GODFATHER OF HONG KONG: MOVIES, MAFIA & MASCULINITY

Back then, masculinity was something to celebrate and boast about; and testosterone was abundantly rampant in endless kung fu pictures made in Hong Kong, Taiwan and other Asian territories. Chan Wai Man (or, as he's known in Mandarin on the credits of many of his movies -- Chen Hui Min) is among Hong Kong's many true to life Tough Guys.



With an already heavy reputation as a street fighter, martial arts ability in spades, and one helluva scowl, Chan was a natural for big screen domination. Most martial artists who got into movies got a few bit parts or supporting roles before diving in as a lead. Not Chan. He started out with meaty roles from the get-go.
The insert photo at left is one such production -- Kao Pao Shu's Thai shot THE FEMALE FUGITIVE (1975). Early in his career, he played a fair number of good guys, but ultimately made villain roles his raison d'etre. With 1976s JUMPING ASH, Chan made an imprint on Asian audiences as a cold-blooded killer. These types of roles suited his intimidating looks, and he played quite a few psychos throughout his career in films like THE MAD COLD-BLOODED MURDER (1981) and PROFILE IN ANGER (1984) to name two. He possessed an immense amount of versatility that he never got enough credit for.
Throughout this article, there are a list of ten recommended movies from the career of Chan Wai Man aka Chen Hui Min. His participation varies in some of these, but this selected ten films are ten examples of satisfying entertainment featuring the Godfather From Hong Kong.
1. TEN FROM CHEN: THE BRAVEST FIST (1974)


Award winning director Ho Fan is cited as discovering Chan, but the man himself has stated it was Victor Lam Lim Huen who initially got him film roles. These began with two Ho Fan directed films -- LOVE AND BLOOD (1972) and the mundane sex and kung fu flick ADVENTURE IN DENMARK (1973). Both were produced by Victor Lam.

During this period and beyond, Chan resided predominantly in the independent film arena. He appeared in occasional big studio productions for both Shaw Brothers and Golden Harvest, but seemed most comfortable freelancing. He worked for most all the major directors, and even counted directing among his own list of credits, as well as a producer and action designer. In addition, Chan Wai Man was a martial arts instructor in Hong Kong.
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Chen (right) battles Lu Chuan (Shikamura Ito-left) in DEADLY CHASE FOR JUSTICE (1977) |
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THE LEGAL ILLEGALS (1981) |
Like another friend of Chan's, Hwang Jang Lee, Chan looks like he means it when he punches and kicks his foes in his fight scenes. His actions are loaded with a passionate verve that look like pain is truly being administered to the unlucky victim on the receiving end.
2. TEN FROM CHEN: BROKEN OATH (1977)
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Chen Hui Min (left) duels with Bruce Liang (right) during the finale of BROKEN OATH (1977) |

DRAGON LORDS & ANGRY TIGERS

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THE INVINCIBLE KILLER (1978) |
3. TEN FROM CHEN: JUDGMENT OF AN ASSASSIN (1977)



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Chen (left) has a brief fight with Bolo (right) |

1978s BRUCE LI, THE INVINCIBLE (see insert pic) also went out under the title of BRUCE LEE, THE INVINCIBLE. That film had nothing at all to do with Bruce Lee, or even Bruce Lee imitators. It was a standard, period set kung fu story that had Bruce Li (Ho Chung Tao) and the muscular Chen Sing taking on Michael Chan as the main villain and a kung fu gorilla.
4. TEN FROM CHEN: THE DEADLY BREAKING SWORD (1979)


GAMBLING ON MOVIES: UNMADE, AND PATCHWORK PRODUCTIONS
As per the chaotic nature of Hong Kong cinema back in the day, a lot of movies got started, but were aborted; and others were finished a year or more after they were started -- padded out with additional material that didn't always match with the initially shot footage. Chan Wai Man was a part of some of these scuppered and scattershot productions.



5. TEN FROM CHEN: HANDCUFFS (1979)



The new scenes in NINJA STRIKE involving Chan consist of an all new plot about a coveted necklace that holds the key to a chest of riches. Beginning in 1940 during WW2, an American guy makes off with the necklace while former venom movie actor Wang Li holds off a gang of ninjas so the American can escape. Flash forward to present day. A noticeably chubby Casanova Wong (what a difference a year makes) appears in some extra action scenes battling ninjas that weren't in the original Korean version.
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Chan Wai Man (right) and Casanova Wong (left) beat the hell out of each other in NINJA STRIKE (1985) |


TO BE CONCLUDED IN PART 2...
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