This is a really great movie, the kind of thing you would recommend to a distant cousin. Brought to us by the Snake in the Eagle’s Shadow team, Drunken Master is a slightly superior film and undoubtedly the quintessential kung fu comedy.
Credit due to all involved: Woo-ping’s stylish direction and choreography, Simon Yuen’s synonymous ageing beggar, Hwang Jang-lee’s dastardly evil adversary. Yet the real delight here is Jackie Chan, strikingly confident from his new found fame and looking better than ever.
Woo-ping retraces the early years of Chinese folk hero Wong Fei-hung, who is sent as a punishment by his father to learn kung fu from his torturous Uncle Sam the Seed (Simon Yuen), a bummed out alcoholic famous for crippling his students. The film’s villain Thunderfoot (Hwang) – a hired assassin who is good with his legs – kicks a little sense into the rebellious youth, and Sam is quick to teach the boy a few drunken kung fu techniques.
The training scenes are awesome, and you’ll have to go some to find a better brawl than Hwang and Jackie’s final punch up, in which our young hero resorts to camping it up with his new style of lady-like kung fu.
This movie caused a storm when first released and it still holds an impact today. A kung fu classic if ever there was one.
AKA: Drunken Monkey in the Tiger’s Eyes; Eagle Claw, Snake Fist and Cat’s Paw; Story of the Drunken Master
- Country: Hong Kong
- Action Director: Corey Yuen Kwai, Hsu Hsia, Sunny Yuen Shun-yee, Yuen Woo-ping
- Directed by: Yuen Woo-ping
- Starring: Dean Shek Tin, Hsu Hsia, Hwang Jang-lee, Jackie Chan, Lam Kau, Linda Lin Ying, Simon Yuen Siu-tien, Sunny Yuen Shun-yee, Tino Wong Cheung
- Produced by: Ng See-yuen
- Written by: Hai Wah-on, Yuen Woo-ping
- Studio: Seasonal Films