Shawscope: Volume Three 14-Movie Blu-ray Collection

Shawscope - Volume Three Blu-ray angle
Shawscope: Volume Three 10-Disc Blu-ray Collection Buy on Amazon

Title: Shawscope: Volume Three
Format: Blu-ray Disc
Release Date: November 26, 2024
Price: $199.99 Amazon

Shawscope: Volume Three 10-disc, 14-film Blu-ray Limited Edition arrives on Nov. 26, 2024, from Arrow Video. The collection includes HD (1080p) Blu-ray presentations of all 14 movies, including 13 from new 2k restorations from the original negatives and a new 4k restoration of One-Armed Swordsman by Celestial Pictures.

All fourteen movies are provided on eight Blu-ray Discs. A ninth Blu-ray Disc contains special features. The tenth disc is a CD with music from the De Wolfe Music Library, as heard in The Avenging Eagle and other Shaw Brothers classics.

Limited Edition Contents

  • High Definition (1080p) Blu-ray presentations of all fourteen films, including thirteen new 2K restorations by Arrow Films from the original negatives, and a new 4K restoration of One-Armed Swordsman by Celestial Pictures
  • Original uncompressed Mandarin mono, plus Cantonese and/or English (where applicable) lossless mono options
  • Newly translated English subtitles for each film
  • Illustrated 60-page collectors’ booklet featuring new writing by David West, Jonathan Clements and Dylan Cheung, plus cast and crew listings and notes on each film by Ian Jane
  • New artwork by Tony Stella, Ilan Sheady, Tom Ralston, Jolyon Yates, Kung Fu Bob and Chris Malbon
  • Hours of illuminating bonus features, including feature commentaries on each film, several cast-and-crew interviews from the Frédéric Ambroisine Video Archive, and the rare alternate Korean cut of Killer Constable
  • Exclusive CD of music from the De Wolfe Music Library, as heard in The Avenging Eagle and other Shaw Brothers classics

Shawscope: Volume Three 10-Disc Blu-ray Collection carries an MSRP of $199.99

Disc Details

DISC ONE – ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN

  • Brand new 4K restoration by Celestial Pictures and L’Immagine Ritrovata
  • Newly restored uncompressed Mandarin and English mono audio
  • Newly translated English subtitles, plus optional hard-of-hearing subtitles for the English dub
  • Brand new commentary by David West, author of Chasing Dragons: An Introduction to the Martial Arts Film
  • Newly filmed appreciation of the One-Armed Swordsman series by film critic and historian Tony Rayns
  • Interview with actor Wang Yu, filmed in 2001
  • Interview with actor Chiao Chiao, filmed in 2005
  • Interview with actor Ku Feng, filmed in 2004
  • Appreciation of director Chang Cheh’s work by film historian Sam Ho, filmed in 2003
  • Interview with Daniel Lee, director of the remake What Price Survival, filmed in 2004
  • One-Armed Side Hustles, a brand new video essay by Brandon Bentley on Wang Yu’s career playing amputee protagonists
  • Theatrical trailers, and trailers for other films by Chang Cheh

DISC TWO – RETURN OF THE ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN / THE NEW ONE-ARMED SWORDSMAN

  • Brand new 2K restorations of both films from the original negatives by Arrow Films
  • Newly restored uncompressed Mandarin and English mono audio for both films
  • Newly translated English subtitles for both films, plus optional hard-of-hearing subtitles for the English dubs
  • Brand new commentary on Return of the One-Armed Swordsman by critic Samm Deighan
  • Brand new commentary on The New One-Armed Swordsman by martial arts cinema expert Brian Bankston
  • Theatrical trailers for both films

