The Swordsman (1990)
4/10
Slapdash, suffers from muddled direction
4 January 2017
Warning: Spoilers
THE SWORDSMAN is one of those wirework-heavy Chinese fantasy-action films that were all the rage in the 1990s. I'm not a great fan of the sub-genre; give me the good old-fashioned kung-fu comedies of the 1970s over these any day. This one is pretty typical of the genre, as it has a hugely over-complicated plot with silly story lines and a cast of far too many interchangeable characters, many of whom could have been excised to give the movie greater clarity. Old Hong Kong film staples are thrown into the mix, from cases of mistaken identity to women posing as men and mysterious, mountain-dwelling heroes, but sadly it's all very uninteresting and there's nothing here I could get worked up about. And this is from a FAN of Chinese cinema.

The cast is pretty meagre and seems to be made up of comedy actors attempting serious roles, in the likes of Jacky Cheung and Sam Hui. Nobody stands out, aside from Yuen Wah who has a ball as another over-the-top villain and who dies after a killer bee attack this time around! The female characters are undeniably irritating (Brigitte Lin and Cecilia Yip, I'm talking about you) and the only decent acting of note comes from a pair of cameos by old-timers Lam Ching-Ying and Wu Ma, who share a touching scene together on a boat. Even worse, the fight scenes are nothing to write home about, with poor direction and confusing choreography throughout. The whole film has a cheap, slapdash feel and although it's regarded in some quarters as a classic – and was popular enough to spawn two sequels – I'd readily pick the likes of MOON WARRIORS over this tat any day.
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