Jason Pai Piao
12 titles
Filmography
12 results
Shaolin Rescuers
(1979)Two bored restaurant workers dream of notoriety and ally with a Shaolin master to defeat a treacherous priest out to destroy Shaolin.

Bloody Parrot
(1981)
Portrait in Crystal
(1983)The master of the modern day crime thriller lends his directing skills to this amazing kung-fu crime fantasy. Hua Shan impressed audiences with such films as The Criminals trilogy, then dazzled them in an entirely different way by helming the superheroic Super Inframan and Flying Guillotine 2.

Bolo
(1979)A pair of Ching Dynasty prisoners get pardoned and put in charge as village peacekeepers, but one is a sly womanizer and the other is all fists.

The Weird Man
(1983)Chang is known for his lone swordsman and hero movies and strangely The Weird Man still reflects this. Cheng plays a righteous, beheaded priest with supernatural powers that returns from the dead to wreak havoc against one of the corrupt kingdoms, making Cheng a heroic "swords-ghost". It is insane sanity to the maximum degree, a must see film.

The Emperor and His Brother
(1981)In order to restore order to China, who has been under the rule of the tyrannical Emperor Ching for 50 years, a rebellious brotherhood makes it their mission to disturb the throne.

Shaolin Prince
(1982)As the names of Chang Cheh and Liu Chia-liang became legendary, all-too-often the name of their equally valued collaborator, Tang Chia, is omitted.
The Duel of the Century
(1981)Liu Yung and Korean Venom Sun Chien team up to investigate the murder of a rival swordsman, unearthing a tangled deception, double-dealings and impostors along the way.

Funny Kung Fu
(1978)A young villager trains to become an expert fighter to conquer the two evil Kung Fu masters who are beating up and financially fleecing his town.

Disciples of the 36th Chamber
(1985)Shaolin students have to fight their way out of a royal Manchu wedding.

Killer Constable
(1980)Director Kuei Chih Hung was famous for his modern day crime thrillers, his horror flicks, and even his comedies. But if the only kung-fu film he ever made was this one, he'd still be spoken of with respect by even the most ardent martial arts movie fan.

Demon of the Lute
(1983)The "Scenario and Directed By" credit is rare, but Lung Yi-sheng warranted it for two memorable Shaw movies starring the lovely and lethal Kara Hui. This is the first - a beautiful fight fantasy of lute demons, magical arrows, bottomless abysses, an arduous quest, hermaphrodites, a villain named "Red-Haired Evil," and a mischievous knight named "Old Naughty.