Casts & Crew
Peter Chen Ho
Betty Loh Ti
Lee Kwan
King Hu
Tien Feng
Chen Yan-Yan
Ha Yee-Chau
Cheung Kwong-Chiu
Kao Pao-shu
Hao Li-Jen
Lui Ming
Han Ying-Chieh
Yue Wai
Lee Ying
Wong Chung
Wu Ma
Fan Mei-Sheng
Chang Pei-Shan
Jia Ling
Paul Chang Chung
Tang Ti
Fung Ngai
Cheng Miu
Chin Han
Luk Chu
Ku Feng
Chiu Hung
Leung Yui
Liu Chia-Liang
Lan Wei-Lieh
Erh Chun
Ling Hon
Tsang Choh-Lam
Yam Ho
Tung Choi-Bo
Chow Siu-Loi
Yu Leng-Fung
Cheung Chok-Chow
Kwan Yan
To Wing-Leung
Cheung Hei
Tony Lee Wan-Miu
Also Directed by King Hu
An esquire and a General eyes a priceless handwritten scroll by Tripitaka, held in a Temple library. The Abbot of the Temple selects his successor.
After having the emperor’s minister of defense executed, a power-grabbing eunuch sends assassins to trail the victim’s children to a remote point on the northern Chinese border. But that bloodthirsty mission is confounded by a mysterious group of fighters who arrive on the scene, intent on delivering justice and defending the innocent.
This gripping story centers on the romance between Wang Chin Lung and Sue San. Although they may be perfectly matched when it comes to their love for one other, the two come from remarkably different social ranks. While Chin Lung is the son of a respected government official, Su San is a prostitute, albeit a famous one.
Directed by some of most well known Chinese-language directors of the time, the portmanteau film Four Moods was an attempt to alleviate Li Han-hsiang’s financial troubles during the late 1960s. Arguably one of his best works, King Hu’s short Anger is an adaptation of the famous Peking opera San Cha Kou; set to opera instrumentation and stylishly shot, the film deftly captures the tense showdown between political schemers, avengers and vagabonds inside an inn. Li Han-hsiang’s Happiness, inspired by the Strange Tales of Liaozhai, tells a tale of reprieve for a kind-hearted ghost, while Pai Ching-Jui’s Joy and Lee Hsing’s Sadness both explore the fateful encounters between mortal men and ghostly women.
It's the 10th century BC, the emperor (Tien Feng) is not well, and the medicines he is receiving from con artist "Immortal Li" are in reality only making him worse. There is a man in a nearby kingdom, "Divine Physician" Chang Po-chao, whom it's said could cure his epilepsy, but the only way to bribe the head of the border guard is with a new work by painter Wei Yu-pi. He, meanwhile, wishes to be paid in jade, in fact with a specific piece, which requires a thief. But Ting Yu-yu, the best in the area, claims to be retired, though his daughter Li-ting (Cheng Pei-pei) seems enthusiastic. And for the sake of secrecy, the archivists originally sent to recruit Chang don't even know it's on behalf of the emperor!
A righteous husband-and-wife swordfighting duo struggle to protect China from the machinations of Japanese pirates and corrupt officials.
Jointly and respectively directed by King Hu, Lee Hsing, and Pai Ching-Jui, three major Taiwan directors of the 1970s, this film consist of three shorts with the same cast of two actors and one actress, who through reincarnation meet in three different times.
A comedy about the advertisement business, set in modern Taiwan.
Ming dynasty noblewoman Yang must escape from the evil eunuch Hsu. She seeks refuge at a decrepit town where she gets assistance from a naive scholar & a group of mysterious yet powerful monks.
A scholar, tasked to copy a sutra, meets with a mysterious old lady and her daughter in the mountains.