A Shaolin Monk armed with metal balls and butterfly swords.
By traditional cinematic standards, critics at Asian Movie Pulse describe the film as "atrocious" due to its liberal plagiarism of Bruce Lee's canon. However, as a piece of exploitation cinema history, it is an "entertaining mash-up of Bruce Lee’s greatest hits" that is practically "critic-proof" for fans of the "bad movie" aesthetic.
Set just before the outbreak of World War II, the story follows Mr. Ang (played by Bruce Le), a Chinese nationalist recruited by an espionage group. His mission? Retrieve a "vitally important and dangerous" Chinese security document that has been stolen by the Japanese and hidden at the top of a six-story tower.
A Shaolin Monk armed with metal balls and butterfly swords.
By traditional cinematic standards, critics at Asian Movie Pulse describe the film as "atrocious" due to its liberal plagiarism of Bruce Lee's canon. However, as a piece of exploitation cinema history, it is an "entertaining mash-up of Bruce Lee’s greatest hits" that is practically "critic-proof" for fans of the "bad movie" aesthetic.
Set just before the outbreak of World War II, the story follows Mr. Ang (played by Bruce Le), a Chinese nationalist recruited by an espionage group. His mission? Retrieve a "vitally important and dangerous" Chinese security document that has been stolen by the Japanese and hidden at the top of a six-story tower.