Arrow Video: ShawScope Volume 3 (1967 - 1983) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Arrow Video

Back in 2021, Arrow Video unveiled the first of three major boxed sets of specifically Hong Kong based martial arts action fighter flicks with ShawScope Volume One: a twelve-film set of some of the Shaw Brothers company’s finest actioners ranging from 1972 to 1979.  A year later, Arrow Video returned with Volume 2 which consisted of four films ranging all the way from 1978 to 1993.  Mixing things up once again for what ultimately became the third volume of ShawScope, Arrow Video now two years later have returned once more in producing their rectangular boxed set consisting of fourteen more Shaw Brothers movies this time ranging from 1967 to 1983.  Whereas the first two sets started out in the 1970s and either stayed within that range or exceeded to the 1990s, Volume 3 starts off earliest in the late 1960s before capping off the insanity in 1983. 

 
Though the checkered journey of these films seems similar with the basic boilerplate plotlines of a wronged martial artist avenging themselves through kick fighter punches and hand-to-hand combat, Volume 3 presents an interesting lineup beginning with the first three One Armed Swordsman films, two female driven action fighters with Lady Hermit and Intimate Confessions of a Chinese Courtesan and a staggering nearly all-female wartime film with The 14 Amazons.  Next the series dives into four wuxias penned by Gu Long entitled The Magic Blade, Clans of Intrigue, Jade Tiger and The Sentimental Swordsman all starring Ti Lung.  Following that quartet of films are The Avenging Eagle and the white knuckled antiheroic actioner Killer Constable.  Last but not least, the final two films Buddha’s Palm and Bastard Swordsman from the 1980s leapfrog freely into fantastical Taoist magic excesses in easily the most bonkers and bizarre offerings in the package.

 
The crème de la crème of the set is definitely the first film One Armed Swordsman which received a full top to bottom 4K restoration whereas the other thirteen films only received 2K scans.  No matter, qualitatively the image differs from picture to picture as does the Shaw logo itself which starts to change nearing the 1980s.  In the first two One Armed Swordsman films both starring Wang Yu of One Armed Boxer, our hero is maimed by jealous rivals including a young woman who slices one of his arms off.  Soon however he takes up training and soon is able to do battle with two-armed assailants and work them over with the slightest of ease.  Going into retirement in the sequel The Return of the One Armed Swordsman, our hero is coaxed out to face a group of masters intent on taking over the martial arts school and community, resulting in massive bloodshed and stunning choreography.  Lastly the third film, also written and directed by Chang Cheh but replacing Wang Yu with David Chiang in easily the weakest entry of the trilogy but nevertheless sports its own unique gothic horror patina. 

 
Shifting gears with The Lady Hermit, we have Come Drink with Me star Cheng Pei-pei as a master swordswoman who is tasked with taking on a ruthless warlord, resulting in some climactic battles and stunning physical feats that have to be seen to be believed.  Next up is arguably the most salacious naughty film in the set with the rape-prostitution-revenge actioner Intimate Confessions of a Chinese Courtesan in which a woman forced into a life of prostitution with brutal clients slowly outwits and turns the tables on those who have wronged her.  Think of it as a postmodern action-adventure revenge feminist reworking of The Shape of Night or later still Bad Guy in which the pimp gets his just desserts.  If you thought the female driven Shaw Brothers martial arts actioner would boil down to these two films, think again with the staggering nearly all-female wartime epic The 14 Amazons which dives deep into medieval warfare reminiscent of some of Akira Kurosawa’s own war films.

 
After reaching such heights with The 14 Amazons, the set shifts gears once again with the aforementioned quartet of films The Magic Blade, Clans of Intrigue, Jade Tiger and The Sentimental Swordsman.  Starring Ti Lung as the titular Fu Hung-hsueh, it tells the story of a formerly powerful warrior now wandering aimlessly ala Yojimbo in search of purpose when he discovers a plot to overthrow the martial arts world using the secret weapon dubbed the Peacock Scale.  A year later, the director and lead star Ti Lung were back for Clans of Intrigue which saw him as Chu Liuxiang drinking away with a friend of the Holy Water Palace when he is accused of stealing the palace’s Heaven’s One Holy Water followed by a series of murders.  Characteristic for featuring striking boat set pieces, its an action fighter flick where its hero is tasked with clearing his name before the timeclock runs out. 

 
Continuing onward with the actor-director-author collaboration is Jade Tiger which sees the titular Ti Lung embarking on a tragic journey full of intrigues determined to avenge his father’s beheading by a traitor working for Tang on the eve of his son’s marriage.  Following a century old grudge, the film’s hero proceeds undaunted through the mire, plot surprises and double crossings towards his goal of overthrowing the warring clan trying to kill him.  Lastly in the foursome is The Sentimental Swordsman which more than wears some gothic horror blankets including but not limited to fog, dim lighting and most of it taking place at night ala And God Said to Cain.  It’s a refreshing change in direction for the series and the individual quartet to veer closer to creepy quasi-horror vibes. 

