The best Wang Hsieh’s comedy movies

Wang Hsieh

Wang Hsieh

05/05/1930- 21/07/2016
Today we present the best Wang Hsieh’s movies. If you are a great movie fan, you will surely know most of them, but we hope to discover a movie that you have not yet seen … and that you love! Let’s go there with the best Wang Hsieh’s movies.

The Prodigal Son

The Prodigal Son
7.3/10
A rich man's son (Yuen Biao) believes himself to be the best kung fu fighter in Canton. Unfortunately, his father, anxious for his son's safety, bribes all his opponents to lose. After a humiliating defeat at the hands of an actor in a traveling theatre company, the son resolves to find a better teacher. Furious kung fu battles and slapstick comedy.

Virgins of the Seven Seas

Virgins of the Seven Seas
5.6/10
  • Genre: ActionComedy
  • Release: 21/06/1974
  • Character: Pirate Leader Chao
Five Western girls are kidnapped by Chinese pirates and sold to a brothel. While they are being trained to become prostitutes, a couple of local citizens take mercy on them and plots their escape by teaching them kung-fu. The five scantily-clad girls, using their newfound martial arts skills then fight their way to freedom.

Hong Kong 73

Hong Kong 73
6.2/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 24/04/1974
  • Character: Husband who punches Fook
As the Heng Seng Index reaches unprecedented heights, people from all walks of life go stock speculation crazy. A security guard and his landlord learn firsthand that money is ‘Easy Come, Easy Go’ as their fast fortune disappears overnight in a Macau casino. Meanwhile, greedy neighbours and infidel couples cheat each other and even blue-collar workmen dive into the frenzy. Inevitably, the market tumbles as do the people’s bittersweet lives. A hilarious but ironic tale featuring some of Shaw’s biggest stars.

The Happiest Moment

The Happiest Moment
6.9/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 08/11/1973
  • Character: Police Officer Wang
Michael Hui plays four characters in this three-chapter, Hong Kong erotic comedy anthology set in Northern China during WWII.

Crazy Sex

Crazy Sex
5.8/10
Shaw Brothers superdirector Li Han-Hsiang was particularly masterful in two genres: erotica and classic Chinese tales. He combined these two loves in this two-part examination of lust. The first story features an elderly jeweler's adventures with his unsatisfied wife, a handsome neighbor, and the neighborhood bordello. The second is a more modern tale of sex, lies, and videotape.

The Leg Fighters

The Leg Fighters
5.7/10
When Pan, a South China martial artist is defeated and killed by Tan, a North China challenger in a legfighter duel, Pan's younger brother Pak vows to crush Tan with his own unique style of ferocious footwork.

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