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Dynamite Fighters

1987 [CN]

Action / Drama

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Michelle Yeoh Photo
Michelle Yeoh as Fok Ming-Ming
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
841.89 MB
1280*598
Chinese 2.0
R
24 fps
1 hr 31 min
P/S 0 / 1
1.53 GB
1920*896
Chinese 2.0
R
24 fps
1 hr 31 min
P/S 1 / 7

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by paul_haakonsen5 / 10

Amidst all the action and fighting, where did the story go...?

This movie is oddly enough the essence of Hong Kong cinema, back from the late 1980's. The story is fairly simple, and spiced up with comedy elements, while the main focus of the movie is the martial arts and action sequences.

The story is about a small group of people who has to rescue a guy from the clutches of Japanese invaders.

"Magnificent Warriors" ("Zhong Hua Zhan Shi") has elements of action and martial arts, obviously, and also elements of comedy and drama. There is sort of a light-hearted Indiana Jones touch to the movie as well.

Michelle Yeoh does put on a good performance here, martial arts and action-wise, as the movie is not heavy on dramatic acting performances.

If you enjoy martial arts movies and/or Asian cinema in general, then you should watch "Magnificent Warriors" for the action that it is.

Reviewed by Leofwine_draca8 / 10

Hong Kong version of Indiana Jones, with goofy humour and a rousing climax

Having really enjoyed Michelle Yeoh in her breakthrough film POLICE ASSASSINS, I was eager to watch this adventure film which by all accounts starred the actress in an Indiana Jones-type role. There were no real surprises in this film, which is a somewhat shallow action-adventure with a lot of laughs and a lot of explosions. The film is much-lauded for an early battle in which Yeoh uses her whip to take on various thugs, thus inspiring Jackie Chan in SHANGHAI NOON, and it's highly amusing stuff.

The film is technically proficient, and there's no faulting the slick choreography of the many battles. The budget is a bit less than you'd imagine, and events often seem closed in, as you'd expect in a low budget cheapie. Director David Chung also did the excellent POLICE ASSASSINS but he seems to be slightly lacking in inspiration here; one of the low lights is an early dog fight which seems to go on for an age without anything happening, and when they kept repeating the same bit of supposedly-stirring music over and over AND OVER again, I was ready to tear my hair out. Characterisation is nil; Yeoh is the tough heroine, yes, but we never find out any of her motivations and she seems like a computer game character.

There are some mildly annoying supporting characters in the film, including those played by Cindy Lau and Lo Lowell; they grate from the instant they appear. The only person who comes out of it with any kudos is Richard Ng, in a bumped-up role as the second lead; while he delivers the same type of slapstick buffoonery that we have come to expect from his acting roles, he's given plenty of screen time, including heroics in the battles, and he's as great as ever. It's left to the supporting likes of Hwang Jang Lee, Lo Meng, and Fung Hark-On to really get into their characters of devious Japanese bad guys; these guys – who I consider to be among the "unsung heroes" of '80s Hong Kong cinema - are as great as ever.

The film takes a turn for the great about an hour in, turning into a running fight between the heroes and villagers against the might of the Japanese army. The martial arts bouts are crisply done and with plenty of great stunts, usually involving people getting thrown through scenery. There are some nice battles in burning buildings and things really go crazy for ten minutes or so as director Chung lets his hair down and has some fun. Things close with a nice extended battle scene as the walled village faces the Japanese army. Although it looks fairly cheap – reminding me of similar scenes in the no-budget Filipino film, DUNE WARRIORS – there are lots of shoot-outs, explosions, and various cool stunts/moments of slow motion as the bad guys get their just desserts and the heroes triumph. Hardly a surprise, but a nice rousing climax to finish off the film, ending it on a strong note.

Reviewed by BA_Harrison5 / 10

Mildly diverting Hong Kong action nonsense.

Michelle Yeoh might not be a trained martial artist, but with her background as a dancer, lots of meticulous choreography and more than a little help from Hong Kong cinema magic, she is suitably convincing as a kick-ass kung fu cutie. Here, she plays a female Indiana Jones-style character, a daring aviator and mercenary who, with help from a secret agent (Derek Yee) and a wacky con-man/wanderer (Richard Ng),helps the people of a small Northern Chinese town to fight the evil Japanese invaders who want to build a poison gas plant on their land.

As is often the case with '80s Hong Kong actioners, Magnificent Warriors suffers from a touch too much screwball silliness (mostly courtesy of comic relief Ng) and some lightweight flirting between Yeoh and Yee, all of which would be excusable if the action, of which there is plenty, was sufficiently exciting. Unfortunately, the countless explosive set-pieces and fast-moving fight scenes never really set the pulse pounding: there's lots of crash, bang and wallop, but very little that sticks in the mind as jaw-dropping, making it a frustratingly mediocre adventure overall.

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