Iron Monkey (1993)
Iron Monkey is a Hong Kong variation of Robin Hood. Corrupt officials of a Chinese village are robbed by a masked bandit known as "Iron Monkey", named after a benevolent deity. When all else fails, the Governor forces a traveling physician into finding the bandit.
- Yuen Wo-Ping
- Tsui Hark
- Elsa Tang Bik-Yin
- Lau Tai-Muk
- Charcoal Tan
Rating: 7.4/10 by 288 users
Alternative Title:
Iron Monkey: The Young Wong Fei Hong - US
Iron Monkey - US
Siu nin Wong Fei Hung chi: Tit ma lau - CN
少年黃飛鴻之鐵馬騮 - HK
Siu nin Wong Fei Hung chi: Tit ma lau - HK
El Mono de Hierro - MX
Siunin Wong Fei-hung tsi titmalau - CL
少年黄飞鸿之铁马骝 - CN
Country:
Hong Kong
Taiwan
Language:
广州话 / 廣州話
Runtime: 01 hour 30 minutes
Budget: $11,000,000
Revenue: $14,681,661
Plot Keyword: martial arts, kung fu, secret identity, robin hood, iron monkey
This is a great kung-fu action film set in historical China. The fight choreography is done by Yuen Wo Ping, who has choreographed fighting in a number of great films, and later choreographed the fighting in The Matrix. His style is stamped all over the fights in the movie. As Kung Fu films go Iron Monkey has an interesting story woven in among familiar tropes. You see plenty of thugs get their comeuppance and there are a few light comedy scenes as well. The story centres around the "Iron Monkey", a Robin Hood-like character who robs from the rich and gives to the poor, who has a Batman-like secret identity. It is much more than "your kung-fu is no good, mine is better!" and the main characters are genuinely likeable and well acted. I think the English voice actors do a pretty good job. The villains are cartoonish in their badness, and the heroes always win, which is typical of the genre. If you like the genre, this is definitely one worth watching. Because it has an interesting story, it's also fairly accessible to folks who are not big kung fu fans.