The film tells that Yan Xian's master passed him a demon catcher before he died, but the demon catcher was stolen by the three cat demon. The stranger caught the "demon in the ear" inside the king. Yan Seventeen caught a rat demon who had stolen his money and treasure, and this rat demon named Rat Laibao was the real successor of the demon catcher.
Chi Ba-Fang
The story about royal intrigue with the ingenious Lord Liu, whose intelligence was envied by the Emperor himself.
He San
El joven espadachín Lung Fei se encuentra con presagios extraños que presagian la muerte de su prometida Ting Tzu-chu.
Sus preguntas con la ayuda del jefe de policía Tieh Hu revelan una historia asombrosa.
Sha Yung
Hsiao Kong Tsi / Zhou's master
Kao is given a mission by his elderly master to take a cursed sword and solve petty squabbles between skilled martial masters.
Boss Su
The plot is a trifle about an obnoxious restaurant delivery boy causing trouble with some local bad guys for the cook who secretly knows kung fu, eventually learning some techniques and finally, with the cook, confronting the bad guys.
Wan Lung
The year is 1756 and the Emperor journeys to Soochow, where he encounters a famous courtesan and gets involved with in all sorts of un-emperor-like activities.
Master Wei
It's Meng Yuan-wen (star of The Master Strikes) versus Kuan Feng in this wild and wacky wushu saga of a priceless pole with a spectacular secret. A master martial artist's silly disciple struggles to save it from an evil white slaver, the slaver's duplicitous wife, and even his own bone-headed, but greedy, companion. Hsu Hsia choreographs the abundant action, as he had for both Five Superfighters and Drunken Master. The result is both sublime (for its kung-fu) and engagingly ridiculous.
Wu Zu De
Complex plots? This director didn't want them. Expensive, famous stars? Didn't need them. Glorious sets and costumes? He could take them or leave them. With his choreographer Hsu Hsia, John Lo Mar liked making lean, mean, fighting movies, and fans rejoiced. Here Wu Yuan-chin stars as "the Kid," a monk whose education in the aptly named "Crazy Lo Han Fist" finds him battling a cruel bandit's son and befriending an abused prostitute. From then on, it's one fight after another in another John Lo Mar martial arts marvel.
Old Master Q/Mr. Funnybone
The beloved king of Hong Kong comic book characters, Old Master Q, is back in live action again by popular demand. This hilarious sequel to Mr Funny-bone finds him, and his delightful sidekick "Big Potato", opening an Old-fashioned healing clinic - leading to a fun and fascinating clash (cultural and otherwise) when the old ways smack face first into ultra-modern Hong Kong. But, this being the great Mr Funny-bone, he triumphs in spite of himself and his large-cranium companion.
Wang Lao-San
In the 18th century, Emperor Chien Lung makes a journey into Southern China.
Doctor Mei Er
Debido a sus propios ideales extremos, el famoso espadachín Li ha perdido a todos sus seres queridos. Después de que un espadachín rival salva su vida, el orgullo abrumador de Li significa que abandona a la mujer que ama y le permite casarse con su salvador. La persona detrás de los problemas de Li apunta al legendario 'Plum Blossom Bandit', cuya identidad ha demostrado ser esquiva durante mucho tiempo para el mundo marcial.
Lao San
Emperor Chien Lung uses disguises to experience life among his subjects.
Funny Bone/Master Q/Lao Fu Zi
The beloved cartoon character Master Q gets a hilarious live-action adaptation in the side-splitting comic adventure Mr. Funny-Bone! Join Master Q for a series of comic vignettes as he attempts to win the heart of the lovely Li Jing. Along for the ride is Master Q's loyal sidekick Potato, a stout fellow who's forever getting into silly mishaps. The pair get involved in plenty of shenanigans and gags, including pratfalls, low-brow bathroom humor, and even some fun fighting sequences.
Uncle
In 1974, John Lo Mar co-directed The Crazy Bumpkins, a new variation on the time-tested, beloved Cantonese comedy "Country Bumpkin" tradition. That proved such a success that a sequel, Return Of The Crazy Bumpkins, soon appeared. Now, the third time's the charm, as John Lo Mar gets to both write and direct the third slapstick-filled installment, once again starring Yeh Feng and Wang Sha as the hapless and hilarious yokel Ah Niu and his crafty city-slicker Uncle Chou.
Uncle Chou
The sequel to John Lo Mar and Chang Yang's original film finds the naive village immigrant, Ah Niu (Yeh Feng) leaving jail to work and live with his crooked Uncle Chou (Wang Sha) again. But now, his girlfriend Ah Hua (Ai Ti) has become the wife of an abusive husband. As with the bittersweet original, Ah Niu -- with his kind heart but simple mind -- gets caught in various rackets and silly situations.
Uncle
Following the lives of three downtrodden but resilient outcasts, John Lo Mar's gritty social drama paints a sense of realism rarely seen in Hon Kong movies. Li Ching - the best actress of her era - play Ah Chiao is a girl from a rural village stranded in the city, who befriends a kind-hearted transient and a retired actor. They are poor, but they are happy. Although her fortune changes for the better when she becomes a singer, she ultimately learns money can't buy happiness.
Uncle Chou
shaw production