The Fearless Hyena(Chinese: Cười quyền quái chiêu ) (released inJapanasCrazy Monkey,[1]and also released in theUnited StatesasRevenge of the Dragon) is a 1979 Hong Kongmartial arts filmstarring, written and directed byJackie Chanin his directorial debut. The film was a box office success, and released in Hong Kong on 17 February 1979.[2]

The Fearless Hyena
Theatrical release poster
Cười quyền quái chiêu
Directed byJackie Chan
Written byJackie Chan
Produced byHsu Li-hwa
StarringJackie Chan
James Tien
Dean Shek
CinematographyChen Yung-shu
Edited byLiang Yung-tsan
Music byFrankie Chan
Chen Hsua-chi
Production
company
Goodyear Movie Company
Distributed byLo Wei Motion Picture Co., Ltd.
Release date
  • 17 February 1979(1979-02-17)(Hong Kong)
Running time
97 minutes
CountryHong Kong
LanguageCantonese
Box officeUS$2.9 million(est.)

The film later spawned a sequel titledFearless Hyena Part II.In West Germany, the film had been marketed under the titlesDer Shadowmanand alsoDer Superfighter III.

The film initially focuses on a martial arts student who lacksself-controland has agamblinghabit. He is soon offered a position as a martial arts teacher in a school with a poor reputation. He unwittingly attracts the attention of a villainous kung fu master.

Plot

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Ching Hing-lung (Jackie Chan) is a youngster, living in a remote village with his grandfather, kung fu master Ching Pang-fei (James Tien). Lung does not take his training seriously enough, he gambles, and he gets into fights which lead him to display the skills his grandfather has told him he must keep secret.

Lung briefly finds employment selling coffins, working for an unscrupulous proprietor (Dean Shek), who even stoops to selling second-hand coffins. Lung is fired when he accidentally traps his Boss in one of the coffins.

After making his escape, he runs into three thugs he had beaten up earlier, who ask him to teach them kung fu. Lung meets their sifu, Tee Cha (Lee Kwan), the unskilled leader of the Everything Clan. Master Tee offers Lung a lucrative job training his students and fighting against the top fighters from rival schools. This boosts the reputation of the school and of the scheming Master Tee.

However, Lung makes the mistake of naming the school under theYing Yeeclan name. This comes to the attention of evil kung fu master Yam Tin-fa (Yam Sai-kwoon), who finds and kills Lung's grandfather. But, Lung eventually takes revenge for his grandfather's murder after undergoing rigorous training from The Unicorn (Chan Wai-lau).

Cast

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  • Jackie Chanas Shing Lung
  • James Tienas Ching Pang-pei, Lung's grandfather
  • Dean Shekas The Coffin Seller
  • Chan Hui-lau as Unicorn
  • Yen Shi-kwan as Yen
  • Lee Kwanas Tee Cha
  • Rocky Cheng as "The Willow Sword" Bar Tar
  • Chiang Chih-ping
  • Chu Siu-wa
  • Eagle Han-yingas Chin Wa-li
  • Hp Hing-nam
  • Chui Yuen
  • Wong Ken-mei
  • Kim Sae-ok
  • Kuo Nai-hua
  • Chang Ma
  • Peng Kong
  • Wong Yiu as Stony Egg
  • Man Lee-pang
  • Wong Chi-sang as One of Yam's men
  • Wang Jia-en

Fight scenes

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Fearless Hyenafeatures several unusual slapstick fight scenes, including achopsticksduel(to which an homage was later paid in the cartoon filmKung Fu Panda), Hing-lung fighting while disguised as across-eyedintellectually disabledman, disguised as a woman, and using "Emotional Kung-Fu", a style that involves vividly displaying the emotions of anger, sorrow, joy and happiness to find the opponent's weakness, thus fighting whilst crying or laughing.

Box office

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In Hong Kong, the film grossed a total ofHK$5,445,535(US$1,088,526) at the Hong Kong box office.[2]

In South Korea, where it released in 1980, the film sold 436,545 tickets inSeoul City,[3]equivalent to an estimated873,090,000[4](US$1,437,345).

In France, it sold 187,706 tickets in 1984,[5]equivalent to an estimated €506,806[6](US$399,870).

Combined, the film grossed an estimatedUS$2,925,741(equivalent to $13,000,000 in 2024) in Asia and Europe.

Superfighter trilogy

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  • Der Superfighter III
    • (The Fearless Hyena)
  • Der Superfighter II
    • (Fearless Hyena Part II)

See also

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References

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  1. ^Rōmaji:クレージー・モンキー,lit. "Kurējī Monkī"
  2. ^ab"The Fearless Hyena (1979)".Hong Kong Movie DataBase.Retrieved28 November2018.
  3. ^"영화정보"[Movie Information].KOFIC(in Korean).Korean Film Council.Retrieved26 August2019.
  4. ^Park, Seung Hyun (2000).A Cultural Interpretation of Korean Cinema, 1988-1997.Indiana University.p. 119.Average Ticket Prices in Korea, 1974-1997 [...] * Source: Korea Cinema Yearbook (1997-1998) * Currency: won [...] Foreign [...] 1980 [...] 2,000
  5. ^Soyer, Renaud (4 February 2014)."Jackie Chan Box Office".Box Office Story(in French).Retrieved1 July2020.
  6. ^"Cinema market".Cinema, TV and radio in the EU: Statistics on audiovisual services (Data 1980-2002)(2003 ed.).Office for Official Publications of the European Communities.2003. pp. 31–64 (61).ISBN92-894-5709-0.ISSN1725-4515.Retrieved23 May2020.{{cite book}}:|website=ignored (help)
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