Kung Fu Zombie cover art

Kung Fu Zombie Reviews

Certificate 18
  • Rated:
  • 50
  • from 106 members

A criminal comes to town in order to kill Billy Chong over a past dispute. But instead of getting his own hands dirty, he hires a Taoist wizard to animate some zombies to do the job for him. The plan goes horribly wrong, and the criminal ends up getting killed in his own trap. This antagonises the villain's spirit and he forces .. Read more

Starring Shum Yan Chi, Billy Chong, To Chong Yeong-mun Kwon
Director I-Jung Hua
Genres Action/Adventure

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  • Most helpful members' reviews (3) of Kung Fu Zombie

    View all
  • 3 out of 3 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars

    Zany fun with lots of style!

    This is a good example of low budget cinema (and Hong Kong cinema) in that creativity seems to abound from the fact that the film is low budget (take for instance a quote from Halliwell's Film Guide which said The Big Boss was possibly Bruce Lee's best film - which is probably because the low budget nature of the film gave Lee more presence and relied more on his acting ability).

    Kung Fu Zombie was a big hit in the year of 1980 and whilst the film may seem little more than a cash-in on Sammo Hung's Close Encounters Of The Spooky Kind and Lau Kar Leung's The Spiritual Boxer, the film has a very strong sense of style (the editing in particular is very clever and so cutting-edge, almost avant-guard filmmaking - especially during a scene in which the 'zombie' of the title {really a vampire} kills off a person near the end of the film in a frenziedly shot manner which surely must have inspired Sam Raimi when he was making his Evil Dead films, something which kungfucinema.com owner Mark Pollard, himself, had stated in his review).

    The fight scenes are very different from ones during the era of which this film was made in, they're extremely fast-paced but not done to the detriment of the enjoyment factor (like Ching Siu Tung's fight scenes). But the most fitting description is that the fight scenes are Corey Yuen Kwai on acid whilst watching Charlie Chaplin.

    There's a fight scene with Billy Chong in the middle of the film which seems to come from nowhere but I don't think it came from any other movie so maybe a few scenes were left on the cutting room floor which would have explained the appearance of such an encounter, but it certainly came from this movie.

    Like I said before, this film must surely have influenced Sam Raimi i.e. the combination of mad-cap humour interlaced with moments of extreme violence and inanimate objects that laugh (think Evil Dead 2; in this movie there's an invisible person wearing a hat and the way he laughs {i.e. the motion of the hat} is reminiscent of the way the objects laughed in Evil Dead 2).

    In fact, to digress from this movie for a moment, there are ideas present in Close Encounters Of The Spooky Kind which pop up in Sam Raimi's Evil Dead films i.e. the creepy mirror reflection, the make-up of one particular creature and the possessed hand.

    Of course, in Sammo's movie there's a scene similar to Conan The Barbarian which involves the protagonist's body being painted in order to counteract the spirits - so maybe there was no plagiarism there but just two people inventing the wheel.

    Though to be honest, the special effects in this film are very poor and make the Evil Dead films seem like the creation of George Lucas and Jim Henson. Also, strangely though funnily enough, whenever the villain shows up the James Bond theme plays!!!

    Nevertheless, Kung Fu Zombie is a cult-classic with black humour which makes other Kung Fu movies seem like kids flicks by comparison!

      • Joseph Kuby from Colne, Lancashire, England, United Kingdom.
  • 1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    absolutely stinking

    I am a big fan of really badly dubbed kung fu films and a HUGE fan of zombie films...

    BUT this really stinks of decomposed flesh...

    the image quality is really poor and the action is really rubbish... it might be amusing after about 15 hits on a bong but thats not my bag. I just turned it off and watched an Alejandro Jodrowski film instead.

      • pure evil from interzone
  • Rated - 1 star

    Rubbis!!!!!

    No good at all I am a big fan of Martial arts and zombies films so i thought this was the one for me But NO! dont make the same mistake i made by renting this it is really aload of crap!.

      • André Hartley from Boro, NE, England
  • Most recent members' reviews (2) of Kung Fu Zombie

    View all
  • Rated - 3 stars

    Mind Blowing Stuff.

    This is a real case of style over substance. Madcap comedy, kung fu excess and blood splattered gore all combine in the ultra low budget martial arts horror. This is not the best of this genre, but it is definitely one that you will remember.

