Geung see dai si doi (2003)

4.7/10
33/100

Geung see dai si doi Storyline

Martial arts/horror movie from critically-acclaimed Hong Kong filmmaker Tsui Hark. In 19th century China, an evil monk awakens a nest of vampires hell-bent on devouring human life. Now, a quartet of heroes trained in the Taoist Mao Shan school of magic and their master must use their unique powers to destroy the Vampire King and its lethal coven before it is too late.

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Geung see dai si doi Movie Reviews

You were trying to watch this movie the wrong way…

Good heavens. Why must every Hong Kong film since CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON be compared to it? That’s like comparing Tim Burton’s ED WOOD to Orson Welles’ CITIZEN KANE because they’re both in black-and-white! They’re both great movies, but it’s ridiculous to stand them next to each other because they’re so vastly different. To me, Tsui Hark constructed a BRILLIANT homage to the “hopping corpse,” and “demon” movies of the 1980’s and early 1990’s while adding some great kung-fu sequences. I see hints of SWORDSMAN, I feel bits of MR. VAMPIRE, I hear parts of IRON MONKEY, I smell A CHINESE GHOST STORY, and it’s all done quite well. Wu-shu, taoist warriors, hopping corpses, a creepy nod to HOUSE OF WAX, and silly jokes? Great fun to me! Art-house, said one reviewer? Don’t know what art films YOU’VE been watching lately. This movie didn’t try anything tremendously fancy or new, it took a lot of things we’ve seen before and turned out a movie that was more than the sum of its parts. Bad humor? Different humor. Hong Kong humor is usually quite different than American humor…I’m sure a lot of people missed when RAIN, CLOUD, THUNDER, and LIGHTNING (ridiculously stereotypical “hero” names) were renamed “Kung,” “Hei,” “Fat,” and “Choi.” Put those four words together and it says “Happy New Year” in Cantonese. Amazingly funny to us? Probably not. Good for a lengthy chuckle for chinese native? Definitely. Low-budget? Again, have we been so spoiled by movie producers throwing vast wads of cash at American films — often to cover the fact that a movie is BAD — that we can’t appreciate a film that doesn’t try to overachieve, but does what it can with what it has? How quickly people forget CLERKS, EL MARIACHI, etc. But then again, DESPERADO was so much better than EL MARIACHI, yes? Because it had BIG EXPLOSIONS and SEX! It’s time people set CROUCHING TIGER up on its own shelf and stop comparing it to movies it bears no similarities to. Wanna say that Zhang Yimou’s HERO was an overblown attempt to recreate CT,HD? Go for it, you’ll be right. Wanna miss the fun of VAMPIRE HUNTERS entirely by refusing to watch it as its own film? Your choice, and ultimately, your loss.

Offers nothing new to the genre… but is passable entertainment.

When four hunters of the undead — -Thunder, Wind, Rain and Lightning- — are separated from their master during a battle with a King Vampire, they continue their hunt for the bloodsucker, using a magical Taoist compass to lead the way. Eventually they arrive at the home of Master Jiang, who is celebrating the marriage of his son to the beautiful Sasa.

When the groom turns up dead the next day, having been bitten by a snake, the foursome are employed to find the reptile. Master Jiang informs Sasa that she need never be parted from her husband, because the family tradition is to preserve dead relatives with wax and store them in vaults below the house; she can visit him anytime she likes!! Meanwhile, it transpires that Sasa had been married off by her brother just so that she might be able to find the whereabouts of a hoard of gold hidden somewhere in the house and pass the information on to him.

With that plan scuppered, Sasa’s brother employs a ‘zombie wrangler’ to reanimate the waxy corpses under the house. With Master Jiang busy rounding up the zombies, he hopes to search the place for the hidden loot.

Unfortunately, for everyone involved, the King Vampire shows up at the end to cause additional mayhem and chaos and it is up to the four heroes to save the day.

Whilst this is no classic of the genre — the plot is far too messy — it does contain many elements which will prove to be of fun to fans of 80s Hong Kong vampire movies: the martial arts are of a reasonable standard, with some impressive swordplay and a bit of nifty wire-work, there is some fairly cheesy gore, and the reanimated bodies do the old hopping routine we all know and love. Best of all is the King Vampire, who has supernatural powers that enable him to suck blood at a distance and fire flames from his mouth.

My main gripe with this film is that everything is just too dark. I found myself straining to see what was going on for most of the running time. I can ignore some dodgy CGI and iffy make-up effects, but I’d like to be able to see what the hell is going on.

Despite the advances in film technology, Tsui Hark’s Vampire Hunters remains an average production that does nothing to improve on the films that it emulates. Don’t watch this with expectations too high, and you might find yourself enjoying it.

Crazy hopping vampires strike back

Version: English dub

If like me, you possess an awesome-sense (like Spider-Man’s Spider-sense, only it detects awesomeness instead of danger), you should ignore all the negative for ‘Vampire Hunters’ and listen to me instead. It isn’t an awesome movie, but how can a movie with zombies, vampires, and kung-fu not be somewhat entertaining?

In 17th century China, zombies and vampires roamed the lands, feeding on the unsuspecting. A group of martial artists / vampire hunters find themselves employed by a very rich – and very insane – old man who has kept everyone of his relatives preserved in wax and not buried. Apparently it is his family’s tradition. So, having generations of potential zombies in your cellar may not be the smartest idea ever, but it takes two to tango. In this case, a thief wants the old-man’s treasure and hires a zombie-wrangler to re-animate the waxed up relatives in order to sneak into the mansion and steal the treasure. It’s up to the kung-fu fighting vampire hunters to save the day (or night).

‘Vampire Hunters’ ends up being a more serious version of ‘Mr. Vampire’. I don’t think I’ve seen any other HK vampire movie that actually tried to be serious instead of an action / comedy. Unfortunately, the concept of ‘serious’ is my arch-nemesis.

I’d forgive the seriousness if the action was good. I would have expected a better action movie from Tsui Hark, but what am I gonna do? Complain some more? Sure! The action is okay, but poorly edited. Thankfully there is enough to keep someone like me entertained. The special effects aren’t all that good, but I’ve never been one to care about bad special effects.

‘Vampire Hunters’ is a decent action movie, but really only for anyone interesting in Hong Kong vampire / action movies – 5/10