7-Man Army (1976) Review

"7-Man Army" Chinese Theatrical Poster

“7-Man Army” Chinese Theatrical Poster

AKA: Seven Man Army
Director: Chang Cheh
Cast: David Chiang, Ti Lung, Alexander Fu Sheng, Gordon Liu, Chen Kuan Tai, Lee I Min, Chi Kuan Chun, Pai Ying, Ting Wa Chung, Leung Kar-Yan, Johnny Wang, Miu Tin, Fung Ngai, Chen Ming Li, Chan Wai Lau
Running Time: 114 min.

By Mighty Peking Man

7-Man Army tells the story of seven Chinese soldiers (Ti Lung, Alexander Fu Sheng, Chen Kuan-Tai, David Chiang and… sorry, I can’t name the other three) who defend a fortress against thousands of Japanese troops and Mongolian mercenaries (led by Leung Kar-Yan, Gordon Liu and Wang Lung-Wei). The film is set in 1933, during Japan’s initial occupation of China.

Though not as Americanized as Boxer Rebellion, 7-Man Army is still a very much a high budget, epic-like, polished production. It features hundreds of extras, big explosions, and even actual fighter planes dropping bombs.

7-Man Army is obviously a war movie, but don’t let the word ‘war’ fool you. Sure, it has the gun-battles, military jive and typical war film scenarios; but it equally qualifies as a good ol’ Shaw Brothers kung fu flick. In a way, it’s kind of funny – during many instances, hand-to-hand combat is the primary weapon of choice for the soliders; and if it’s not with their bare hands (or feet), they’ll still prefer to use their bayonets instead of just shooting the damn rifle – as silly as it sounds, it’s acceptable because it’s Chang Cheh.

Sporadically throughout, each of the seven men have their own little flashback segment (a la Bruce Lee, John Saxon and Jim Kelly in Enter The Dragon), explaining why they each joined the army. These mini stories help break up the war-setting a bit, making the film’s pace even better.

The finale packs one hell of a punch and if you’re familiar with most of Chang Cheh’s work, it should come to no surprise that 7-Man Army ends with a great dose of heroic bloodshed. Let’s just say that Willem Dafoe’s death scene in Platoon ain’t got nothing on this…

Recommended.

Mighty Peking Man’s Rating: 7/10



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10 Responses to 7-Man Army (1976) Review

  1. pingu305 says:

    great ensemble shaw brothers casting and in different modern times:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9iSRMiq2PLQ&feature=plcp

  2. ZOUHAIR says:

    I WATCHED THIS FILM IN 1969 , SO HOW ITS WRITTEN 1976

  3. ZOUHAIR says:

    I am sure, DUNIA CINEMA in Beirut showed this movie before 1970

  4. STDZ says:

    I have the dub, but it’s a bootleg and some of the Shaw Bootlegs look like trash. THey need to release a bunch of Shaw movies so I don’t have to watch a bootleg anymore.

  5. Pedro says:

    This movie is the reason why I say Chang Cheh, was the director that had the knack to assemble a cast, that had chemistry between each other, better than any of Shaw poll of directors. You know those guys will die even before the movie starts, but it’s the story telling, and actors that makes it compelling, so you want to know, how was their fight, how far did they go before they perished. This is Cheh and his heroic bloodshed movies at each best. The bond between characters, their motivations, all counts when the desperate fight starts, and one by one go down, you feel each death. Even if the ending is corny, you feel good to know, their sacrifices were not in vain. A must watch film.

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