MAGNIFICENT BODYGUARDS (飛渡捲雲山)
Dir. Lo Wei, 1978
Hong Kong. 103 min.
In Cantonese & Mandarin with English subtitles
WEDNESDAY, JULY 9 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, JULY 14 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, JULY 26 – 10 PM
A wealthy noblewoman assembles a team of fierce bodyguards to escort her ailing brother to a specific doctor who holds the cure to his illness. Together they must traverse dangerous wild country infested with roving gangs of bandits, savages, and demonic monks intent on his capture.
While much of the industry was preoccupied with maintaining Bruce Lee’s presence via the Bruceploitation trend, Lo Wei, the very filmmaker who directed Lee in his breakout roles in THE BIG BOSS (1971) and FIST OF FURY (1972), turned his sights towards finding the Next Big Thing. Within a few years, Lo would find his new leading man in a fresh-faced stunt choreographer and background performer named Jackie Chan, providing him with his very first starring roles in NEW FIST OF FURY (1976) and MAGNIFICENT BODYGUARDS.
Though not quite Chan’s breakout role (those would come later in the same year via Yuen Woo-ping’s DRUNKEN MASTER and SNAKE IN THE EAGLE’S SHADOW), it’s easy to see why Lo viewed Chan as the heir apparent to Lee’s stardom. Even as a smarmy, hot-headed bodyguard— a far cry from the comedic roles for which he became known— the same charisma, finesse, and obsessive detail that Chan would bring to his later work are still undeniably present.
If Chan’s born stardom weren’t enough to carry the film, MAGNIFICENT BODYGUARDS was also marketed as the first kung fu movie to be presented in 3D, replete with multiple shots of fists, feet, spears, swords, and arrows flying directly towards the camera (alas, though, Spectacle will only be presenting this one in 2D).