88 Films: The Kung Fu Instructor (1979) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of 88 Films

Shaw Brothers near the end of the 1970s had amassed quite a prolific and sizable film library consisting of martial arts action flicks and/or erotic period dramas usually filmed in ShawScope 2.35:1 widescreen by the time they arrived upon Human Lanterns director Sun Chung’s 1979 masterwork The Kung Fu Instructor.  A reworking of Akira Kurosawa’s Yojimbo which itself influenced Sergio Leone’s A Fistful of Dollars, the film overseen by martial arts directors Tong Kai and Huang Pei-Chih is notable for being the first Shaw Brothers film to make use of the handheld Steadicam resulting in some striking tracking shots previously unseen in Shaw efforts.  Starring A Better Tomorrow actor Ti Lung, it represents another scenic outdoorsy escapist kung fu flick with tons of wild training and ornate camerawork.

 
In the small town of Ho Si, the residents are divided into two Chinese factions the Mong and the Chow, separated by property lines dating back centuries.  Keen on eliminating opposition, Mong Fan (Ku Feng) hires the best kung fu teacher in the land Wong Yang (Ti Lung) to train his family members.  But when the instructor refuses knowing the training will be put to ill use, Mong Fan turns up the heat trying to frame him for murder before an angry mob of witnesses.  However, after the instructor goes into hiding, he reluctantly agrees to train the emissary of the Mong faction in exchange for clearing his name.  As he’s training him, however, a member of the Chow family stumbles onto the training grounds and the instructor intervenes on the youth’s behalf, sparking an all-out war between the feuding clans as Wong Yang fights to the death to survive.

 
Boasting arresting cinematography by Lam Nai-Choi in scope widescreen, moving between the traditional fast zooms and the aforementioned Steadicam photography and featuring an exciting score by Eddie Wang, The Kung Fu Instructor is a wild and wickedly entertaining martial arts action romp.  Featuring stunning physical feats on camera, amazing set pieces and numerous scenic landscapes including a fight on the open plains that is positively graceful, Sun Chung’s entry into the Shaw Brothers martial arts subgenre evokes Kurosawa and Leone while finding its own distinctive footing as a Hong Kong period actioner.  While featuring a strong ensemble cast including but not limited to Wong Yu and Ku Feng, Ti Lung all but completely carries the film himself and like most of the characters who encounter him in the film can’t help but drop to our knees in slack jawed awe. 

 
Coming to blu-ray for the first time in the US and UK thanks to boutique label 88 Films who alongside Arrow Video and Shout Factory have undertaken ongoing efforts to unearth and published almost the entire Shaw Brothers library, The Kung Fu Instructor arrives in high definition thanks to a new transfer from the original camera negative and lossless 2.0 original Mandarin audio or English dubbed audio.  The disc itself comes with a newly commissioned cover by 17th & Oak that looks splendid and the slipcover edition comes housed with reversible sleeve art for those wanting to peek at the original theatrical poster art.  88 Films was and still is more or less a British company but in the last few years with their efforts to bring more titles to the United States, they’ve made themselves known to western consumers through their 88 Asia Collection line as a formidable boutique label to pay attention to and be reckoned with. 

--Andrew Kotwicki