The Killing Flag (Part 1)
The Killing Flag (Part 1) is a 1963 Hong Kong martial arts film direcred by Fung Chi-Kong.
Sze-To On
Fung Chi-Kong
Casts & Crew
Tang Pik-Wan
Lam Ka-Sing
Cecilia Lee Fung-Sing
Josephine Siao Fong-Fong
Sek Kin
Cheung Sang
Heung Hoi
Chow Gat
Liu Chia-Liang
Tong Kai
Fung Ging-Man
Also Directed by Fung Chi-Kong
Ghost story (originally released in parts 1 & 2) based on a Chinese opera.
Adaptation of a Chinese opera.
Musical from Hong Kong directed by Fung Chi-Kong.
Comedy from Hong Kong directed by Fung Chi-Kong.
Comedy from Hong Kong directed by Fung Chi-Kong.
The origin story of legendary kung fu masters.
Fantasy from Hong Kong directed by Fung Chi-Kong.
The town is rumoured to be haunted. Cheung Siu-chen pretends to be possessed so that her lover Lau Tin and his friend Lee Luk may heroically exorcise the ghost and curry favour with her father. Driven by greed and lust, the attendant of the ancestral temple and his underlings cast an enticing spell on Cheung and claim that Cheung is possessed with a fierce ghost. Lau and Lee expose the hoax and redeem Cheung. Cheung's father happily gives his consent to the marriage between his daughter and Lau.
Centring on the legend of the four ancient Chinese heroines, the film was a novelty for audiences at the time, as the singing performance was in Cantonese and used huangmei operatic rhythms—a popular trend in the 1960s, yet it retained traditional flavours by using operatic luogu percussion in the battle scenes. ‘Movie-fan princess' Connie Chan Po-chu not only sings Cantonese song and huangmei tone solos in the film, she also wows the audience by taking up the doumadanrole for the first time as the Tang dynasty female general Fan Lei-fa, showing off her superb operatic martial skills, together with Shum Chi-wah, inherited from Peking opera master Fen Ju Hua. Yu Kai's weaponry prowess and renowned female comedian Tam Lan-hing cross-dressing as a male general are also brilliant in this gem.
Chinese Opera comedy from Hong Kong directed by Fung Chi-Kong.