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IMDbPro

The Five Venoms

Original title: Wu du
  • 1978
  • 18
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
8.4K
YOUR RATING
The Five Venoms (1978)
The final student of a dying martial arts master is instructed to locate the previous five students and defeat any evil ones among them.
Play trailer2:59
1 Video
47 Photos
Kung FuMartial ArtsActionDramaFantasyMystery

The sixth and final disciple of a dying martial arts master is instructed to find the master's five former disciples, each specializing in their own unique kung fu style, and defeat any evil... Read allThe sixth and final disciple of a dying martial arts master is instructed to find the master's five former disciples, each specializing in their own unique kung fu style, and defeat any evil ones amongst them.The sixth and final disciple of a dying martial arts master is instructed to find the master's five former disciples, each specializing in their own unique kung fu style, and defeat any evil ones amongst them.

  • Director
    • Cheh Chang
  • Writers
    • Kuang Ni
    • Cheh Chang
  • Stars
    • Sheng Chiang
    • Chien Sun
    • Phillip Chung-Fung Kwok
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    8.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Cheh Chang
    • Writers
      • Kuang Ni
      • Cheh Chang
    • Stars
      • Sheng Chiang
      • Chien Sun
      • Phillip Chung-Fung Kwok
    • 71User reviews
    • 67Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:59
    Trailer

    Photos47

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    Top cast36

    Edit
    Sheng Chiang
    Sheng Chiang
    • Yang Tieh
    Chien Sun
    Chien Sun
    • Ma Chou…
    Phillip Chung-Fung Kwok
    Phillip Chung-Fung Kwok
    • Ho Yuan-Hsin
    • (as Chui Kuo)
    • …
    Meng Lo
    Meng Lo
    • Liang Shen, Toad
    • (as Mang Lo)
    Pai Wei
    • Chi Tung, Snake
    Feng Lu
    Feng Lu
    • Chang Hsiao-Tien, Centipede
    Lung-Wei Wang
    Lung-Wei Wang
    • Judge Wang
    • (as Wang Lung-wei)
    Ku Feng
    Ku Feng
    • Old Master Yuan (Guest star)
    • (as Feng Ku)
    Dick Wei
    Dick Wei
    • Master
    • (as Lung Tu)
    Shu-Pei Sun
    Shu-Pei Sun
    • Constable Lin Kuang
    Huang-Hsi Liu
    • Men Hua
    Hui-Huang Lin
    Hui-Huang Lin
    • Prison Gaoler
    Ching-Ho Wang
    Ching-Ho Wang
    • Constable
    Lao Shen
    Lao Shen
    • Fruit vendor
    Han-Chen Wang
    Han-Chen Wang
    • Prison Coroner
    Yu-Lung Hsiao
    Yu-Lung Hsiao
    • Constable
    Chih-Lu Chen
    Chen-Tu Tan
    Chen-Tu Tan
    • Constable
    • (as Chen-Tao Tan)
    • Director
      • Cheh Chang
    • Writers
      • Kuang Ni
      • Cheh Chang
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews71

    7.08.4K
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    Featured reviews

    8Gambitt

    Highly enjoyable kung-fu flick

    The Five Deadly Venoms is a great kung-fu action movie wrapped in a whodunnit mystery. There are all the usual telltale signs of a kung-fu flick: great choreography, awful dubbing, different "styles" of fighting, and a wide range of greatly exaggerated, often cheesey human emotions. However the plot certainly is better than average. It's interesting and holds your attention throughout the non-fight scenes. Occasionally it's even able to fire up the audience, such as when X character receives horrible injustice.

    Another thing I love about the Five Deadly Venoms is the beautiful simplicity of the movie's morals and themes. Just about everyone gets what's coming to them. The cowardly, greedy, and corrupt lose out. The bad guys, consumed by selfish greed are ultimately destroyed by their own treachery and backstabbing. The good guys use teamwork, planning, and integrity to overcome the odds and come out on top.

