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The Man from Hong Kong

Hong Kong, Australia

1975

111 Min
Color
2.35:1
English
  • Currently 3.4/5 Stars.
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DIR Brian Trenchard-Smith, Wang Yu

EXEC David Hannay, André Morgan

PROD Raymond Chow

SCR Brian Trenchard-Smith

DP Russell Boyd

CAST Wang Yu, George Lazenby, Hugh Keays-Byrne, Roger Ward, Rosalind Speirs, Grant Page, Rebecca Gilling, Frank Thring, Sammo Hung Kam-Bo

ED Ron Williams

PROD DES David Copping, Lindsay Hewson

MUSIC Noel Quinlan

SOUND Shao Lung Chou

Karlovy Vary (Midnight Screenings: Ozploitation)

Director

Original

Brian Trenchard-Smith

Brian Trenchard-Smith (born 1946) is an English film and television director, producer, writer, consultant and actor who is notable for his contributions to the horror and action genre during the 1970s and 1980s in Australia. Most of his work has been in television, and the majority of his films have been direct-to-video releases. He generally works in the drama, action and horror genres. He has directed 42 movies and TV series including Turkey Shoot, Dead End Drive-In, The Man from Hong Kong, and Leprechaun 4: In Space.

In addition, he also has been credited by Quentin Tarantino as one of his favorite directors.

Trenchard-Smith blogs once a week at Film Industry Bloggers an online Blogging community of professionals who work throughout the world’s TV and film communities. His category is as The Genre Director. —wikipedia 

Original

Wang Yu

Jimmy Wang Yu (Chinese: 王羽; pinyin: Wáng Yǔ; Yale: Wong4 Jyu5; born March 28, 1943 in Wuxi, Jiangsu, also known as Wong Yu-lung and Wang Yue) is a Chinese actor, director, producer, and screenwriter. He shot to fame with the Shaw Brothers Studio’s martial arts film, The One-Armed Swordsman, in 1967. His film, The Chinese Boxer, in 1969, is credited with being the first Hong Kong martial arts film that kick started the unarmed combat genre that took Asia by storm in the 1970s.

Born Wang Zheng-quan (simplified Chinese: 王正权; traditional Chinese: 王正權; pinyin: Wáng Zhèngquán) in Wuxi, Jiangsu, China, Jimmy was a former ROC soldier and Hong Kong swimming champion, as well as a racing car enthusiast, before joining Shaw Brothers in 1963. He teamed up with the famous sword-fighting director, Chang Cheh, and acted in The Golden Swallow with Cheng Pei-Pei, in 1968. Jimmy starred in several notable films including Temple of the Red Lotus (1965), One Armed Boxer (1971), Return of The Chinese… read more

Wall

Displaying 3 wall posts.
Picture of Michael Harbour

Michael Harbour

16Jan12

Wall to wall cliches. An Australian/Hong Kong production with a former James Bond as a villain, martial arts choreographed by Hung Kam Po (Sammo Hung), and vehicular mayhem by Grant Page (who did the same for Mad Max a few years later). This almost plays like a parody of a 70s action drama. A very silly movie.

Picture of Alex

Alex

24Mar11

Not as good as Stone but still a good Aussie film.

Picture of Ryan Estabrooks

Ryan Estabrooks

28Jun10

Hilarious action movie! This is definitely one that you will not want to take serious at all, it has more of a Kung-Pow feel than Die Hard.

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