Duel to the Death

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Directed byChing Siu-tung
Written by
Produced byRaymond Chow
Duel to the Death
Theatrical poster
生死決
Directed byChing Siu-tung
Written by
Produced byRaymond Chow
Starring
Cinematography
  • Danny Lee
  • Lau Hung-chuen
Edited byPeter Cheung
Music byMichael Lai
Production
company
Paragon Films[1]
Distributed byGolden Harvest
Release date
  • 13 January 1983 (1983-01-13)
Running time
86 minutes
CountryHong Kong
LanguageCantonese

Duel to the Death (生死決) is a 1983 Hong Kong wuxia film directed by Ching Siu-tung in his directorial debut, and written by Ching, David Lai and Manfred Wong. It starred Norman Chui, Damian Lau, Flora Cheong-Leen, and Eddy Ko. The film was released theatrically in Hong Kong on 13 January 1983.

The film is set in 16th-century China. Every ten years, the greatest swordsmen from China and Japan would challenge each other to a duel to the death to defend their country's honor. As the date of the next duel approaches, Bu Qingyun and Hashimoto Ichirō[a], who represent China and Japan respectively, uncover a plot to rig the fight.

Bu is a peaceful and contemplative swordsman who was trained by Shaolin monks and a mischievous hermit, while Hashimoto is a pitiless yet honorable samurai. One night, Hashimoto is attacked by a masked man, whom he kills after a brief but intense clash. The masked man turns out to be Hashimoto's sensei, who hopes that his death will strengthen Hashimoto's resolve before the duel.

In the days leading to the duel, ninjas acting on the Shōgun's order work with Chinese collaborators to kidnap famous fighters and sabotage the duel so that Hashimoto will be killed. This plan will supposedly benefit both sides: the Chinese will enjoy the glory of victory, while the Japanese get to study and improve on Chinese martial arts. However, both Hashimoto and Bu are unwilling to go along with the plan, the former wanting only a fair duel and the latter refusing to be a pawn in the Shōgun's game.

Together, Bu and Hashimoto fight the conspirators and free the captives. Afterwards, Bu sees no point in proceeding with the duel, having grown weary of the bloodshed it has caused. Hashimoto, however, believes it is his duty to finish what he set out to do, so he kills Bu's master to force Bu to fight him.

The two swordsmen clash in a gravity-defying duel around a rocky coastline, with both mortally wounding each other. Hashimoto cuts off Bu's right arm and fingers on his left hand, while Bu spears Hashimoto through the torso. The duel ends inconclusively as either side waits to see who falls dead first.

Cast

Release and reception

Duel to the Death was released on January 13, 1983, grossing a total of HK$5,158,322.[1] In the Hong Kong film magazine City Entertainment Film Biweekly [zh], a reviewer complimented the film as "quite outstanding" praising the editing and refreshing action scenes while finding that some characters were not drawn out enough.[3] It was screened at the 30th Hong Kong International Film Festival in April 2006 as part of "A Tribute to Action Choreographers" event.[4]

In 2014, Time Out polled several film critics, directors, actors and stunt actors to list their top action films;[5] Duel to the Death was listed at 92nd place on this list.[6] In the publication's subsequent list, published in 2020, the film was listed in the 100th position.[7]

Award nominees

Award Date of ceremony Category Recipient(s) Result Ref.
Hong Kong Film Awards 1984 Best Editing Peter Cheung Nominated [8]
Best Action Choreography Ching Siu-tung Nominated

Notes

References

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