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The Fighting Fists Of
Shanghai Joe
(1972)
(a.k.a. Shanghai Joe & My Name
Is Shanghai Joe & To Kill Or Die)
Director: Mario Caiano
Cast: Chen Lee, Klaus Kinski, Roberto Undari
Although there had been a number of European
westerns made in the decades before A
Fistful Of Dollars was made in 1964, it
was undeniably that movie that properly kicked
of the spaghetti western craze. This craze
actually lasted for a period of time longer than
other cinematic crazes; it was in fact only
around 1975 when the craze was considered
officially dead, though a small number still got
made and released over the next few years
(including the legendary Keoma.)
What makes this longevity of the spaghetti
western even more extraordinary is that it
managed to continue for several years after the
turn of the decade; by that time, signs of
stagnation were starting to form on the genre,
after the same basic stories and themes had been
repeated endlessly. The temporary reprieve came
from the addition of elements you wouldn't
ordinarily associate with spaghetti westerns.
For example, one spaghetti western had children
playing almost all the roles. However, the most
popular new element added to the genre was
comedy, with originated when filmmakers were
inspired by the big success of Terence Hill and
Bud Spencer's They Call Me Trinity.
One other new element filmmakers sometimes added
to spaghetti westerns was the addition of Asian
culture. More specifically, Asian culture tied
with the martial arts. Charles Bronson teamed
with samurai Toshiro Mifune
in Red Sun,
and Lee Van Cleef teamed up with Lo Lieh in
The Stranger And The Gunfighter.
On the other hand, there was Klaus Kinski battling
against Chen
Lee in The Fighting Fists Of Shanghai Joe.
Not only is this (noodle?) western different
from those previously mentioned ones with the
fact the Asian and Caucasian stars are made as
adversaries, its tone is also remarkably
different. Although Red Sun both
played it straight alternately with
touches of comic relief, and Stranger
was a tongue-in-cheek caper with the
addition of gunplay and martial arts,
Shanghai Joe still seems positively
schizophrenic by comparison. It also has comedy,
but these attempts at humor feel very out of
touch in a story that not only finds the
protagonist constantly struggling against one of
the major ills of human society - racism - as
well as against homicidal individuals who want
to kill him in the worst way. The protagonist's
methods of getting out of his predicaments are
equally two-sided; sometimes our hero dispatches
his enemies in the most light-hearted of ways,
with an almost dance in his steps and/or leaving
his defeated opponents thoroughly humiliated.
Yet there are other times when he violently
shatters the bones and inflicts extremely bloody
wounds on those opponents. It's kind of hard to
laugh when that happens, or even when it's a
memory from a previous scene.
The strange thing is that despite the wildly
and constantly changing tone of The
Fighting Fists Of Shanghai Joe, as well
as the factor of the addition of several other
problems, it manages to defy the odds and still
end up being quite entertaining to watch. For
one thing, it
doesn't take long for the movie to set things up
and get down to business. In San Francisco of
1882, Chen Lee's character (the "Joe" part of
"Shanghai Joe" is never explained) arrives from China with dreams
of opportunity and making a fortune. Also having
dreams of becoming a cowboy, and hearing that
Texas is full of them, he decides to book
passage on the next stagecoach headed there.
Unfortunately, almost as soon as he exits
Chinatown and enters the Caucasian district to
get his ticket, he discovers that 98% of
Caucasian Americans are thoroughly racist
assholes, and half of that remaining 2% regard Asians in
a way that could be best described as a notch or
two more polite. Naturally, this causes unending
grief for Joe, from not being allowed to ride in
the interior of the stagecoach to ranch hands
who refuse to pay up when Joe wins a bet he
makes with them. Though if all this ever gets
too much for Joe, he has a way to deal with it -
namely, thoroughly beating the crap out of the
jerks who antagonize him.
It doesn't take too
many beatings for the legend of Joe to spread
around Texas, and he soon finds himself
recruited by rich rancher Stanley Spencer.
Though when Joe quickly finds out Spencer is
cruelly exploiting Mexicans as cheap labor, Joe
rebels and vows to stop Spencer one way or
another. Realizing what he's up against, Spencer
in turn gives out the call to a colorful number
of bounty hunters... Yep, essentially what we have here is another
example of the familiar plot of the little guy
defying and fighting the big guy against all
odds. Though the "little guy" this time around
is substantially different from the norm,
western or not. For one thing, we never learn
that much about Shanghai Joe; his motives are
never revealed, and we don't learn anything
about his past until a flashback near the very
end, though it proves to be too little and too
late. I realize that one of the typical
conventions of the western is "The man with no
name", a mysterious person with a mysterious
past. But when you make a movie where someone is
fighting for something for a purpose that's
stronger than mere greed, you have to give
enough explanation for why he's doing that.
Otherwise, the audience will wonder why the
protagonist is going through all that trouble
and placing himself in danger. Why does Shanghai
Joe go to all this trouble to help people he's
just met, risking his life in the process? We
are never given any kind of explanation.
The
movie suffers from having a protagonist with
such a bland personality, though it doesn't just
come from inadequate screenwriting. Knowing the
context of
Shanghai Joe, actor
Chen Lee seems a very odd choice to play the
title role. He just goes through the motions,
not putting any real energy or passion in any
particular scene, and his facial features
suggest a Caucasian background as much as an
Asian one. When you also consider that Lee's
limited acting credits are all for Italian
films, it seems even more likely he was an
Italian citizen and was hired for convenience's
sake. Equally disappointing in their construction
are the characters of Stanley Spencer and the
bounty hunters he hires. Despite his prominent
billing, Kinski actually does not play the chief
role of Spencer; instead he plays the role of
the bounty hunter with a penchant for scalping
his victims, a role so brief that it doesn't
even earn the moniker of "extended cameo".
