Little Godfather from Hong Kong

1974 "Trained to destroy! Hired to kill! Primed to explode!"
5.9| 1h27m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 28 June 1974 Released
Producted By: The Eternal Film (H.K.) Co.
Country: Hong Kong
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Bruce Liang plays a Chinese Kung Fu movie star, who during his free time carries on a one-man crusade against drug dealers. The villains trick Liang into signing up to appear in a new martial arts movie. The plan is to kill Our Hero while the cameras are running, and make it look like an accident.

Genre

Action

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Director

Ng See-Yuen

Production Companies

The Eternal Film (H.K.) Co.

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Little Godfather from Hong Kong Audience Reviews

Steineded How sad is this?
Intcatinfo A Masterpiece!
Kamila Bell This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
Scarlet The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
dafrosts I adore Bruce Leung Siu-Lung and Kurata Yasuaki. The plus was Mang Hoi as Bruce's little brother, Stone/Ah Shi. The concept seemed plausible. A Drug Cartel hires Italian Mob Boss Don Caro to knock off Interpol agents to halt investigations into the Cartel. Things go well for Caro until Wang Liu (Siu-Lung) saves an Agent. Blowing up the dog was over the top. Sadly, the plot goes downhill from there. Wang Liu, with little brother Stone/Ah Shi (Mag Hoi) in tow, heads to Italy to "make a movie". Wang Liu easily spots and eliminates the worst assassins I have ever seen outside a "comedy". Caro refuses to dispatch the obviously best choice to eliminate Wang, his filial son Sakada (Kurata). Sakada has mad skills. Nearly as good as Wang's. Caro prefers to continue permitting his most inept son, Cani (Mario Cutini), to attempt fulfilling the assignment. The decision costs Cani to lose in the end. BTW - the gun Cani uses to shoot at Wang isn't the same one Wang returns.Wang is blackmailed into helping Caro with a diamond deal, in exchange for Ah Shi's life. The deal goes well, but Ah Shi is still killed, prompting Wang to seek revenge.I don't get the fight between Wang and Sakada , on any level. Sakada keeps running away. Why? These are men capable of an incredible fight, yet Sakada keeps running away. The coliseum scene is hard to watch, aside from the annoying echo. They run more than they show off their skills. Someone explain the snow. There's no sign of it the entire time they're in Rome. Sakada runs away from the coliseum and BOOM - snow.The men exchange a few blows while running through the snow, but nothing spectacular. The whole "snow fight" was unnecessary. The finale is another eye roller. Yet another gun that never requires reloading is used. The red mini car would have exploded long before it finally came to a stop, if that many rounds had actually been fired at it. Wang kills Don Caro using a tiny han gun, then picks up Don Caro's weapon and unleashes round after round into Caro's dead body.Bruce Leung Siu-Lung, Kurata Yasuaki, Mang Hoi and The masked Thugs - Tony Leung Siu-Hung & Lam Hak-Ming are the reasons I give this a 7. Plot wise, it deserves a 3.
Leofwine_draca In the early '70s some crazy stuff was coming out of Italy. The martial arts craze was a big influence and even led to a mini-genre, that of the "kung fu spaghetti western". However, LITTLE GODFATHER OF HONG KONG is the only Italy/Hong Kong collaboration I know that mixes in the martial arts genre with the then-hot polizia (or crime thrillers) that were flooding the screens in Italy. Here, a family of the Italian Mafia find themselves up against a Chinese movie star and martial artist, who unwittingly gets involved when he thwarts an assassination attempt made by them on an Interpol agent.What follows is a plot spread very thinly, which is basically an excuse for a series of well-staged fight sequences. But when these scenes take place at some of Rome's most gorgeous locations, you won't hear me complaining. In particular the final shoot-out takes place in a beautiful valley and is a treat to watch. In fact I knew I was in for a good time from the opening scenes of this film, which depict a series of staged assassinations taking place in various countries - one involves an exploding dog! What follows is a cool car chase with stunts, scenes of Wang's family and friends being bumped off and Wang gradually eliminating Carro's evil family - first his three sons, then finally Carro himself. The bad guys fight back by attacking Wang with an exploding camera, electrocution, shoot-outs, you name it, but being a Chinese martial artist he is always one step ahead.Bruce Liang (real name Liang Hsiao, renamed to cash in on the obvious success of Bruce Lee) is Wang (not WONG!), playing very much a simple Bruce Lee-type role. He's charismatic, agile, a high-kicker, and everything you could want from a martial artist. He's ably supported by the likes of the beautiful Shirley Corrigan as an actress (who unsurprisingly appears naked in the bathroom) and screen heavyweight Gordon Mitchell, playing an evil Nazi complete with fake German dubbing! Mitchell's death in particular is a good one, as falling from a high tower he turns into an unconvincing dummy before hitting the ground below.The fight sequences are well-staged and make good use of props, with one baddie's head being burnt off in a fireplace, another being fried by electricity, and some blood and violence on top of that (including a few neck-breakings for good measure). Despite a high body count for the good guys (basically Wang is the only one left standing!), the film has a jovial tone throughout and never takes itself too seriously - for example the scene in which Wang takes down a pair of Russian thugs. Therefore it's good fun for kung fu addicts.
ckormos1 By the first expository news flash there is no doubt this is a both nostrils stinker. There is a good reason for this. Hong Kong kung fu stars go to Europe on vacation and while they are there they throw together the cheapest possible movie to help pay the bills. This movie has so many low points it's hard to decide the lowest. Is it the exploding dog? Is it Bruce fighting at the coliseum pretending to be Bruce Lee and they even threw in the cat? Is it the pastey white stunt men who fall to the ground whenever Bruce throws a kick within a meter? My opinion the worst scene is when Kurata Yasuaki chases Bruce through the snow for about ten minutes and then they don't even fight! I gave it a "1" only because "0" was not an option.
hungoverblacksmith Although giving the film a paltry "1" rating, I should perhaps add that if your rating scale is for, say, films that are so bad they are quite hilarious, then this one might rate an "8" or "9". And that is, of course, why we suffer through such escapades of cinematic ineptitude, because in these trying times of world strife and (to crib Tom Lehrer) "universal brouhaha" it is always nice to find a chuckle in films with no pretensions to grandeur, quality, or even basic talent."Little Godfather" is one such film. Highlights for me include: The "exploding dog" sequence near the start of the film- watch it slowly and laugh. Or the chase scene through Rome which suddenly ends up outside the city and in snow (even though there has been no snow through the entire film, and of course, no snow in the following scene). Or perhaps my favourite, the near-sentimental moment of the film when the arch-villain laments the passing of his son: just when you think there will be some emotional depth to the movie, his speech brings it all crashing back into overblown badness.Grab some friends, have a beer, some popcorn perhaps, and let it wash over you. The fact that it is a "Wu-Tang Clan" DVD release only adds to the ridiculous ineptitude of it all. You can find 'em in the $2.88 bin at Wal-Mart. Better than spending $6 renting "The Day After Tomorrow"...