White Dragon must get a list with the names of rebel supporters to Prince Ma Tung, the leader of the rebellion. Trying to stop him in his mission is the evil Prime Minister, who naturally wants the list in order to crush his opposition. Adding another complication is the fact that Ma Tung wants to kill White Dragon in revenge for the humiliation Tung's father suffered in a duel against White Dragon years earlier.
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Reviews
This is How Movies Should Be Made
Let me be very fair here, this is not the best movie in my opinion. But, this movie is fun, it has purpose and is very enjoyable to watch.
It's funny, it's tense, it features two great performances from two actors and the director expertly creates a web of odd tension where you actually don't know what is happening for the majority of the run time.
Great example of an old-fashioned, pure-at-heart escapist event movie that doesn't pretend to be anything that it's not and has boat loads of fun being its own ludicrous self.
Certainly vastly superior to the over-hyped MASTER OF THE FLYING GUILLOTINE (which has its moments, to be sure, but which also boasts as many negatives as positives), BLOOD OF THE DRAGON is Wang Yu at his heroic best. He was never nobler than he is here, and the storyline is reasonably coherent (not always the case with Old School kung fu movies). The only real problem I have with this one: I've seen it three times, now (once during its initial theatrical run and twice on DVD), and there's an abrupt jump-cut during the final showdown that's still jarring, after all these years. One would think that some enterprising distributor could find a decent print of this one after all these years... (And, no sooner do I lodge the complaint than I come across a print that features the missing action: it shows Wang Yu's opponent, impaled on the tip of the steel spear that he carries, being waved about like a banner before being discarded. It was worth the wait.)
I've seen many of Wang Yu's films, and I think that "Blood of the Dragon" (aka "The Desperate Chase") just might be his finest moment. It's certainly one of the only independent films he made that can hold its own against Chang Cheh-directed epics like "The Magnificent Trio" and "The Assassin" in terms of excitement and tragic scope. The fights (very little empty-hand action, but plenty of spears, swords and more exotic weapons) are well-choreographed, the tone of the movie is appropriately grim, and Wang's character Lung Tai is a hero you actually care about and root for. The dubbing is slightly better than what I've heard in most Hong Kong and Taiwanese martial arts flicks, and the hard-rocking American soundtrack--recorded by Flood--enhances the action. "One man, one weapon, one hell of a movie"...that's what "Blood of the Dragon" promises, and it delivers! (Especially in the no-holds-barred climax.)
Ah-ha, foreshadowing! A strong lead, elaborate fight scenes, semi-bad dubbing, silly facial hair, and a weak musical score add up to Blood of the Dragon. I had never heard of Jimmy Wang Yu until I saw Screaming Ninja and this. He definitely deserves his status as a name in the martial arts genre. He is quite impressive both physically and in his acting. White Dragon(Yu) faces Red Wolf, Golden something, wussy prime minister, and Kang Fu(Fei Lung - Evil Betty). Of course, they are no match for the defender of the rebellion. Fun as only a seventies martial arts movie can be. The twenty minute final battle could have inspired a scene in Kill Bill. A different soundtrack and some less silly supporting vocal talent would elevate this a lot.
Jimmy Wang Yu stars as a martial art criminal who decided to change his ways and help a young boy bring a bamboo containing a list of people that is in the hitlist on a Mongolian leader. Only problem is Jimmy has to take the list to a son who has a vendetta against him for killing his dad. More trouble occurs and lots of action and violence happen. Lots of known faces (including Roy Chiao) helps this standard action film. This 1974 film was released in the U.S. in 1978 by a small American distributor who redubbed it (more Americanized voices instead of the H.K. English accent dubbers), re-scored it (by an Atlanta rock band FLOOD), and edited it (removed a finger cut off scene) for it's release. The only reason why it failed at the theatres was they bill THE MAN FROM HONG KONG star as "Wang Yu". Other than that, it's a pretty good action film.