AKA Karate Ghostbuster
Starring Jackie Chan, James Tin Jun, Mo Man-Sau, Li Tong-Chun, Lee Kwan, Dean Shek Tin, Ko Keung, Lee Hoi-Lung, Lee Man-Tai, Wang Kuang-Yu, Wong Ching
Directed by Lo Wei
Expectations: Moderate.
Lo Wei’s Spiritual Kung Fu may have been released to the public just a month and a half after Drunken Master blew up the Hong Kong box office, but it was made well-before as an answer to Half a Loaf of Kung Fu, Chen Chi-Hwa’s kung fu comedy starring Jackie Chan. After many requests from Jackie to allow him to include comedy in his films, Lo Wei finally relented and let Jackie and Chen make Half a Loaf of Kung Fu. But upon seeing the finished film, Lo was furious and he shelved the film (until 1980). He didn’t find it funny at all, and he made Spiritual Kung Fu in order to show Jackie what a real kung fu comedy should be like. Spiritual Kung Fu lucked out being released after Drunken Master, because at that point the public craved anything Jackie Chan. It gave this film box office receipts that came close to equaling those of Snake in the Eagle’s Shadow, and which also bested many Shaw Brothers films destined to be memorable classics (such as The Five Venoms & Crippled Avengers).
So I suppose knowing all that, the big question about Spiritual Kung Fu hangs around its comedy. Is it funny? Do the laughs feel similar to the kung fu comedy of the two Jackie Chan/Yuen Woo-Ping collaborations? The answer is a resounding NO! There’s a reason why Lo Wei wasn’t known as a comedy director. The first half of the film goes hard into Lo’s idea of comedy, with things like Jackie stuffing random animals down his pants (including a snake that finds “a nice, dark place to call home,” if you know what I mean!), punishments that include writing calligraphy with a gigantic brush, a mischievous ghost that farts in a monk’s face, and Jackie pissing on the ghosts as they shrink and try to hide in a corner. You get the idea; the comedy is really low-brow. It’s kind of interesting to watch because you never know what’s coming next, but it’s a stretch to call it funny. That being said, I can imagine children getting more laughs out of it than I did, but there are better films to get your children laughing.
But no matter what, I did enjoy the kung fu ghosts, perhaps more than I should have. They arrive on a comet that lands in the Shaolin library, and they immediately start causing trouble (and eventually farting in that monk’s face). They wear long red wigs and white leotard bodysuits with tutus and white face paint. And just about every time they’re on-screen, they are accompanied by a bubbling synth bass groove that I enjoyed quite a bit. It’s a stretch to call it music, but it evokes something of an otherworldly style and feeling. The ghosts are a comical bunch, for sure, but sadly I liked them more in theory than in practice. They never get a real chance to shine. I’m sure Lo was glad to finally have a hit film with Jackie, but I have to wonder if he actually thought this was a good kung fu comedy after seeing what Jackie had achieved with Yuen Woo-Ping. I imagine not, given what happened when Jackie returned to make the final film of his contract with Lo Wei… but that’s a story for another review.
Next up in this chronological journey through the films of Jackie Chan is Jackie’s first crack at directing, the 1979 film The Fearless Hyena!