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Eastern Condors Details

1986 Certificate 18
  • Rated:
  • 60
  • from 684 members

EASTERN CONDORS is director Sammo Hung's high-energy version of THE DIRTY DOZEN. To win their freedom, a group of hardened Asian convicts agree to go on a suicidal mission to Vietnam and destroy an abandoned ammunitions dump before the Vietcong discovers it. Along the way, the men run into a trio of female freedom fighters and .. Read more

Starring Sammo Hung, Yuen Biao, Lam Ching Ying, Joyce Godenzi
Director Sammo Hung
Genres Action/Adventure, World Cinema

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Eastern Condors

EASTERN CONDORS is director Sammo Hung's high-energy version of THE DIRTY DOZEN. To win their freedom, a group of hardened Asian convicts agree to go on a suicidal mission to Vietnam and destroy an abandoned ammunitions dump before the Vietcong discovers it. Along the way, the men run into a trio of female freedom fighters and a freewheeling martial artist named Rat, played by Hung's Peking Opera "brother," Yuen Biao. The film borrows liberally from other Vietnam war movies (the Russian roulette scene from THE DEER HUNTER, for instance), but there are plenty of imaginative turns, including an instance when Hung uses leaves as deadly projectiles. As is typical in Hung's films, the action choreography is fluid and energetic. Hung's wife, Joyce Godenzi, plays one of the Cambodian guerrillas, Oscar-winner Haing S. Ngor (THE KILLING FIELDS) appears as a mentally deranged peasant, and Yuen Wah (Hung's and Biao's other stage brother) gives a quirky performance as the relentless commander of the Vietcong forces.

Starring Sammo Hung, Yuen Biao, Lam Ching Ying, Joyce Godenzi
Director Sammo Hung
Studio E1 ENTERTAINMENT
Run time DVD: 1 hr 33 mins
Certificate Certificate 18
Genres Action/Adventure, World Cinema
Language DVD: Cantonese
Dubbed English
Subtitles DVD: English
Released DVD: 02 Apr 2001
Production year: 1986
Format DVD
  • Most helpful member's review of Eastern Condors

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  • 11 out of 15 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars [Highly rated reviewer]

    Eastern Condors

    Eastern Condors features Sammo Hung as the leader of a group of criminals recruited by Army officer Lam Ching Ying (another Chinese Opera graduate) to destroy a weapons dump in Vietnam before the vietcong (led by Yuen Wah) can get their hands on it. The group parachutes into the jungle to rendez vous with vietnamese guerillas (led by Sammo's real life wife Joyce Godenzi) and that's really where the fun begins.

    While it's missing Jackie Chan (who was filming Project A Part 2, a sequel that sorely misses Sammo and Yuen Biao, who both appeared in the first film) one of the great strengths of Eastern Condors is the all star cast. Sammo put in a huge amount of work before this film, always famous as the fat kung fu star he lost a lot of weight so he'd be able to execute the complicted moves and flying kicks he wanted for this movie. He looks different; not fat, just substantial. Yuen Biao's wiry shape alway lent itself to acrobatics and here he executes some absolutely breathtaking moves, even when he's not fighting Biao is incapable of moving with out real grace. Yuen Wah had created the robotic movement of his bad guy character for an earlier film, which had flopped, he revisits it here and creates a truly memorable villain (so much so that he'd all but reprise the role for Dragons Forever a couple of years on). Lam Ching Ying doesn't, sadly, have a lot of fighting to do but, always the best actor in Sammo's stock company, he turns in an effective performance as the officer who is growing conflicted about his mission. It's strange to see Haing S Ngor in this film (he plays the mad brother of Lam Ching Ying's CO) but interessting to note that, by dint of his work in The Killing Fields, he may go down as the only Oscar winning actor to have appeared in a chinese kung-fu movie.

    The action, as you'd expect from Sammo, takes precedence over everything and it's among the best he's ever executed. The gunfights are strong but it's the martial arts that you come for and from Joyce Godenzi's knife wielding guerilla to the opera brothers everyone impresses. The best fights are, as ever, saved for the final sequence when first Yuen Biao and Yuen Wah have an astonishing fight; Wah really impressing with his blinding speed, not for nothing was he Bruce Lee's acrobatics double and then Sammo and Yuen Wah having the final face off.

    Typically of Sammo the action is bloody and brutal and nobody is spared. Godenzi may inflict a blow in her first scene which will make everyone wince but that doesn't save her character from an exceedingly nasty fate in the final scene.

    While the action is the focus (and who'd want it any other way?) there's more than enough drama in the story to keep you watching. A scene at VC outpost makes you wonder if John Woo was taking notes for his brilliant Bullet in the Head which came out about three years later and there are good perfomances from Lam Ching Ying, Sammo and Joyce Godenzi which also hold the attention.

    Eastern Condors blend of brilliant martial arts action and the war films familliar to western audiences provide an excellent entrace to a much maligned genre. I highly recommend it.

      • SAI81 from Tonbridge
  • Most recent members' review of Eastern Condors

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  • 6 out of 8 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 3 stars

    Warning...

    ...avoid films where reviewers drone on forever with sickly praise. I'm talking about you, Mr Kuby.

      • A customer from UK
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684 Member ratings
  • 100
55
  • 90
43
  • 80
107
  • 70
113
  • 60
143
  • 50
81
  • 40
59
  • 30
34
  • 20
31
  • 10
18

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    • Eastern Condors
      EASTERN CONDORS is director Sammo Hung's high-energy version of THE DIRTY DOZEN. To win their freedom, a group of hardened Asian convicts agree to go on a suicidal mission to Vietnam and destroy an abandoned ammunitions dump before the Vietcong discovers it. Along the way, the men run into a trio ...