Bullet Points: Invincible Shaolin
Arrow Video is releasing a third volume of their popular Shawscope limited edition Blu-ray box sets on November 26th. When that news first broke, I did not immediately hit the PRE-ORDER button (as I had done...
Arrow Video is releasing a third volume of their popular Shawscope limited edition Blu-ray box sets on November 26th. When that news first broke, I did not immediately hit the PRE-ORDER button (as I had done...
My latest trip into the vast Shaw Brothers library comes courtesy Arrow Video’s amazing Shaw Scope Volume Two, one of the wisest physical media investments I have ever made. This time around, I selected a movie...
Do you ever select a movie to watch and instantly know you made the right decision? Seeing Gordon Liu in all his Shaolin Monk glory training with the iron rings on his forearms as the opening...
My journey down the Shaw Brothers rabbit hole has been a case of good news and bad news every time. The bad news is, I missed out on these Kung Fu classics growing up and it...
Arrow’s Shaw Scope Volume 2 is the gift that keeps on giving. The collection features some of the Shaw Brothers’ best martial arts films, including many that I am experiencing for the first time, like the...
Arrow Video has once again hit it out of the park with their Shaw Scope Volume Two box set. Featuring 14 movies from the Shaw Brothers vault (each of them jam packed with special features), plus...
King Boxer could be described as the spark that lit the Kung Fu fire in the United States of America. Months before the release of Enter the Dragon and Bruce Lee becoming an international superstar, Warner...
In this edition of Bullet Points I will be reviewing 1979’s Dirty Ho… I will pause now for sophomoric giggling… a movie that I have seen praised by martial arts movie enthusiasts despite its English title...
I started down another movie rabbit hole late last year when I reviewed Alexander Fu Sheng in The New Shaolin Boxers. I decided to continue my Fu Sheng journey with another Shaw Brothers film regarded as...