DISC THREE – THE LADY HERMIT / INTIMATE CONFESSIONS OF A CHINESE COURTESAN

  • Brand new 2K restorations of both films from the original negatives by Arrow Films
  • Newly restored uncompressed Mandarin and English mono audio for both films
  • Newly translated English subtitles for both films, plus optional hard-of-hearing subtitles for the English dubs
  • Brand new commentary on The Lady Hermit by critic James Mudge
  • Two brand new commentaries on Intimate Confessions of a Chinese Courtesan, one by film critic and historian Tony Rayns, one by critic Samm Deighan
  • Alternate English export credits for Intimate Confessions of a Chinese Courtesan
  • Theatrical trailers for both films

DISC FOUR – THE 14 AMAZONS

  • Brand new 2K restoration from the original negatives by Arrow Films
  • Newly restored uncompressed Mandarin and English mono audio
  • Newly translated English subtitles, plus optional hard-of-hearing subtitles for the English dub
  • Brand new commentary by Jonathan Clements, author of A Brief History of China
  • Interview with stuntwoman Sharon Yeung, filmed in 2004
  • Interview with film historian Bede Chang, filmed in 2005
  • Interview with film critic Law Kar, filmed in 2005
  • Theatrical trailers

DISC FIVE – THE MAGIC BLADE / CLANS OF INTRIGUE

  • Brand new 2K restorations of both films from the original negatives by Arrow Films
  • Newly restored uncompressed Mandarin and English mono audio for The Magic Blade
  • Newly restored uncompressed Mandarin and Cantonese mono audio for Clans of Intrigue
  • Newly translated English subtitles for both films, plus optional hard-of-hearing subtitles for the English dub on The Magic Blade
  • Brand new commentary on The Magic Blade by critic Samm Deighan
  • Brand new commentary on Clans of Intrigue by critic James Mudge
  • Alternate version of Clans of Intrigue via seamless branching, featuring four extended scenes previously censored for explicit material
  • Theatrical trailers for both films

DISC SIX – JADE TIGER / THE SENTIMENTAL SWORDSMAN

  • Brand new 2K restorations of both films from the original negatives by Arrow Films
  • Newly restored uncompressed Mandarin mono audio for Jade Tiger
  • Newly restored uncompressed Mandarin and Cantonese mono audio for The Sentimental Swordsman
  • Newly translated English subtitles for both films
  • Brand new commentary on Jade Tiger by critic Ian Jane
  • Brand new commentary on The Sentimental Swordsman by David West, author of Chasing Dragons: An Introduction to the Martial Arts Film
  • Theatrical trailers for both films

DISC SEVEN – THE AVENGING EAGLE / KILLER CONSTABLE

  • Brand new 2K restorations of both films from the original negatives by Arrow Films
  • Newly restored uncompressed Mandarin and English mono audio for both films, plus Cantonese mono for The Avenging Eagle
  • Newly translated English subtitles for both films, plus optional hard-of-hearing subtitles for the English dubs
  • Brand new commentary on The Avenging Eagle by martial arts cinema expert Frank Djeng
  • Three brand new commentaries on Killer Constable: one by film critic and historian Tony Rayns; one by Frank Djeng; one by martial arts
  • cinema expert Brian Bankston
  • Additional and alternate scenes from the South Korean version of Killer Constable (in standard definition)
  • Alternate English-language title sequences for both films
  • Theatrical trailers for both films

DISC EIGHT – BUDDHA’S PALM / BASTARD SWORDSMAN

  • Brand new 2K restorations of both films from the original negatives by Arrow Films
  • Newly restored uncompressed Cantonese, Mandarin and English mono audio for Buddha’s Palm
  • Newly restored uncompressed Mandarin mono audio for Bastard Swordsman
  • Newly translated English subtitles for both films, plus optional hard-of-hearing subtitles for the English dub on Buddha’s Palm
  • Brand new commentary on Buddha’s Palm by critic and translator Dylan Cheung
  • Brand new commentary on Bastard Swordsman by martial arts cinema expert Frank Djeng
  • Alternate English title sequence for Buddha’s Palm, as Raiders of the Magic Palm
  • Theatrical trailers for both films

