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Martial Arts Movie About the Five Elements Fire Water Wood Metal Earth

1982 film

Five Elements Ninjas
Five-Element-Ninja-poster.jpg
Directed by Chang Cheh
Screenplay by
  • Chang Cheh
  • Ni Kuang[1]
Produced by Mona Fong[1]
Starring
  • Cheng Tien Chi
  • Lo Mang
  • Lung Tung-Sheng
  • Wang Li
  • Michael Chan
  • Yu Tai Pei
Cinematography Huang Wenyun[1]
Music by
  • Mentum Yung Shing
  • Chen-Hou Su[one]

Production
visitor

Shaw Brothers Studio[1]

Release appointment

  • Apr 21, 1982 (1982-04-21) (Hong Kong)

Running fourth dimension

108 min
Land Hong Kong[one]
Languages Cantonese[1]
Mandarin
Japanese

Five Elements Ninjas (Chinese title: 五遁忍術) is a 1982 Hong Kong martial arts movie directed by Chang Cheh. The film is about a Chinese martial arts schoolhouse finds itself outclassed past their rivals, they hire elite ninja from Nihon to destroy the schoolhouse. The solitary survivor of the massacre learns the secrets of ninjutsu and seeks revenge against the ninja. Although only starring one member of the famed Venom Mob in Lo Mang, the moving-picture show very much is in the spirit of managing director Cheh'due south later Venom Mob films.

Plot [edit]

In ancient Hong Kong about the Yuan Dynasty, Chief Hong challenges his rival, Yuan Zeng, for the title of martial arts master. Their students confront off against each other, and when his students are hands defeated, Hong calls in a samurai to fight on his behalf. Zeng's students are initially dismissive of a Japanese martial artist, but he defeats his opponent, whom he goads into committing suicide. Zeng's educatee Liang Zhi Sheng defeats the samurai, simply before the samurai commits suicide, he warns that an allied ninja clan will seek revenge for his expiry. He tosses his ring at Zeng, who is poisoned when he catches it.

Every bit Zeng recuperates, he receives a challenge from the Five-Element Ninjas. Suspecting a trap, he keeps two of his best students, Sheng and Tian Hao, at the school to guard it against an invasion and sends ten others to do boxing. As Sheng and Hao help to reinforce the school'south defenses and ready traps, the ninjas utilise trickery and guerrilla warfare to defeat their opponents. Hong is overjoyed, but the leader of the ninja, Cheng Yun Mudou, advises that they push their advantage to destroy Zeng's school. Hong agrees, and Mudou sends a female spy, Senji, to infiltrate the school. Sheng convinces a reluctant Hao to accept her in subsequently they relieve her from being beaten.

Senji secretly makes a map as she takes various jobs around the school. Distrustful of her, Hao accuses her of hiding his weapon when she cleans his bedroom and demands to gustatory modality-test the soup that she has poisoned before letting her serve it to Zeng; to maintain her cover, she intentionally drops information technology. Once Senji completes her map, she smuggles it to Mudou. That dark, Senji offers herself to Sheng, who refuses to take advantage of her, though he agrees that she may play a vocal for him on her flute. Nether the cover of her flute-playing, Mudou's ninja attack the camp, killing many of the students earlier they are aware of the set on. Senji reveals herself as a spy and mortally wounds Sheng before he can blitz to Hao'southward help. Mudou kills Sheng and Zeng; Hao, who Senji requests they take prisoner, is the only survivor.

Remembering basic ninja grooming that he received in the past, Hao escapes from his bonds and takes Senji hostage when she comes to tell him that she has fallen in beloved with him. Hao escapes the ninja and returns to his old ninja master to consummate his training. He joins three other students, who aid him in his quest for revenge. Meanwhile, Mudou kills Hong and takes his place as martial arts master. Hao delivers a claiming to Mudou, who sends Senji to spy on Hao and report who his new master is; he also sends four ninjas to spy on Senji herself. Hao easily detects her, but when he also sees the ninjas, he accuses Senji of trying to trap him and kills her. Afterward killing the ninjas, Hao and his fellow martial arts students go on to fight each of the Five-Element Ninjas.

At present well-trained in ninjutsu and aware of the ninjas' trickery, Hao and his beau martial arts students easily defeat the Japanese ninjas and destroy their symbols. Mudou, even so, proves to be a hard foe. As the four Chinese ninjas face off against him, he sneaks leg shackles onto Hao. Hao uses a mysterious key his chief gave to him to unlock them, and makes many unsuccessful attempts to put them on Mudou. Finally, channeling his rage over the deaths of Senji, Sheng, and Zeng, he shackles Mudou's legs and pulls him down and while his three beau martial arts students spear him, Hao tears Mudou in one-half. Hao himself is mortally wounded in the process. As his beau martial arts students inquire every bit to why he put himself in front of Muduo's spiked anxiety, he dies. His brothers destroy the final symbol.

Cast [edit]

  • Cheng Tien Chi as Tian Hao
  • Lo Mang every bit Liang Zhi Sheng
  • Michael Chan as Cheng Yun Mudou (Kenbuchi Mudou)
  • Chen Pei-Hsi as Senji
  • Chan Shen as Primary Hong
  • Kwan Fung as Yuan Zeng

Release [edit]

Five Element Ninjas was released in Hong Kong on April 21, 1982.[1]

Reception [edit]

From retrospective reviews, AllMovie described the film as "a legend amongst fans of Asian cult fare and for once, the legend lives up to the hype."[2] The review noted that the plot sticks to uncomplicated martial arts tropes, while noting that the "actual methods used are so off the wall that no fan volition care" and that "the final 20 minutes is the kind of high-boot bloodbath that is guaranteed to exit any fan of these films smiling and slackjawed. Thus, Five Element Ninjas is the kind of gloriously over-the-peak blowout that every genre fan needs to run across."[2] Michael Brooke (Sight & Audio) wrote that the films that contain the give-and-take "ninja" in the title are mostly "bargain-basement dreck" but that Five Chemical element Ninjas was "a blissfully entertaining exception".[iii] The review noted that Five Chemical element Ninjas "lacks the emotional intensity of Chang's earlier films", but stated that "its febrile verve and invention more than compensate. The body count is enormous even by Chang'south notoriously gore-drenched standards, though the cartoonishly unrealistic claret-spurts and a disembowelled fighter meeting his doom subsequently slipping on his own dangling entrails smacks more of a Monty Python Peckinpah tribute than anything especially disturbing."[three] James Mudge of Beyond Hollywood wrote that "it has pretty much everything that discerning fans could ever want".[4] [ self-published source? ]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "Drove Items Online Catalogue [Annotation: Search for "Five elements ninjas"]". Hong Kong Motion picture Archive (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 10 October 2018. Retrieved 2 May 2016.
  2. ^ a b Guarisco, Donald. "5 Element Ninjas". AllMovie. Retrieved two May 2016.
  3. ^ a b Brooke, Michael (September 2010). "Acme of the Chops". Sight & Sound. Vol. 20, no. 9. British Film Institute. p. 89.
  4. ^ Mudge, James (iii November 2007). "Five Chemical element Ninjas (1982) Moving picture Review". Beyond Hollywood . Retrieved 22 Oct 2015.

External links [edit]

  • V Elements Ninjas at Hong Kong Cinemagic
  • Five Elements Ninjas at IMDb
  • V Elements Ninjas at AllMovie

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_Elements_Ninjas

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