 
Down to the last four, our next film is The Avenging Eagle again starring Ti Lung who is nearing death on horseback but is rescued by another man who turns out to be not only a skilled martial artist but a sworn mortal enemy whose paths will cross again later as the story goes on.  The one that will stop viewers in their tracks who think they know this terrain by now is undoubtedly Killer Constable which sort of plays like a Shaw Brothers riff on Dirty Harry as well as the neo-noir.  The plotline of the ruthless and uncompromising Killer Constable posits us with Constable Leng (Chen Kuan-tai) remorselessly murdering his way through criminal adversaries.  However, when tasked with tracking a gang which robbed the imperial treasury he finds himself a newfound outlaw with his sordid reputation coming back to haunt him.  Meanwhile a shot at redemption comes when he is asked to care for the blind daughter of a man he just slain.  It proves to be a startlingly violent, cynical and finally emotionally involved journey unbecoming of the usual Shaw Brothers fare.

 
Now after such a powerful punch as Killer Constable, why not go out with a profoundly bizarre weirdo bang with the final two films in the set Buddha’s Palm and the slightly more grounded Bastard Swordsman.  For a boxed set that seemed to be heading in an increasingly serious direction, Buddha’s Palm is like a balls-to-the-wall Cannon Films explosion of wretched psychedelic surreal excesses.  Whatever the company was doing with Taoist Black Magic and elements of the supernatural wuxia before, they loaded it with dynamite here.  Ostensibly about a martial arts technique that can transform an ordinary human hand into a deadly force, a blind man holds the key to its dangerous secrets which unleash all manner of freakish mayhem.  Largely driven by optical effects including but not limited to characters flying through the air like Superman or firing laser beams from their hands or eyes, it is the very definition of berserk filmmaking spoken of the same wacky breath as, say, Tobe Hooper’s genre-defying Lifeforce.

 
After drifting into near orbit with Buddha’s Palm whose plotline is, let’s face it, secondary to the sensual excesses, the last film Bastard Swordsman finds a curious and perhaps healthy union between the Shaw Brothers martial arts films that came before and the pyrotechnics heavy state the company was currently embroiled in.  In it, Norman Chui plays the ‘Spider Swordsman’ who has mastered the ‘Silkworm Style’ of martial arts combat fighting, resulting in something akin to Dragon Ball Z involving characters upgrading or leveling up into new kinds of superhuman fighters.  While starting out with the skeleton of your typical Shaw Brothers film from the mid-1970s, it gradually takes a turn towards the fantastical and outlandish including but not limited to silkworm transformations and a final fight that has to be seen to be believed.  Mixing in just a little bit of the psychedelia of Buddha’s Palm without engulfing the whole endeavor in mania, Bastard Swordsman is the perfect ending note to an already extensive but varied series of Hong Kong martial arts films from the ShawScope empire.

 
Of course the set itself wouldn’t be rounded out without the inclusion of plentiful extras including but not limited to a 60-page collector’s booklet, newly commission artwork, hours and hours of bonus features including another entirely different Korean cut of Killer Constable with VHS inserts.  Also included is a compact disc consisting of music selections from the various films.  While each disc comes with its own subset of audio commentaries, Arrow Video saw fit to include a ninth disc entirely devoted to the overflow of special features including newly filmed interviews with many of the key performers involved as well as historians dedicated to director Chor Yeun by both Tony Rayns and Sam Ho.  All in all, the supplements are extensive and will take almost as long to wade through as the films themselves.

 
It goes without saying Arrow Video have outdone themselves once again with their rollout of Shaw Brothers offerings.  While other companies like Shout! Factory are doing their own Shaw sets while 88 Films have done standalone releases of both Shaw and Golden Harvest titles, thus far Arrow Videos sets have been the most comprehensive in terms of gathering a mass amount of kindred films together into one place.  The inclusion of compact disc soundtracks for music from the films is a nice touch that sort of lets you immerse yourself back into the world of those films and the extras are rich and time consuming.  That all of these various film boutique releasing labels are giving such love and attention to the Hong Kong actioner is cause for celebration and over the course of fourteen films I’ve come to know and appreciate the opening Shaw Brothers logo greeting every wild cinematic adventure ahead.  Fans already introduced to ShawScope will relish in these offerings while newcomers unaccustomed to the lore are more than in for a treat, a gift that keeps on giving.

--Andrew Kotwicki