The Jade Faced Assassin

1971
6.3| 1h45m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 09 April 1971 Released
Producted By: Shaw Brothers
Country: Hong Kong
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

The swordsman Zhang Zhen is injured in a misadventure and rescued by Eldest Sister of Changchun Sect, who has a crush on him. However, Zhang falls in love with the maid Yuenu instead, and conceives twins with her. The couple are killed by a group of evil pugilists later. The Eldest Sister is angry with Zhang Zhen for not accepting her and plans to make Zhang's children kill each other as revenge. The baby girl (Xiaolu'er) is saved by Zhang's friend, Lian Lanyan, while the male infant (Hua Yuchun) is taken away by the Eldest Sister. Lian Lanyan encounters the Ten Villains when he passes through Villains' Valley. He is overwhelmed by them and knocked out in a fight. The baby Xiaolu'er is taken away by the Villains, who surprisingly do not harm her, and instead intend to groom her to become the greatest villain ever. Eighteen years later, the twins meet each other by coincidence.

Genre

Action

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Director

Yan Jun

Production Companies

Shaw Brothers

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The Jade Faced Assassin Audience Reviews

Bereamic Awesome Movie
Beystiman It's fun, it's light, [but] it has a hard time when its tries to get heavy.
Senteur As somebody who had not heard any of this before, it became a curious phenomenon to sit and watch a film and slowly have the realities begin to click into place.
BelSports This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
freydis-e Only one review here so I'll add my opinion. This is highly entertaining, mainly because of Lily Ho who takes the lead almost throughout. We have a bit of kung fu, a bit of swordplay and Ho isn't brilliant at either, but she's very agile - or so her character keeps telling us. As a cocky brat, raised by a bunch of villains she is quite perfect, she plays the part at all times with endless energy and enthusiasm and her facial expressions are often hilarious. Anyone at all pretentious (including both the hero and the villain) she treats with arrogant disdain, but she gets on just fine with more genuine people, as in the scene with the drunkard and the old priest at the temple, one of the funniest I've seen in this genre - poor bees! The support actors do their job but despite the twin billing, this is a one-woman show.The standard revenge on parent-killer theme is complicated here (quite a lot) by the baggage left over from the plotting of three manipulative older-generation sisters, it's not always that obvious where the movie is headed and the fast pace keeps up the excitement throughout. There's more location shooting here than you see in most Shaw Bros martial arts films, the scenery is gorgeous and the cinematography makes the most of that. Martial arts fans may be disappointed by the quality of the action, though there's plenty of it and some of the swordplay isn't too bad. Not one for the purists maybe, but in terms of entertaining fun, the Shaw brand doesn't deliver any better than this.
Brian Camp THE JADE FACED ASSASSIN (1970) is yet another female swordplay adventure from Hong Kong's Shaw Bros. studio, but one distinguished from so many others by virtue of its eventful, unpredictable plot line, breathtaking location photography, and lead performance by Lily Ho that set a new standard for female-fighters-dressed-as-men-themed martial arts films. Lily plays Siao Lu Er, who was separated from a twin in infancy and raised by the motley crew of villains in Happy Valley, each of whom imparts his or her particular kung fu style to the girl. When she turns 18, she's good enough to beat them all and heads out on her own, dressed in male garb, on a mission of revenge laid out for her by Uncle Lian (Ku Feng), the one who'd rescued her from certain death in the opening scene when an intra-familial dispute left her real parents dead.A lot happens in the film's running time and a plot summary wouldn't do it justice. Let's just say that Lily winds up mixing it up with just the right crew of characters to ultimately resolve all disputes even though none are initially aware of their real identities. The audience knows (or can figure out) far more than the characters do, which makes for genuine suspense and gives the viewer a real stake in the action. In the course of it, Lily latches onto a fellow called Hero Chang (Cheng Pei-shan) and correctly suspects him of great wrongdoing and then sets out to prove it. In the course of it she clashes with a young swordsman named Hua Yu Chun (Kao Yuen) whose relationship to her becomes obvious to the viewer long before the characters learn of it.Lily was not one of the Shaw studio's greatest fighting stars. (She was more accustomed to contemporary dramatic roles or period courtesan ones.) However, she displays a great affinity with her character here and understands how to put over the fact that she's a girl masquerading as a guy. She moves in just the right way and addresses others and interacts with them with the easy familiarity of a cocky young man. She gets it right in a way so few of the actresses who played these roles did. We don't automatically think, "But it's obvious she's a girl!" She also gets to do a lot of action here, mostly running around, trailing bad guys, hiding under things, leaping out of windows and up to rooftops and such. There really isn't as much fighting action as there should be in a film like this and what there is isn't the most intricately staged. Still, there is so much movement among the characters and at such a fast pace that we really don't mind.Another key factor of the film's appeal is the visual spectacle of some of the most unusual and picturesque mountain locations I've yet seen in a Shaw Bros. film. And they clearly took the main actors out on location for this action. The fight finale on a majestic mountain top with incredible views all around is quite amazing. I should add that the studio work is equally good, with an early segment in Happy Valley making excellent use of the Shaw studio's expert interior work, creating a setting of a rundown no-man's town of criminal fugitives that's quite striking and atmospheric.The scenes of Lily in Happy Valley reminded me of THE PROUD TWINS (1979), in which Fu Sheng played a very similar character raised by unsavory characters. So I checked my notes and realized this one is indeed based on the same Ku Lung story that PROUD TWINS is based on. But there are enough significant plot changes to make the viewing experiences quite different.Oh, and despite the title, I couldn't spot a single Jade Faced Assassin anywhere.