The Golden Lotus -jackie Chan 1974- -chn- — [updated]
The Golden Lotus was a prestige project for Shaw Brothers. Unlike the gritty street fights of contemporary martial arts films, this was a period drama—what critics often called a "fleshpot" melodrama. It was directed by Li Han-hsiang, a master of the genre known for his opulent set designs and his willingness to push the boundaries of censorship regarding sexuality on screen.
. While primarily an erotic drama based on the classic 17th-century Chinese novel Jin Ping Mei , it is widely remembered today as the film debut of a young Jackie Chan Production Overview The Golden Lotus -Jackie Chan 1974- -CHN-
Jackie does the only thing he can. He kicks the golden lotus (now a key) into the spring’s center. The lotus melts, sealing the spring forever. The jiangshi crumble. Iron-Tusk sinks into the mud, screaming. The Golden Lotus was a prestige project for Shaw Brothers
The film adapts a specific portion of the famous novel Jin Ping Mei , focusing on the tragic anti-hero Wu Song and his corrupt brother, Wu Da Lang. However, the narrative heart of the film beats with the story of Ximen Qing and Pan Jinlian. The lotus melts, sealing the spring forever
A blend of Drunken Master slapstick, Big Trouble in Little China weirdness, and 1970s Shaw Brothers melodrama.
When film enthusiasts think of Jackie Chan in the 1970s, their minds typically gravitate toward the gritty, sacrificial violence of Drunken Master (1978) or the directorial brilliance of The Fearless Hyena (1979). Few, however, recall the peculiar, transitional period of 1974—a year that found a young, not-yet-famous Jackie Chan wandering through the lavish, erotic, and morally complex world of Shaw Brothers studios.