The Mystery of Chess Boxing
Mystery of Chessboxing (international title Ninja Checkmate) is a kung fu film released in 1979 and directed by Joseph Koo, starring Mark Long, Jack Long and Lee Yi Min.
Plot
Lee Yi Min stars as a young boy, Ah Pao, who wants to learn kung fu so that he can avenge his father's death at the hands of the Ghost Faced Killer (Mark Long). The Ghost Faced Killer meanwhile is hunting down a number of clan leaders who all conspired to have him killed. Before attacking, the killer always throws down his "ghost face killing plate," a decorated metal plate with a red face. He then uses his distinctive five elements style.
Ah Pao attends a local kung fu school but is bullied by the seniors. However, the school's cook (Yuen Siu Tien) helps the boy and teaches him some moves. These prove to be adequate for his day-to-day living but cannot fulfill his deep desire for revenge. When Ah Pao is found in possession of the Ghost Faced Killers' symbol, he is expelled from school. Still wishing to learn kung fu, he turns to an old xiangqi (a.k.a. Chinese chess) master Chi Sue Tin (Jack Long), recommended by the cook, for training. The master is an old enemy of the Ghost Faced Killer who reveals his former identity: he was a former kung fu chief who held sway over the area with his fellow fighters, but he was forced to go into hiding after being badly injured in a fight and also coming under scrutiny by the Ghost Faced Killer. Chi Sue agrees to teach Lee his chess boxing kung fu.
Ah Pao finally learns the strategic link between chess and kung fu. He and Chi Sue Tin team up using double horse style, a reference to xiangqi, and they defeat the Ghost Faced Killer.
Cast
- Lee Yi Min – Ah Pao
- Jack Long – Chi Sue Tin
- Mark Long – Ghost Faced Killer
- Simon Yuen – Master Yuen (cook)
- Jeanie Chang – Chi Sue Tin’s granddaughter
References in culture
This movie is the inspiration for the Wu-Tang Clan song "Da Mystery of Chessboxin'" on the album Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers).
Wu-Tang Clan member Ghostface Killah also takes his name from the film's distinctive villain.
DJ Hazard's song "Killers Don't Die"[1] samples the American dubbed soundtrack from this film.
External links
- Mystery of Chessboxing at IMDB
References
- RZA: The Wu-Tang Manual: Enter the 36 Chambers, Volume One, 2005, Riverhead Trade, ISBN 1-59448-018-4