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The Butterfly

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The Butterfly

Tornado Alley
When Taekwondo Strikes hong kong movie review
Completed
When Taekwondo Strikes
1 people found this review helpful
by The Butterfly
Jul 30, 2022
Completed
Overall 7.0
Story 6.5
Acting/Cast 7.5
Music 6.0
Rewatch Value 7.0
This review may contain spoilers
Angela Mao showed why she was one of the best when she fearlessly took on Sammo Hung and Hapkido Grandmaster Hwang In Shik without flinching in this action packed film. The story might have been short on plot but it was long on fight scenes and Angela is always a delight to watch fight.

When Taekwondo Strikes was set mostly in Korea around 1930 during the Japanese occupation. Jhoon Rhee (the Father of Taekwondo in America!) in his only lead acting role played the leader of the resistance. Hong Kong actor Carter Wong was the naïve, young pupil and follower. And Taiwanese actress Angela Mao was a transplanted Chinese woman living in Korea with her mother. To round out the international cast, Ann Winton, Rhee's real life American student also played a member of the resistance. Throw in Sammo Hung and Hwang In Shik as Japanese fighters and it was one exciting martial arts party!

Lee Chung Tung (Rhee) and Jin Zheng Zhi (Wong) were accosted by the Japanese in a Catholic church headed by an American priest. Jin had fled there thinking the Japanese wouldn't cause trouble in the foreigner's house of worship. He was wrong. The first of three fights took place there. Wan Ling Ching (Mao) had a marvelous fight in the church when she went looking for the priest after he was captured and a Japanese bad guy accosted her. Big mistake. She and Lee teamed up determined to get a Secret List out of Korea into Manchuria. Nothing ever goes easy in a martial arts movie and eventually there was a big thrown down in Manchuria over ownership of the Secret List.

The story was thin, but the fighting was magnificent. With Hapkido and Taekwondo being highlighted the high flying kicks kept rapidly being thrown. Angela's iconic fight in a restaurant against Sammo and his men is legendary. Jhoon Rhee and Hwang In Shik lent realism and credibility with their expert kicks. Some of Sammo's choreography could venture into what I call kung fu posing where arm movements are unrealistically held too long. The kicks tended to be faster and more creative. And in a fight in the church Angela used objects around her to create an epic beatdown on her Japanese opponent.

Due to a common history of Japanese occupation, this 1974 movie was very anti-Japanese. If you are sensitive to that you might want to avoid it.

The sets could be laughably bad. The same Korean downtown was used for Manchuria as well. There were a few more realistic settings but most were made to be breakaway so that people could be thrown through windows and walls.

Fun fact: Andre Morgan who played the beleaguered priest was an American who ultimately became CEO of Golden Harvest. He helped produce Bruce Lee's Enter the Dragon as well as producing this film.

When Taekwondo Strikes was a fun film to watch. Jhoon Rhee made a properly badass resistance leader. Angela Mao is one of my favorites and I could watch her glare her opponents into submission any day. She always seemed believable when taking on baddies and this movie was no exception. If you aren't looking for a complex plot and simply want to watch some of the best fighting each other this is a good movie to try.




7/30/22
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