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1992 Hong Kong film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moon Warriors (in Chinese 戰神傳說) is a 1992 Hong Kong wuxia film directed by Sammo Hung, written by Alex Law, and produced by Jessica Chan. The film stars Andy Lau, Kenny Bee, Anita Mui and Maggie Cheung. The film was released theatrically in Hong Kong on 19 December 1992.
Moon Warriors | |||||||||||
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Chinese name | |||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 戰神傳說 | ||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 战神传说 | ||||||||||
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Directed by | Sammo Hung | ||||||||||
Written by | Alex Law | ||||||||||
Produced by | Jessica Chan | ||||||||||
Starring | Andy Lau Kenny Bee Anita Mui Maggie Cheung | ||||||||||
Cinematography | Arthur Wong Cheung Man-po Tam Chi-wai | ||||||||||
Edited by | Kam Ma | ||||||||||
Music by | Mark Lui James Wong Sherman Chow | ||||||||||
Production company | |||||||||||
Distributed by | Newport Entertainment (Hong Kong) | ||||||||||
Release date |
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Running time | 83 minutes | ||||||||||
Country | Hong Kong | ||||||||||
Language | Cantonese | ||||||||||
Box office | HK$11,159,986 (in 1992)
HK$27,000,000 (in 1993) Total over HK$38,159,986 |
Fei is a simple fisherman who possesses great sword-fighting prowess and rescues the 13th Prince of Yin from assassins sent by his brother, the 14th Prince (Kelvin Wong), who is attempting to usurp his throne. Fei invites the injured 13th Prince and his entourage to his village and allows the prince to heal, and the two become fast friends. The next morning, the 14th Prince's troupes have made their way to the village, so Fei leads the 13th Prince and his entourage to hide inside a mausoleum, which turns out to be the tomb of the King of Yin, the 13th Prince's father, and thus, Fei learns of the prince's identity. Fei joins the 13th Prince on his journey to find the Lord of Lan-ling (Chang Yi), hoping to get assistant from the lord's army to defeat the 14th Prince, but they encounter the 14th Prince and his troupes. While fighting off the troupes, the 13th Prince entrusts his bodyguard, Mo-sin and gives Fei a piece of jade to meet the Lord of Lan-ling and escort his daughter and the prince's fiancé, Princesses Yuet-nga, back.
Fei and Mo-sin meet the lord and Yuet-nga but are ambushed by the 14th Prince's assassins and fends them off. As they escort Yuet-nga on the run, they encounter another group of assassins so Mo-siun stays behind while Fei and Yuet-nga continue on. While staying in a cave during the night, Fei and Yuet-nga were attacked by a face-concealed assassin who they encounter again the next day where Fei was impaled and injured while protecting Yuet-nga. Yuet-nga nurses Fei's wound and the two fall in love as they spend time together and Fei gifts her a bunny. Meanwhile, the assassin who attacked Fei and Yuet-nga turns out to be Mo-sin, who was sent by the 14th Prince to spy on his brother. The 14th Prince threatens to poison Mo-sin if she fails to kill his brother by Moon Autumn.
Fei brings Yuet-nga back to his fishing village where she is reunited with the 13th Prince and Lord of Lan-ling announces the engagement of the prince with her daughter, the prince also awards Fei the title of the General of Restoring the Country, but the latter refuses as he is heartbroken and just wants to just live a simple life, and Yuet-nga bides a final farewell to Fei before getting married. At night, Mo-sin found the chance to kill the 13th Prince while the latter was napping, she finds her unable to so haven fallen in love with him. Yuet-nga discovers Mo-sin as a traitor after seeing the 13th Prince's entourage dead and informs the prince. Mo-sin has a change of heart and warns the 13th Prince about his brother's plan.
The next day, the 14th Prince leads his troupes into Fei's village where they slaughter 89 villagers, while Fei singlehandedly kills a number of the troupes in a fit a rage. The 14th Prince then confronts his brother, Yuet-nga and Mo-sin inside the mausoleum where he mortally wounds Mo-sin and the 13th Prince and injures Yuet-nga, until Fei barges in and fights the 14th Prince to avenge the deaths of his fellow villagers. Fei is outmatched until his pet killer whale, Neptune, whips the 14th Prince, allowing Yuet-nga to blind the 14th Prince, who then delivers a devastating blow to Yuet-nga. As Yuet-nga dies in Fei's arms, the 14th Prince gets up and stabs Fei, but he is killed when the King's tomb cracks and falls on him. Fei then narrates how he woke up in the middle of the sea with Neptune afterwards, and the mausoleum has collapsed, with Yuet-nga, the 13th Prince, 14th Prince and Mo-sin buried inside. When Fei revisits years after, wildlife flowers have grown on it, reminding him of the dead bodies beneath it.
Song | Composer | Lyricist | Singer | Notes |
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You and I Are the Most Freedom (最自由是我和你) | James Wong | Andy Lau | Theme song | |
Let Spring Show My Smile (趁春濃為我展歡顏) | Sally Yeh | Insert theme | ||
Empire gave the film a score of 4/5 stars, praising its balance in character development and jaw-breaking action.[2] Andrew Saroch of Far East Films gave the film a similar score of 4/5 stars and praises the quality of the action choreography and the emotional nature of the characters' dilemmas,[3] J. Doyle Wallis of DVD Talk gave the film a score of 3.5/5 stars, praising Andy Lau and Anita Mui's performances, the action choreography and the set locations.[4] Time Out describes the film as "a visually splendid, dramatically rich, but somewhat rarefied martial arts yarn."[5]
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