    Poison Clan rocks!
    10Golden_ninja

    One of the best kung fu films ever made

    This is definitely one of the best kung fu movies ever, and may be one of the best movies ever... It's got a great plot that functions like a puzzle, with lots of intrigue and suspense. This film is full of cat and mouse games and deceptions, with people hiding their identities and their natures. The characters in this film live and breath much more than your average kung fu movie characters. They are all interesting and compelling and the movie does a good job at giving them scenes to show their personality's and desires.

    The fight scenes play out like little stories and many of them are very original and exciting. It has cool training sequences and martial arts skills that are so awesome they enter the realm of fantasy. There are 5 members of the poison clan each one with his own style that mimics the special skill of a venomous animal. The styles of each of these characters are fun to watch and you can see the techniques they use in training applied during the film... When this happens, The director uses quick cutting back to the training scene to draw a parallel. These cuts are accompanied by music changes and sound effects and the whole thing really works nicely.

    One thing about this movie that is very original is the way it treats death. The director Chang Cheh was obviously very concerned that the film not trivialize death. This makes some of the scenes in the movie much more effective. We actually care when people are killed in this film. This is because the camera lingers on the horror of death even when the bad guys are killed. Some of the sequences in this movie are truly gut wrenching. When characters go in search of vengeance you really feel their anger and pain.

    At the same time, this is also a fun movie. It has all the typical things you expect from a traditional kung fu film. There is bad dubbing, The characters are willing to fight at the drop of a hat. Some of the sound effects are hilarious and at times the behavior of the characters is incredibly unrealistic... all this just adds to the greatness of the film.

    And lets not forget that this director was a visual stylist much more gifted than most of his contemporaries. If you watch this movie closely you will notice that the technical prowess on display is virtuostic. Everything goes by so fast (because of the quick cutting style and the rapid camera movements of the genre) that it is easy to overlook how beautiful the movie really is. The lighting and composition are spectacular at times. The camera work and movement is extremely sophisticated along with very interesting fast paced editing... In the scenes that portray suspense and intrigue for example, imagine Hitchcock moving at about twice the speed. Chang Cheh was truly a master craftsman and artist who knew his genre and was able to produce important material while working within it's confines. He doesn't rattle the boat of the kung fu genre film, but in a subtle way his skills permeate every scene and every shot and they add greatly to the quality of the work. He is an important filmmaker who continues to influence many people.

    This is the real package A kung fu movie that delivers on every level. It's art, it's trash, it's emotionally moving, and it's fun, it has a true sense of morality, but doesn't allow that morality to get in the way of delivering good action. I recommend it to everybody whether you are a fan of this genre or not.
    7asandor

    Five Deadly Venoms - a brilliant time

    Five Deadly Venoms is the first film in the unofficial Venoms series of martial arts films, starring a large group of martial artists and performers working mostly in Shaw Brothers pictures. This first film was hugely influential in Kung Fu film history, and is certainly an enjoyable ride. The film opens with an old man training by sitting in a pot full of boiling water. He tells his pupil, a man trained in the five venoms schools - centipede (Fast strikes), snake (powerful, targeted strikes), scorpion (hidden and sudden strikes), toad (immense physical immunity), and lizard (ability to climb walls), to track down the five experts - one in each of these styles. The teacher knows some have turned to evil, but his pupil must team up with the good ones to defeat the others. Also they wear masks that comically impede their ability to be understood. This is to hide each masters identity from the other. In the capital, the venoms are scheming against each other using secret codes, executions, and torture.