      • Ian Davies from Merthyr Tydfil, South Wales
  • Rated - 3 stars

    Dracula or zombies

    I couldn't tell if the bad guys were a Dracula or zombies, but if you want to have a laugh then rent it.

      • Binh La from Berkshire, Great Britain
  • 3 out of 3 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars

    Zany fun with lots of style!

    This is a good example of low budget cinema (and Hong Kong cinema) in that creativity seems to abound from the fact that the film is low budget (take for instance a quote from Halliwell's Film Guide which said The Big Boss was possibly Bruce Lee's best film - which is probably because the low budget nature of the film gave Lee more presence and relied more on his acting ability).

    Kung Fu Zombie was a big hit in the year of 1980 and whilst the film may seem little more than a cash-in on Sammo Hung's Close Encounters Of The Spooky Kind and Lau Kar Leung's The Spiritual Boxer, the film has a very strong sense of style (the editing in particular is very clever and so cutting-edge, almost avant-guard filmmaking - especially during a scene in which the 'zombie' of the title {really a vampire} kills off a person near the end of the film in a frenziedly shot manner which surely must have inspired Sam Raimi when he was making his Evil Dead films, something which kungfucinema.com owner Mark Pollard, himself, had stated in his review).

    The fight scenes are very different from ones during the era of which this film was made in, they're extremely fast-paced but not done to the detriment of the enjoyment factor (like Ching Siu Tung's fight scenes). But the most fitting description is that the fight scenes are Corey Yuen Kwai on acid whilst watching Charlie Chaplin.

    There's a fight scene with Billy Chong in the middle of the film which seems to come from nowhere but I don't think it came from any other movie so maybe a few scenes were left on the cutting room floor which would have explained the appearance of such an encounter, but it certainly came from this movie.

    Like I said before, this film must surely have influenced Sam Raimi i.e. the combination of mad-cap humour interlaced with moments of extreme violence and inanimate objects that laugh (think Evil Dead 2; in this movie there's an invisible person wearing a hat and the way he laughs {i.e. the motion of the hat} is reminiscent of the way the objects laughed in Evil Dead 2).

    In fact, to digress from this movie for a moment, there are ideas present in Close Encounters Of The Spooky Kind which pop up in Sam Raimi's Evil Dead films i.e. the creepy mirror reflection, the make-up of one particular creature and the possessed hand.

    Of course, in Sammo's movie there's a scene similar to Conan The Barbarian which involves the protagonist's body being painted in order to counteract the spirits - so maybe there was no plagiarism there but just two people inventing the wheel.

    Though to be honest, the special effects in this film are very poor and make the Evil Dead films seem like the creation of George Lucas and Jim Henson. Also, strangely though funnily enough, whenever the villain shows up the James Bond theme plays!!!

    Nevertheless, Kung Fu Zombie is a cult-classic with black humour which makes other Kung Fu movies seem like kids flicks by comparison!

      • Joseph Kuby from Colne, Lancashire, England, United Kingdom.
  • 1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    absolutely stinking

    I am a big fan of really badly dubbed kung fu films and a HUGE fan of zombie films...

    BUT this really stinks of decomposed flesh...

    the image quality is really poor and the action is really rubbish... it might be amusing after about 15 hits on a bong but thats not my bag. I just turned it off and watched an Alejandro Jodrowski film instead.

      • pure evil from interzone
  • Rated - 1 star

    Rubbis!!!!!

    No good at all I am a big fan of Martial arts and zombies films so i thought this was the one for me But NO! dont make the same mistake i made by renting this it is really aload of crap!.

      • André Hartley from Boro, NE, England
  • Rated - 3 stars

    Mind Blowing Stuff.

    This is a real case of style over substance. Madcap comedy, kung fu excess and blood splattered gore all combine in the ultra low budget martial arts horror. This is not the best of this genre, but it is definitely one that you will remember.

      • Ian Davies from Merthyr Tydfil, South Wales
  • Rated - 3 stars

    Dracula or zombies

    I couldn't tell if the bad guys were a Dracula or zombies, but if you want to have a laugh then rent it.

      • Binh La from Berkshire, Great Britain

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    • Kung Fu Zombie
      A criminal comes to town in order to kill Billy Chong over a past dispute. But instead of getting his own hands dirty, he hires a Taoist wizard to animate some zombies to do the job for him. The plan goes horribly wrong, and the criminal ends up getting killed in his own trap. This antagonises the ...

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106 Member ratings
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16
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10

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