It’s a rare privilege to
discuss existential considerations in the context of an action movie, but
that’s exactly why the Hong Kong production The
36th Chamber of Shaolin won a place in the pantheon of martial-arts cinema.
The picture has some exciting passages of violent action, and the basic plot
takes the familiar shape of a revenge saga, but the storyline also explores
notions of dignity and harmony and transcendence. Viewers accustomed to
Hollywood’s treatment of martial arts, which often reduce ancient tradition to
cutesy “wax on, wax off” slogans, will find something new here. It’s no
accident that The 36th Chamber of Shaolin
has a significant cult following that even stretches into the world of
hiphop—members of the iconic rap act Wu-Tang Clan, including Quentin Tarantino
collaborator RZA, have cited this movie as a touchstone.
Set in feudal China,
the story follows a young man named Liu Yude (Liu Chia-Hui). He’s a student at
a martial-arts academy run by a teacher who agitates against the oppressive
Manchu government. When government operatives including a corrupt enforcer
invade the school, murdering the teacher and several students, Liu escapes but
vows revenge. Determined to increase his martial-arts skills, he makes a
harrowing journey to the remote Shaolin temple, where monks are rumored to have
perfected almost superhuman fighting abilities. Demonstrating humility and
perseverance, Liu eventually wins entry to the Temple and is renamed San Te.
(There really was a Shaolin monk named San Te, and the movie’s storyline,
though wildly fictionalized, was inspired by his life.)
The moment Liu becomes
San is also the moment when The 36th
Chamber of Shaolin becomes truly interesting. Fitting the Buddhist
principles of patience and serenity, the movie shifts gears from a violent
adventure tale to a methodical exploration of personal growth through grueling
physical training. Even the simple task of walking from living quarters to the
temple’s dining hall is a pivotal test, because the monks install a moat between
the two locations and fill it with tethered logs, so acolytes must learn to
center themselves in order to glide over the obstacles. San proves his mettle
by discovering a new way of moving across the logs, inspiring his teachers and
fellow students alike. Then San begins his journey through the 35 chambers of
the temple, each of which indoctrinates students in a different martial-arts
skill. Some of the chamber sequences are mesmerizing, because the training
combines elements of combat, dance, resistance, and other physical disciplines,
sharpening everything from eye/hand coordination to mental focus to muscle
tissue. Once San completes the 35th chamber and receives an invitation to teach
at the temple, he has spent years transforming himself from a headstrong youth
to an impressive adult.
What keeps these sequences from seeming episodic is the
revenge angle. Through each challenge and trial, we know the protagonist is
focused on a singular goal. Hence the 36th chamber of the title, a proposed
expansion of the temple’s influence by teaching Shaolin martial arts to
outsiders—and hence the film’s exciting final act, San’s adventure outside the
temple. Elevated by Chen Yung-Yu’s rousing score and expertly filmed by
director Liu Chia-Liang, The 36th Chamber
of Shaolin is an action film that periodically approaches the level of
poetry, even though it has one foot planted in spirituality and the other in
violence. The picture was followed by two sequels, Return to the 36th Chamber (1980) and Disciples of the 36th Chamber (1985), though neither is as highly
regarded as the original.
The 36th Chamber of Shaolin: GROOVY
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