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Shanghai Joe [Blu-ray]
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Shanghai Joe [Blu-ray]
Current price: $29.99
Barnes and Noble
Shanghai Joe [Blu-ray]
Current price: $29.99
Size: OS
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Director Mario Caiano, best known for the gorgeous horror film
Amanti d'Oltretomba
, made eleven Westerns in his career, but none as strange as this one. Perhaps it might help some to recall that the TV-series
Kung Fu
was enjoying great popularity at around the same time employing a similar East-meets-West theme. This film is much more grim and bloody, however, as it tells the tale of a Chinese man (Chen Lee) who travels to San Francisco in 1882. Looking for a better life, all he finds is scum -- racists, perverts, slavers, greedy conmen and mercenaries. Naturally, the gentle mystic must fight to find inner peace. Lee's major weapon -- aside from knives and lethal yo-yos -- is a devastating punch that rams all the way through his opponents' bodies. But that isn't the half of it. A cardshark gets his eyes gouged out in revolting detail, people are beaten to bloody pulp, and the villain of the piece (Klaus Kinski in a fascinating performance) is Scalper Jack, a mincing, sadistic bounty-hunter who tortures and skins his victims alive. A depressing and violent film, this exercise in bloodletting is powerful stuff and well-acted by a veteran cast including Giacomo Rossi Stuart, Claudio Undari and Gordon Mitchell, who also appeared in Caiano's
Erik IL Vichingo
. Adalberto Albertini made an unfortunate comic sequel the following year with Kinski (in a different role) and Lee.
Amanti d'Oltretomba
, made eleven Westerns in his career, but none as strange as this one. Perhaps it might help some to recall that the TV-series
Kung Fu
was enjoying great popularity at around the same time employing a similar East-meets-West theme. This film is much more grim and bloody, however, as it tells the tale of a Chinese man (Chen Lee) who travels to San Francisco in 1882. Looking for a better life, all he finds is scum -- racists, perverts, slavers, greedy conmen and mercenaries. Naturally, the gentle mystic must fight to find inner peace. Lee's major weapon -- aside from knives and lethal yo-yos -- is a devastating punch that rams all the way through his opponents' bodies. But that isn't the half of it. A cardshark gets his eyes gouged out in revolting detail, people are beaten to bloody pulp, and the villain of the piece (Klaus Kinski in a fascinating performance) is Scalper Jack, a mincing, sadistic bounty-hunter who tortures and skins his victims alive. A depressing and violent film, this exercise in bloodletting is powerful stuff and well-acted by a veteran cast including Giacomo Rossi Stuart, Claudio Undari and Gordon Mitchell, who also appeared in Caiano's
Erik IL Vichingo
. Adalberto Albertini made an unfortunate comic sequel the following year with Kinski (in a different role) and Lee.