DISC NINE – BONUS FEATURES

  • High Definition (with standard-definition VHS inserts) presentation of the rare Korean version of Killer Constable with newly-translated English subtitles, featuring over half an hour of exclusive alternate footage never released outside South Korea before
  • Newly filmed appreciation of director Chor Yuen by film critic and historian Tony Rayns
  • Interview with stuntwoman Sharon Yeung on Intimate Confessions of a Chinese Courtesan, filmed in 2005
  • Appreciation of Intimate Confessions of a Chinese Courtesan from 2003 by academic Sze Man-hung, musician Kwan King-chung, and filmmaker Clarence Fok (Naked Killer)
  • Interview with actor Ti Lung, recorded in 2004
  • Archive interviews with director Chor Yuen, actors Yuen Wah and Li Ching on The Magic Blade
  • Appreciation of Chor Yuen’s career by film historian Sam Ho, filmed in 2003
  • Interview with screenwriter Sze-to On on The Magic Blade, filmed in 2003
  • Interview with actor Ku Feng on The Avenging Eagle, filmed in 2004
  • Interview with actor Eddy Ko on The Avenging Eagle, filmed in 2004

DISC TEN – MORE MUSIC FROM SHAW BROTHERS CLASSICS (CD)

Product Description

Before Hong Kong’s mightiest film studio mastered the art of the kung fu film, Shaw Brothers hit box office gold with a very different kind of martial arts cinema, one that channeled the blood-soaked widescreen violence of Japanese samurai epics and Italian spaghetti westerns into a uniquely Chinese form: the wuxia pian. With their enthralling tales drawn from historical myth and legend of sword-wielding (and often gravity-defying) noble heroes, the wuxia films housed in this next installment of Arrow Video’s best-selling Shawscope series demonstrate the sweeping stylistic evolution of the genre, from the righteous stoicism of the late-60s Mandarin period, right through to the wild-and-weird anarchism of the early-80s Cantonese explosion.

The iconic One-Armed Swordsman trilogy, directed between 1967 and 1971 by wuxia cinema godfather Chang Cheh, made household names of stars “Jimmy” Wang Yu and David Chiang and set the gory template for many of the films to come. Contrary to Chang’s tales of loyal brotherhood, many wuxia films focused on female protagonists, three very different examples of which we see next: Ho Meng-hua’s Lady Hermit, with the great Cheng Pei-pei (Come Drink with Me) as a virtuous swordswoman called upon to stop a vicious warlord; Chor Yuen’s scandalous Intimate Confessions of a Chinese Courtesan in which the titular lady of the night masters every deadly skill she can to get revenge on those who enslaved her; and Cheng Kang’s all-star epic The 14 Amazons, in which Shaws’ finest starlets play the real-life women of the Yang dynasty, avenging their fallen menfolk in battle. Next, Chor Yuen adapted several beloved novels by consummate wuxia storyteller Gu Long to the big screen, four of which are collected here: The Magic BladeClans of IntrigueJade Tiger and The Sentimental Swordsman, all starring the redoubtable Ti Lung. As kung fu overtook wuxia at the box office, the genre evolved into unexpected new directions, with its chivalrous knights-errant replaced by conflicted antiheroes, as seen in Sun Chung’s breathlessly exciting The Avenging Eagle and Boxer’s Omen goremeister Kuei Chih-hung’s fatalistic masterpiece Killer Constable. Finally, just when it seemed the wuxia film had nowhere left to turn, Eighties excess reigned supreme in the special-effects-soaked, fourth-wall-breaking fantastical delights of Taylor Wong’s Buddha’s Palm and Lu Chun-ku’s Bastard Swordsman.

Back with all-new exclusive restorations and hours of insightful bonus material, if you thought the previous two Shawscope sets showed the Shaw Brothers studio at its strongest, you ain’t seen nothing yet!