debut of Hung: the still-abrasive kick-punch extravaganza The Iron Fisted Monk.  Co-written by his former director Huang Feng who guided the action star with Hapkido and The Shaolin Plot, this first-time effort for hung is a tad rough around the edges in certain scenes, including not one but two rape scenes as well as child bullying but ultimately serves as a harbinger of things to come with what would or would not be the unfolding career of a Hong Kong action-comedy superstar.  While not every fan of the Wing Chun hand-to-hand combat fighters will like this one as much for its mentioned transgressions, completists of all things Sammo Hung will nevertheless want to add Arrow Video’s deluxe new limited edition of the uncensored version to their shelves.

 
Rice Miller Luk (Sammo Hung) is an average man living in medieval China when his elder uncle is murdered by the Manchu Bannerman who violently bully their way through town.  Luk is next on their list but is saved from a roughing up by nearby Shaolin monk San De (Chen Sing) who makes easy work of the bullying Manchus and takes Luk under his wing as a Shaolin Temple martial arts trainee.   Time goes by and Luk masters the art of hand-to-hand combat but grows impatient with training and makes a pit stop back to the town he once knew, now overrun with brutal and depraved Manchus led by a ruthless official (Fung Hak-An of Warriors Two) with a cruel mean streak including but not limited to an infamous sexual assault which retroactively earned the film the dreaded Category III (China’s NC-17) upon rerelease years later.  Despite only having half of the training needed at his disposal, Luk takes on the Manchus.  Soon The Iron Fisted Monk himself San De joins his side against the Manchus, but will it be enough?

 
While showcasing the early screen antics and talents of leading action star Sammo Hung in what would evolve into his own unique brand of the martial arts entertainment thriller with tons of wild choreography including but not limited to paving the way for Gordon Liu’s The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, this Golden Harvest/Sammo Hung effort still has sharp jagged scales its director would shed away as he further refined his action-comedy formula.  With the aforementioned scene falling under censorship in the UK and US before its country of origin branded it with the adults only rating, this Sammo Hung effort is recommended for more steely viewers and not for the faint hearted.  Still, despite the more disturbing moments which may not have been completely necessary for this endeavor, there’s still a lot fans of the Sammo Hung brand of action comedy will have loads of fun with.
 
From Hapkido and Police Story 2 cinematographer Yu-Tang Li’s widescreen photography which ranges from the trademark fast zooms of Golden Harvest actioners and whip pans during fight scenes to Chungking Express composer Frankie Chan’s action-oriented score, the look and feel of The Iron Fisted Monk is handsomely constructed though when it goes into kick-punch mode we find the music calms down while the camerawork and editing by Peter Cheung becomes more frenetic.  Still, the filmmaking is almost secondary to the rapid-fire action choreography carried out by Sammo Hung and Chan Sing onscreen as a kind of action-fighter tag team. 

 
Sammo Hung completists will be delighted with Arrow Video’s new limited edition licensed from Fortune Star who continue to restore and reissue both Shaw Brothers and Golden Harvest’s back catalogue but buyers beware this one is a bit of a tougher pill to swallow compared to some of the other ones the action actor-director would do later.  One which will leave some cuts and bruises other Hung offerings likely will not, The Iron Fisted Monk despite these moments will nevertheless provide an entertaining riff on the story of San De and Miller Luk while opening the doors to what would evolve into a prolific action film directing career.  Arrow Video’s blu-ray 2K restored from original film elements and rife with extras will make a splendid addition to any martial arts aficionado’s film library, just know your audience before throwing it on.

--Andrew Kotwicki