Still, I guess the producers got their money's
worth, not just because they only had to pay
Kinski a fraction of his usual fee, but that
Kinski still decided to ham it up in his usual
classic way that fans will be familiar with from
movies like
Crawlspace.
The rest of the bounty hunters aren't
anywhere as memorable. One goes out of the room
to have sex with a woman and is never seen or
mentioned again, and another one nicknamed
"Cannibal" because he has the habit of eating
his victims(!) appears for a minute to slobber
around and make threats before being quickly
dispatched. As for Stanley Spencer, he may be
the most disappointing character in the movie.
Though he's supposed to be a ruthless land baron
who has the entire area under his thumb, there's
little presented here that can adequately
support that. He doesn't appear that many times,
and only briefly each time. He prefers not only
to have other people do his dirty work work for
him, but to decide just what kind of dirty work
to be done. Maybe we shouldn't be so surprised
that by the end of the movie he's been simply
forgotten by everyone; once the last henchman is
dealt with, Shanghai Joe believes his work here
is done.
I could go on for some time listing
criticisms about Shanghai Joe. For
example, the musical score is hardly original;
99% of it is simply the recycling of Bruno
Nicolai's score for
Have A Good Funeral My Friend... Sartana Will
Pay. It is doubtful that you have
ever heard of director Caiano before (except
maybe from the movie Nazi Love Camp 27),
and the answer to that can possibly be seen from
the style of his direction here. Some bits, like
when Shanghai Joe falls in a pit, are so
confusingly shot it takes a few seconds after
the fact to realize what just happened. (The
pan-and-scan format of the version I watched may
share some of this blame, however.) Caiano
doesn't seem to be terribly interested in adding
any kind of personal touch, one notable
exception being the sequence when Kinski's
character first attacks Shanghai Joe, filmed in
an arty slow-motion style that is not only just
plain weird but comes out of nowhere. The only
other time when Caiano seems inspired is at any
moment that seems to call out for bloodshed.
Though he doesn't settle for a mere trickle;
instead, he gives us arms broken so badly they
are practically amputated, gunshots that spit
out geysers of blood, and eyeballs ripped out
and thrust into the camera lens. It's quite a
jolt when this bloodshed happens, coming out of
a tone that's otherwise alternately
light-hearted and sedate. It might not have been
so jarring had there been a sense of urgency and
danger throughout the movie, essential for a
movie concerning a hero who is pretty much alone
and has a number of professional assassins after
him.
Yes, I could go on for some time listing even
more criticisms, but I won't. I don't have the
heart to do so because darn it, I'll admit it, I
really enjoyed Shanghai Joe faults
and all. It's sloppy and uneven, yes, but
sometimes you can get extra enjoyment out of a
movie that makes certain kinds
of mistakes, or
has scenes that were intended to be serious but
come across as goofy instead. These kind of
attitude can be found in the key selling feature
of the movie, the fight sequences. Before I go
into detail about that, I first must point out
that for the most part the fight sequences are
not so silly. In fact, some of them really
deliver the goods, the best being the moment
when Shanghai Joe jumps a bunch of waiting
gunfighters in a saloon. The fights are "old
school" style, akin to the slower and more
deliberate moves found in Hong Kong movies of
the 1970s, but though the action might not be as
swift, the impact of every blow has been
heightened. At the same time, the goofier
touches found in older Hong Kong martial arts
movies can be found amidst the furniture and
limb breaking. This includes (but is by no means
limited to) Shanghai Joe leaping great distances
in the air thanks to off-screen trampolines,
footage being shown in reverse to make him
appear he can leap even higher in the air at
certain points, and multiple cuts that give the
impression he can make several somersaults in
the air from springing up from ground level -
one time being when he's lying on the
ground instead of having both feet firmly
planted there.
Aside from those occasional bursts of graphic
violence, this is a wonderfully silly movie. The
story may both take a long time to properly set
up the conflict and go through each necessary
plot turn to get to the climax and resolution
(that is, if you can call the failure to deal
with the ringleader a "resolution"), but I never
found the long and meandering journey to be
boring at any point. Though your personal taste
might dictate otherwise, the guilty scenes will
probably be of little aggravation, since no
scene in the movie lasts for more than a few
minutes. Even if a scene proves to not advance
the story in the very least, there is always
something amusing on display. It could be
anything, from Shanghai Joe screaming "AYYYYYYY"
to strike fear in his opponents but instead
reminding you of Fonzie, to the director
momentarily breaking away from the story (for no
conceivable reason) to focus on a group of women
complaining that they want to be satisfied in
the bedroom as much as their husbands. The
Fighting Fists Of Shanghai Joe is so
much fun that I didn't question things like when
Shanghai Joe is forced to fight a bull in a ring
why he doesn't just duck behind one of those
safety barriers around the perimeter - the fight
itself was goofy enough to be entertaining. Oh,
and that two year-old recycled musical score? It
still kicks ass, as much as the rest of the
movie does on its own.
Check for availability on Amazon. See also:
Bloodfist 3,
Cheyenne Warrior,
If You Meet Sartana...
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