The Kung Fu Master (1994)
Directors - Benny Chan and various
| DVD Released by : Tai Seng |
| Player reviewed with :Citizen JDVD 3820 |
| Receiver reviewed with : N/A |
| Features: |
| Cantonese/English Dolby Digital 5.1 & DTS Soundtrack |
| English, Subtitles |
| Not Enhanced for 16 x 9 TVs |
| Fullscreen |
| New Trailer |
| Other Releases, 'Making of Kung-Fu Master' featurette, Donnie Yen Biography and Filmography |
| Running Time : 200 mins. |
| Region 1 |
The story opens during the Ching dynasty, racial unrest is high between the ruling imperial Manchurians and the subjugated Chinese people of Han. Red Dragon, leader of the Sun Moon sect dispatches with group of assassins and vows to topple the Ching and return the Ming Dynasty to the throne. Hung Hei-kwun (Donnie Yen) returns home, distraught to find out that his father, Hung Tin Nam (Poon Chi Man) is the martial arts instructor for the Ching. Despised by the other Chinese for kowtowing to their Ching overlords, Hei-kwun is inspired by Red Dragon and insists on opposing his father by opening his own martial arts school to teach only Han Chinese.
Meanwhile Tin Nam is close friends with the Manchurian General Ha (Lo Lieh) who has a dream of unifying the Ching and Han as one family in China. Threatening this dream is a rival Manchurian family headed by the power hungry Sek Tot. Their plot to gain favour with the Emperor by humbling General Ha, destroy the Sun Moon sect and reveal the identity of Red Dragon will only deepen the rift between the Ching and Han.
When an attempt to kill the emperor goes awry, secrets are revealed and no one is as they appear. After playing older roles in similar films (OUATIC 2 and Iron Monkey), Donnie Yen manages a more sprightly gait as a young man caught between doing what he believes is right and honouring his filial duty. The length of a television series gives him the time to grow (if a little shakily) from a rash and unthinking youth to a mature adult. Standout performers include film great Lo Lieh as General Ha, and TV veteran Poon Chi Man as Hung Tin Nam. When their friendship, threatened by opposing political forces faces betrayal and dishonour, the result is both dreadful and moving.
This 2-disc set also packs a number of noteworthy extras. There are a number of westernized trailers for other Tai Seng releases, and a short 'making-of' featurette that consists mainly of montage footage from the show and snippets of interviews with various cast, writers, producers, and director Benny Chan. The real bonus is the inclusion of two commentary tracks. The first is with Donnie Yen and Bey Logan. Both talk all the way through and have a great chemistry with Yen sharing a lot of behind the scenes anecdotes and Logan asking a lot of interesting questions (this was recorded fairly recently with Yen mentioning finished Shanghai Knights). The second track which I did not listen to all the way, featuring Ric Meyers, Tai Seng's Frank Djeng, and Sammo Hung protégé Bobby Samuels is not nearly as engaging, with them talking mostly amongst themselves. Finally, the theme song heard during the featurette is sung by Donnie Yen himself, and plays in its entirety over the main menu. Nice touch.
This release edits together the first 5 episodes (of 40) into a single feature and is only missing about 25 minutes including titles and credits. Entertaining, if historically inaccurate (this Wing Chun is not the one who established the namesake martial arts style) this presents the complete first part of the story and probably the best. Feature film director Benny Chan was hired to helm an epic TV series and is for the most part successful, but it is not for everyone. The action only runs between mediocre and good. Those who prefer a longer plot and character development will enjoy it more. Further releases in the series look unlikely (the show meanders as it goes on anyway), but here Tai Seng has offered a feature packed DVD set that definitely gives you what you pay for. A cautious recommendation.
-Leon Ho
Reviewed 01/15/2003