AKA Ninja Terminator, Ninja Heat, Ninja Blacklist
Starring Chan Sing, Henry Yu Yung, Michael Chan Wai-Man, Si Ming, Louise Lee Si-Kei, Fong Yau, San Kuai, Gai Yuen, James Yi Lui, Lee Man-Tai
Directed by John Law Ma
Expectations: Moderate.
Black List has the distinction of being one of the top 10 grossing films of 1972 in Hong Kong, but I had a hard time seeing why it would have been so popular. To think that this mediocre film did better than many of the Shaw films, even exceptionally good ones, is hard to fathom. Black List does have a somewhat ahead-of-its-time gritty vibe thanks to the location shooting, something that virtually none of the Shaw films of the era have, so maybe that helped. Golden Harvest was also becoming highly successful around this time by utilizing similar, location-based filming methods. I imagine Chan Sing was something of a big star at the time as well, as he had featured in many Shaw films by this point and had starred in fellow top 10 film The Good and the Bad in the same year.
Black List has one of those ultra-simple storylines that is setup within the opening minute or so. We see Zhao Ying-Long (Chan Sing) released from prison, and his brother Zhao Ying-Hu (Henry Yu Yung) is outside the gates awaiting his arrival. After an embrace, Ying-Hu hands Ying-Long a piece of paper and tells him that over the last six years he has uncovered the men responsible for framing him and sending him to prison. Ying-Long vows to kill every last one of the sons of bitches on his “black list,” and that’s about 95% of the story in the film.
The other major hurdle for Black List is the print quality. The only copy I could hunt down was a VHS under the title of Ninja Heat (which is one hell of a misleading title), and it’s washed-out, pan & scan and dubbed. Ugh. It seems like movies only available in poor quality prints always have a bunch of night sequences; Black List features a number of these and it’s nearly impossible to make anything out in them. For instance, there’s one fight that starts in a billiard hall and moves into the streets of Hong Kong. The villain jumps onto a truck or something (I couldn’t tell for sure what it was), and our heroes then climb aboard the roof of a VW bus in chase. I think they caught up with the truck and leapt onto it from the moving VW — which sounds awesome — so I wish I could have actually seen what happened.
The highlight of the film for me, though, was a rooftop battle towards the middle of the film between Chan Sing and Michael Chan Wai-Man. It starts on the streets, but soon Ying-Long chases his prey up the stairs until there’s nowhere else to go but the roof. There they flail around in a fun way, and at one point Michael Chan Wai-Man even uses some hanging clothesline to attempt to strangle Ying-Long. It’s not a great fight by any means, but it entertained me far more than anything in the film previous so it was a welcome change. It was also the first fight in the daylight (at like 50-something minutes into the movie!), so maybe it was just that.
I can’t really recommend tracking this one down, but I will say that I think it would be a far better watch should someone out there happen to remaster it and release a widescreen, original language DVD of it. If that happens I’ll give it another go, but until then I’m gonna call this one a dud. Chan Sing was pretty dope, though, delivering quite a few moments of total brutality to his targets.
Next up in this chronological journey through the Shaw Brothers Martial Arts catalog is my grand and long-awaited return to forward movement in this series! I’ll be kicking off 1973 with Ho Meng-Hua’s Ambush! See ya then! (Hopefully sooner rather than later.)