
"He truly took great care of people around him, and he was very willing to help the younger generation. He was a treasure of the film industry."--Chow Yun Fat on Master Liu Chia Liang's death.

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But prior to that, Liu Chia Liang put the characteristically impish demeanor of Fu Sheng into overdrive -- first playing a faux spiritual boxer in LEGENDARY WEAPONS OF CHINA; then a co-starring role opposite Adam Cheng in the colorful, but painful CAT VS. RAT (1982); and finally, another co-starring role in 8 DIAGRAM POLE FIGHTER (1984).

DISCIPLES OF THE MASTER: WONG YU (real name Wang Chi-chuan)
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Wong Yu (left) cons Lo Mang in LION VS. LION (1980) |
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As a young assassin in THE FLYING GUILLOTINE (1975) |

Over the course of his career, Liu Chia Liang had subverted genre conventions to suit his vision. He now had a sizable smash on his hands versus the encroaching New Wave, and Jackie Chan's one after the other blockbusters.
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Filming CAT VS. RAT in 1982 |


DISCIPLES OF THE MASTER: HSIAO HOU (real name Hao Yiu Chung)
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Hsiao Hou (right) in DISCIPLES OF THE 36TH CHAMBER |


The same could be said of Master Liu's movies during this period. Whether this was due to a noticeable decline in Shaw's production values, or a disinterest on the part of Liu, himself, his films lacked the luster of his works from the previous decade. Although he had one great movie left in him before the Shaw's closed their doors.

This depressive mood is stamped all over Liu's 8 DIAGRAM POLE FIGHTER (1984). Despite Fu Sheng's death during production, this one was a serious affair from the start. Begun as 'The Heroic Family' in May of 1981, the bulk of the film was already completed with shooting continuing right up to Fu's fatal car accident.

Work on Liu Chia Liang's 'The Ten Heroes of Shaolin' was likewise postponed; and when it was completed, it had turned into the third 'Master Killer' movie, DISCIPLES OF THE 36TH CHAMBER (1985).
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Liu sits to himself at Fu Sheng's funeral in 1983. |

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Liu and his first wife Ho Sau Ha (left of him) and four daughters from first marriage. |
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Liu and soon-to-be wife, Yung Jing Jing in 1983. |
Even with the Shaw Brothers studio output at a low ebb and the death of Fu Sheng, all wasn't gloomy for the passionate martial arts movie-maker. Throughout his career, Liu Chia Liang was reported to be quite the ladies man -- even when he was married to his first wife, Ho Sau Ha. He was most famously associated with his frequent kung fu starlet, Hui Ying Hung. In 1983, he was often seen with a much younger actress (29 years his junior), Yung Jing Jing (Mary Jean Reimer). In 1987, the two married (although it was rumored they had married in 1984). Just like in his movies, Master Liu believed in family. He had four daughters and a son with first wife, Ho Sau Ha, and two daughters with the woman he remained with for 26 years till his death. Both families were by his bedside when he passed.

The esteemed old man of kung fu worked with Americans for the first time in 1993s TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES 3: TURTLES IN TIME. According to Liu, Raymond Chow sent him to work on the film for a week. He designed 11 action sequences in 7 days, although it appears none of his work survived the finished version. Then there's DRUNKEN MASTER 2 (1994). It had Liu directing Jackie Chan in the first of two non-Shaw Wong Fei-hung movies.

DM2 is of interest because of the controversy surrounding it. Much like the relationship between Liu and Chang Cheh had soured over time, the collaboration of these two titans of kung fu cinema dissolved much quicker. Both men have strong personalities that just didn't match. It was life imitating art -- like the familiar plot device pitting tradition against modernism found in Liu's Shaw pictures. Problems arose between the two with Liu's traditional style clashing with Chan's new style. This resulted in Master Liu's exit from the picture.
The embittered elder filmmaker retaliated rushing out a DRUNKEN MASTER 3 (1994) without Chan's involvement. It performed poorly. He was redeemed to a degree by receiving a Best Choreography award for DRUNKEN MASTER 2. Unfortunately, he was diagnosed with lymphomatic cancer the same year.
DISCIPLES OF THE MASTER: YANG TSING TSING (Yueng Ching Ching)


When the news broke in 2000 that the old Shaw Brothers catalog of movies were being restored for release on DVD, it was hoped a return to old style kung fu would be revived with it. The Shaw's themselves attempted resurrection with a BOXER FROM SHANTUNG (1972) remake entitled HERO in 1997 starring Takeshi Kaneshiro and Yuen Biao.

Sadly, that film performed poorly. With anticipation of the Shaw restorations, Liu Chia Liang was leading the charge of this second wave of Shaw Brothers revivification. DRUNKEN MONKEY (2003) was intended to be a breath of fresh air in contrast to all the CGI enhanced Wuxia pictures that had dominated Chinese movie screens since the release of STORM RIDERS in 1996.

Yet again, a new era of Shaw productions was denied when DRUNKEN MONKEY failed miserably at the HK box office. Bolstered by a cast of old hands in top form such as Gordon Liu and Chi Kuan Chun (as well as director Liu), and up and comer Wu Jing, the action was spectacular; but marred by a thick, penetrating aura of comical shenanigans. The failure of DRUNKEN MONKEY was the end of Liu Chia Liang's directorial career.


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THE END