    This film has some very fun and campy sequences, with excellent martial arts choreography. It's style is certainly a bit Wu Xia in nature - with the styles giving each master incredible powers. The Toad is a particularly interesting character for his ability to withstand great physical pain. This was a very memorable martial arts film, with the story, martial arts action, costumes and acting, setting and feeling fitting well together. This film certainly suffers from the Shaw Brothers "charm" - the same sets used again and again, similar styles to many of their hundreds of other films, and so on. Even so, this film stands above the pack for its quality, charm and enjoyability. Good watch and a classic of its genre, it is certainly worthy of a watch for fans of this genre of films, or those looking for a good martial arts flick to watch.
    10clurge-2

    Five Deadly Venoms: The best that kung-fu films have to offer!

    Be careful with this one. Once you get yer mitts on it, it'll change the way you look at kung-fu flicks. You will be yearning a plot from all of the kung-fu films now, you will be wanting character depth and development, you will be craving mystery and unpredictability, you will demand dynamic camera work and incredible backdrops. Sadly, you won't find all of these aspects together in one kung-fu movie, EXCEPT for Five Deadly Venoms!

    Easily the best kung-fu movie of all-time, Venoms blends a rich plot, full of twists and turns, with colourful (and developed) characters, along with some of the best camerawork to come out of the 70s. The success of someone liking the film depends on the viewers ability to decipher which character is which, and who specializes in what venom. One is the Centipede, two is the Snake, three is the Scorpion, four is the Lizard, and five is the Toad. Each character has different traits, characteristics, strengths, and weaknesses. Therein lies the hook, we learn along with the student character, finding out who these different men turn out to be. We are in his shoes (so to speak), and we have to pick who we trust, and who we don't, just like he does. We learn along with him.

    Not only is the plot, the characters, and the camerawork great, it's also fun to watch, which in my book makes it more valuable than almost any other movie of it's kind. It's worth quite a few watches to pick up on everything that's going on. Venoms is a lesson on what kung-fu can really do...just don't expect many other kung-fu films to live up to it's gauntlet.
    7ebiros2

    A Real Man's Kung-Fu Movie

    There's no romance or other side plot to this movie, it's action and intrigue all the way, making it a real man's kung-fu movie.

    An aging master dispatches his last disciple Yan Tieh to stop his five former pupils who's styles represents five venomous animals centipede,snake, scorpion, lizard and the toad. Despite the word "Venom" in the title, none of these pupil uses venoms to kill their opponents. Yan Tieh told by his teacher that he's no match for the five former pupil, must find one he can form an alliance with to defeat the other four. How Yan Tieh and the others find each other is the intrigue to the story, with good kung-fu action spread out throughout the story.

    Recognized as a cult classic, this movie has already established itself in the annals of kung- fu action movies. It's known well enough that other movies make reference to the five styles depicted in this story.

    It's no artistic masterpiece, with the usual bad dubbing, and corny acting, but the movie is one of the best of its kind, because its so focused on the all the ingredients of kung-fu action movie of its time, and gives an extra concentrated dose of them.

    One movie you must watch if you are a kung-fu movie fan.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Ranked #11 in Entertainment Weekly's "Top 50 Cult Films of All-Time."
    • Goofs
      Near the end of the film when the Lizard, the Scorpion, the Snake, the Centipede and the Teacher's sixth and final pupil confront each other at the Snake's mansion, the Lizard calls the Centipede "Number 5". The Centipede was actually "Number 1" and was referred to as such throughout the rest of the film and the Toad was actually "Number 5" and was also referred to as such throughout the rest of the film. This is undoubtedly an error in the English dubbing, not in the original Mandarin dialogue.
    • Quotes

      Yang Tieh: Poison Clan rocks the world!

    • Connections
      Edited into Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003)

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Five Deadly Venoms?Powered by Alexa
    • Why is there a spider on the cover sleeve art of the Celestial Pictures DVD release? There is no character named the Spider in this film.
    • What are the kung fu styles used in this film?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 12, 1978 (Hong Kong)
    • Country of origin
      • Hong Kong
    • Languages
      • Mandarin
      • Cantonese
    • Also known as
      • Five Deadly Venoms
    • Filming locations
      • Hong Kong, China
    • Production company
      • Shaw Brothers
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 41 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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