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Iron Bodyguard
File:Iron Bodyguard.jpg
Directed byChang Cheh
Pao Hsueh-li
Written byNi Kuang
Produced byRun Run Shaw
StarringChen Kuan-tai
CinematographyYuan Ting-bang
Edited byKuo Ting-hung
Music byChen Yung-yu
Production
company
Distributed byShaw Brothers
Release date
  • 8 December 1973 (1973-12-08)
Running time
94 minutes
CountryHong Kong
LanguageMandarin

Iron Bodyguard (大刀王五) is a 1973 Mandarin-language Hong Kong historical martial arts film directed by Chang Cheh and Pao Hsueh-li. The main character, Chinese hero Wang Wu, has been the subject of multiple films and television series.

Plot[edit]

The poet Tan Sitong, son of the governor of Hubei, is impressed when Wang Wu steps in to stop two battalion commanders from arresting the associates of a confessed pickpocket. He follows and befriends Wang Wu by helping him fight off a group of attackers. Tan Sitong and three others are appointed to the cabinet and decree a list of reforms, but Empress Dowager Cixi is against the reforms and charges Kang Youwei, head of the Ministry of Works, with subversion against the nation. Tan Sitong helps Kang Youwei escape while Wang Wu helps Liang Qichao escape. Cixi issues an imperial edict for the ministers of the Privy Council Zhang Yinhuan, Xu Jingcheng, Yang Shenxiu, Yang Rui, Tan Sitong, and Liu Guangdi to be removed from office and prosecuted.

Commanders Pei Feng and Wen Ping lead an army that captures several of the wanted men and sends them to the main prison. Wang Wu plans to rescue the prisoners as they are being led to the execution grounds, so he asks for Wen Ping's help. Wen Ping betrays him and tells the others of the plan, so when Wang Wu and his friends attack, they are defeated by Wen Ping's riflemen and Wang Wu flees injured. Tan Sitong and the other prisoners are beheaded and Wang Wu blames himself. Wang Wu defeats Wen Ping and Yen Feng using martial arts and allows them to leave, but Yen Feng is accidentally fired upon and killed by General Chong's riflemen who are awaiting Wang Wu's exit. Wang Wu is then shot and killed by the riflemen as he exits.

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

Filming took place in Hong Kong.[1] The martial arts choreographers were Tong Kai and Lau Kar-leung.[1] Directors Chang Cheh as Pao Hsueh-li and star Chen Kuan-tai had previously worked together on the successful films The Boxer from Shantung (1972) and Man of Iron (1972),[2][3] both Shaw Brothers productions.

Reception[edit]

Reviewer Andrew Saroch of fareastfilms.com called the film "A polished slice of entertainment from the Shaw Brothers’ vast back catalogue of quality."[4]

Reviewer Will of silveremulsion.com gave the film a rating of 3 out of 4 stars, writing, "Iron Bodyguard has all the pieces in place for a stellar martial arts drama like The Blood Brothers or The Boxer from Shantung, but instead we get a somewhat disjointed, start/stop flow that hinders much of any momentum that the film should contain. [...] In spite of the problems, Iron Bodyguard is still an entertaining and interesting slice of Chinese history in martial arts drama form. There are definitely worse ways to learn history!"[5]

Reviewer Venoms5 of coolasscinema.com wrote, "Prior to seeing this movie, I was never a big fan of Yueh Hua. I really came to appreciate him after seeing his arrogantly righteous portrayal of Tan. Chen Kuan Tai is as good as he ever was here as Wang Wu. There are some truly captivating fight scenes here."[6]

A review by Matt L. Reifschneider on shawbrothersunivers.com reads, "Based on real events from Chinese history known as The Hundred Days' Reform, the film presents itself as a character study of Chen Kuan-Tai’s heroic character Wang Wu within a larger historically set epic and not as the action spectacle that one normally associates with the Shaw Brothers studio. The film often plays against expectation of the usual formula and, for better or worse, toys with the structure in presenting its story. Love it or hate it, Iron Bodyguard does not play things safe and instead goes for dramatic effect over the normally enthusiastic action entertainment. The intent is ambitious, certainly, and Iron Bodyguard has to take its time establishing its pieces before setting them in motion."[7]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Iron Bodyguard (1973)". hkmdb.com.
  2. ^ "Iron Bodyguard - Movies on Google Play". play.google.com.
  3. ^ "Iron Bodyguard". ClickTheCity.
  4. ^ Saroch, Andrew. "Iron Bodyguard (1973) - Review".
  5. ^ "Iron Bodyguard (1973)". Silver Emulsion Film Reviews. 3 June 2016.
  6. ^ "Chang Cheh's Best Action Films Part 2".
  7. ^ https://www.shawbrothersuniverse.com/a-chess-match-of-wits-and-fists-history-interpreted-with-iron-bodyguard-by-blood-brothers-film-reviews/

External links[edit]

{{Chang Cheh}}

Category:1970s historical action films Category:1970s Hong Kong films Category:1970s Mandarin-language films Category:1973 films Category:1973 martial arts films Category:Hong Kong martial arts films Category:Hong Kong historical action films Category:Films directed by Chang Cheh Category:Films set in 1898 Category:Films set in 19th-century Qing dynasty Category:Films set in Taiwan Category:Films shot in Hong Kong Category:Shaw Brothers Studio films