18 Fatal Strikes
18 Fatal Strikes
R | 22 May 1981 (USA)
18 Fatal Strikes Trailers

Kung fu classic about a Shaolin monk on the run from a Manchu warlord, and his mighty Shaking Eagle Style. After narrowly escaping the warlord, the monk is nursed back to health by two brothers. However, the warlord is close behind, and the brothers must learn Lo Han style from the monk to protect themselves. However, when one of the brothers is killed, the other, with help from the monk, seeks revenge.

Reviews
Dynamixor

The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.

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Neive Bellamy

Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.

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Jemima

It's a movie as timely as it is provocative and amazingly, for much of its running time, it is weirdly funny.

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Skyler

Great movie. Not sure what people expected but I found it highly entertaining.

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poe-48833

18 FATAL STRIKES opens with Shaolin Abbot Wang Hung on the run for his life. As ever, someone's out to plant the Shaolin priests. Abbot Wang crosses paths with a pair of well-meaning but not altogether capable brothers, Shao Tung and the easily-manipulated (but very durable) Tah Pin (or Tai Pei or Tao Pay, depending on what part of the movie you're at). At any rate, Tah Pin dons the Abbot's bloody garments and leads his pursuers far from the injured Abbot. While the Abbot recovers from his wounds DESPITE Shao Tung's help, Tah Pin rescues the lovely Miss Chang from a gang (actually, she rescues herself with their help). The Abbot begins teaching the bungling duo Low Hand Fist; when Tah Pin dies a genuinely moving death, Tung opens the proverbial can of Whup-Ass on the villains. 18 FATAL STRIKES packs an emotional punch because it features likable characters and the choreography is worthy of Jackie Chan. The "screaming eagle" display by villain Wong Wu Ti is most memorable.

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Arlis Fuson

First off I would like to thank IMDb for adding this movie finally, I did have to write it and submit it myself but I am glad that they added it within 3 or 4 days of me submitting it to them. I did give lots of information that was unused which kind of sucks, but if anyone reads this and needs to know anything about it, I guess you can email me.I am a huge Kung-fu fan and there were so many thousands of these that came out in the 70's and 80's that most got lost and forgotten. This particular one was chosen as The WU-TANG CLANS first movie on its Ground-Zero kung fu classic line. Thank you RZA for digging this one up.It is truly a great film and has a lot of action, I can't say that it's entirely original or that it stands out far from many of the others but it is great fun to watch and some amazing fight scenes.Two men end up having a monk live with them and they go into town and seek medicine and fall for a beautiful woman, meanwhile the evil general of the Manchu army searches to find the Abbot monk and anyone who isn't on his side shall be destroyed. The two men learn the 18 Buddha Palm style from the Shaolin monk and they go after the Manchu army and have a great battle with the general Wong Wu Ti.The movie was chocked full of the comedy bits kung-fu was famous for in the late 70's. The characters are amazing and the long white haired general is very close compared to the Pai-Mai types made popular in Shaw Bros. films.The fights are funny at times, especially when the guys are pretending to use the Budha palms. The final fight between Tung Wai and Hung Sze Ma is one of my faves, it is a super long fight too.The production was great. C.H. Wong produced it and he's had some good films even though hes usually more on the technical side of the film making process. Although its the average sloppy Hong Kong film at times, editor Ting Hung Kuo did a wonderful job piecing it together. The music was very fitting by Mao Shan Huang but it didn't jump out and take control as many of the martial arts film scores do. As far as sound recording goes, Yung Fang Wang might've went a bit over the top with his exaggerated sounds for hits and yells.Cinematography and Direction was amazing, stood out and caught my attention. Joe Cheung directed the film Under the alias Yang Ching Chen and I loved so many of these shots. Martial Arts films were Asia's westerns and this film had such a spaghetti western feel to it. Beautiful shots using the sun to capture and shadow the wonderful choreographed moves from Tung Wai and Yuen Jen. There are some beautiful long shots and Joe did such a wonderful job along with Cheung Sai Gwan.This film is a great kung fu classic, I wish it would get remastered and put on blue ray, but seeing as how no one knows it, I guess the RZA, ground-zero is the best we can hope for. Its a transfer from VHS and even has about a 30 second gap in it. It runs around 1:25 and can also be found under the titles 18 deadly Strikes.If you like martial arts this is a great film, I only walk away wondering one thing... Why does the boss on these movies make 500 of his men fight and get their butt whipped before he stands in...He's the best one there why doesn't he fight first and be done...Oh well funny thought. 6 out of 10 stars.Also some trivia for you...the star of this film Tung Wai was the little kid from ENTER THE DRAGON that Bruce Lee smacked on the back of the head..

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