Wai Wang
10 titles
Filmography
10 results

Swordsman at Large
(1971)There's a sword called the Deer Knife that everyone in the martial world is after.

The Dark Alley
(1972)What starts as a happy love story between Wong, a champion boxer, and his beloved develops into a violent, explosive saga of blood and guts.

The Flying Guillotine
(1975)An assassin, trained in the use of a throwing weapon that can behead its victims from a distance, questions the morality of his missions and becomes a fugitive hunted by his former comrades.

Shadow Girl
(1971)A young girl swordsman has stealth capability and loves to play pranks. She riles terrorists and bandits, so she has to struggle against them. During the struggle, she is injured and poisoned. A young handsome doctor saves her and then she drives away all the bad guys after rehabilitation. But the doctor keeps on exploring a way to heal the stealth problem.

Blood and Guts
(1971)A young swordsman implores his courage, strengthens his resolve, and sharpens his fighting skills to take down the notorious Devil Knight.

Shaolin Iron Finger
(1977)A martial arts expert who uses his most powerful strike for good must take down a trio, who kidnapped his mother, in a classic Kung Fu forest fight.

Shaolin Mantis
(1978)Although David Chiang had starred in over 40 films as a martial arts hero, in Shaolin Mantis, where he plays a man who learns martial arts from a praying mantis, then seeks revenge for his wife's death, the movie contains some of Chiang's best fight scenes ever.

The Savage Five
(1974)The Ching Emperor fears the martial artists from the Shao Lin Monastery, and so he gives orders to burn it down. Most of the inmates who resisted the Manchus are either killed or dispersed. The lucky ones, who escape included Hung Hsi-kuan, in addition to five men, who flee to Central China. They are Tsai Te-chung (Ti Lung), Ma Chao-hsing (Alexander Fu Sheng), Fang Ta-hung (Meng Fei), Li Shih-kai (Chi Kuan-chun), and Hu Te-ti (David Chiang). These five heroes try to join forces with the other anti-Ching elements in Central China. Among the Shao Lin men is Ma Fu-yi, a traitor, who in league with the Manchu henchman, Chen Wen-yao (Chiang Tao), plots to destroy the Shao Lin heroes once and for all. Ma Chao-hsing is captured by the traitor, but he refuses to reveal anything. Meanwhile, Hu Te-ti, with the help of Chieftain Kao, and the chieftain's followers, rush to the rescue of Ma Chao-hsing. A fierce battle ensues, and Ma is freed, but the brave chieftain dies. The anti-Ching patriots begin to realize that in order to lick the Manchu lackeys, led by Chen Wen-yao, Pao Yu-lung, and others, they must improve their kung fu skill, because their opponents are also experts in martial arts. Then the patriots return to the gutted monastery, where they spend more than a year perfecting still more kung fu techniques, such as the 'Crossed Fists', 'Triple-Jointed Stick', 'Rolling Technique', 'Tiger Stork Technique', and 'Pole Technique'. The decisive battle is fought, resulting in the complete routing of the Manchu gangsters. But Fang and Li also die martyrs to liberty. The anti-Ching forces are further reinforced by the arrival of fresh troops from Admiral Cheng Cheng-kung of Taiwan. More bitter struggles against the Manchu tyrants follow...

The Gambler and His Kung Fu Master
(1981)Han Kuo Tsai learns obscure kung fu styles from a ruthless master to battle loan sharks and help him settle old scores.

Pursuit of Vengeance
(1977)Master of the "swordplay thriller" genre, Chu Yuan and renowned kung-fu choreographer Tang Chia tell the fabulous tale of the "Fastest Swordsman in the World" facing the "1000 Face Devil" and no less than seven murderers.