- Source: Encounters of the Spooky Kind
Encounters of the Spooky Kind (Chinese: 鬼打鬼) is a 1980 Hong Kong martial arts comedy horror film starring and directed by Sammo Hung, written by Hung and Huang Ying, and produced by Hung's film production company Bo Ho Film Company. Released as Spooky Encounters in the United States and also known as Close Encounters of the Spooky Kind, the latter title more blatantly mimicking the title of the film Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), Encounters of the Spooky Kind popularized the production of films based on the jiangshi of Chinese legends in the Hong Kong film industry, though it was not the first. As Andrew Heskens of easternkicks.com wrote, "Sammo Hung [...] took the idea of hopping vampires/deceased from The Shadow Boxing (aka The Spiritual Boxer II) and turned it into a phenomenon with Encounter of the Spooky Kind, and things were never the same." Encounters of the Spooky Kind was also one of Hong Kong's first action horror comedies.
In the film, a man is targeted for killing by his wife's lover. The lover employs a witch, who unleashes jiangshi, vampires, and spirits against the husband. The attacks are countered by a rival sorcerer, who takes the husband as his disciple. The events escalate to a battle between the sorcerers.
The film was followed by a 1990 stand-alone sequel starring Hung and Lam Ching-ying, Encounters of the Spooky Kind II (also known as Close Encounters of the Spooky Kind 2), which has no relation to Encounters of the Spooky Kind. A soft reboot directed by Dick Wei was filmed in 2016.
Plot
The film starts with Bold Cheung having a nightmare about two ghosts, an elder and the young adult, first in a wine jar and then as a human. Cheung narrowly escapes the two ghosts, but they still pursue him.
Bold Cheung is challenged to spend the night in an abandoned house where he must peel an apple in front of a mirror. If he breaks the skin then something bad will happen. Upholding his mantle as the boldest, he accepts the challenge. However, that night, whilst peeling the apple, his friend tricks him. While scolding his friend for the prank, a real ghost appears and snatches Cheung's friend away. The ghost reaches for Cheung, but he cuts its hand off and then quickly shatters the mirror, causing the house to collapse.
The next day, Cheung overhears a story about a promiscuous wife from a sweet tofu seller (who admits that something similar happened to him and his wife); he goes to his home to check on his wife and finds two peeping toms outside his door. He scolds them, causing his wife and employer, Master Tam, to hear. Tam escapes, but leaves his shoe which Cheung finds and confronts his wife with. His wife pulls a tantrum and makes Cheung feel guilty.
Master Tam is worried Cheung will find out about the affair, so he hires a Mao Shan witch, Chin Hoi, to get rid of him. When Chin mentions this to his junior disciple, Priest Tsui, Tsui gets angry, stating that it is against the rules of their sect to harm others and is then kicked out by Chin. Cheung is tricked into spending the night in a temple, but he encounters Tsui who tells him that he must sleep on the roof. Cheung does so. A coffin in the temple opens, and a jiangshi, a hopping corpse, begins looking for him, but he is safe. Chin gives up when he cannot find Cheung (he is controlling the jiangshi), just as Cheung falls down. Chin and the cadaver look for Cheung again. He hides under the coffin, but is found; the two fight, but by this time, the sun was rising, so Chin had to move the corpse back into the coffin.
Cheung is tricked into spending another night in the temple. Again he meets Tsui who tells him to collect fifty chicken eggs to throw into the coffin. If he runs out of eggs, he must throw dog's blood over the jiangshi. However, the egg seller puts in ten duck eggs. That night, Cheung throws in the eggs when the coffin begins to open and it works. However, when he throws a duck egg inside, the corpse escapes so Cheung throws dog's blood onto it which sends Chin flying into Tam's roof, severing his control of the jiangshi.
Cheung goes back to town, but an Inspector arrests him for murdering his wife, even though it is a set-up. Cheung is thrown in prison, but escapes by pretending to be sick; he beats up the guards and runs into a forest where he trips over a coffin exposing the corpse within. As Cheung sleeps, it comes to life and mimics his actions before an evil force causes it to attack and chase him. Whilst on the run from the corpse, Cheung bumps into the Inspector and his men. The jiangshi collapses onto the Inspector, giving Cheung time to escape.
Cheung meets up with Tsui who wants to take Cheung as his disciple. As they stop to eat, the Inspector shows up and sends his men after Cheung. Chin is also there and manipulates Cheung's right arm to beat up the people around him and himself. Tsui stops him in a sword fight, and Chin escapes. To help Cheung, Tsui uses his magic to manipulate the Inspector's men to fight the Inspector whilst he and Cheung escape.
Tsui initiates Cheung as his disciple at an abandoned Taoist altar by drawing talismans onto Cheung’s body. He also gives Cheung his undergarment as protection. Meanwhile Chin sends a vampire after Tsui and Cheung but they defeat it and Tsui uses his magic to force the corpse to tell them where Chin was hiding. They then go to Tam's house to challenge Chin. Both sorcerers use magic to instill spirits into their disciples. Cheung is possessed by the monkey god and Chin’s disciple by the Dragon Taming Arhat. The two possessed apprentices fight with Cheung winning.
Chin then forces Master Tam to be possessed with the spirit of Lu Dong Bin but Cheung, who is possessed by Hong Hai Er, kills him. Then the two sorcerers unleash their magic on each other and Tsui is badly injured with Chin’s sorcery because he gave his magic undergarment to Cheung. Just as it seems like Chin is winning, Cheung cuts the legs off his altar. This causes Chin to lose balance, giving Tsui a chance to hit him with magical fire; Chin is set ablaze and falls off his altar to burn to death. However, Tsui is badly hurt by Chin's magic and he too falls off his altar dead. Cheung's wife steps forward in all the madness and tries to convince Cheung that Tam was about to rape her. However, Cheung is not deceived and he punches her over and over again, then throws her.
Cast
Sammo Hung – Bold Cheung
Chung Fat – Priest Tsui
Lam Ching-ying – Inspector
Jonny Chan – Priest Chin Hoi
To Siu-ming – Ah To / Ah dooh / Cocky
Huang Ha – Master Tam (as Wong Ha)
Dick Wei – Master Lok
Cheung Ging-boh – Uncle Fok
Tai Bo – Adviser Lau
Yuen Miu – Ah To's friend / Prison Guard (2 roles)
Pang Yun-cheung – Ah To's friend
Wellson Chin – Police officer
Ng Min-kan – Police officer
Leung Suet-mei – Cheung's wife
Billy Chan – Cheung's friend
Fung Ging-man – Peeping Tom
Ho Pak-kwong – Peeping Tom
Yuen Biao – Vampire
Lau Chau-sang – Guard
Wu Ma – Ah Chiu Fa Kau<
Billy Chan – Driver
Box office
Encounters of the Spooky Kind grossed $5,675,626.00 HKD at the Hong Kong box office. It ran in Hong Kong theatres from 24 December 1980 to 8 January 1981.
Home media
= VHS
== VCD
== DVD
== Blu-ray
=References
External links
Encounters of the Spooky Kind at Hong Kong Movie Database
Encounters of the Spooky Kind at Hong Kong Cinemagic
Encounters of the Spooky Kind at IMDb
Encounters of the Spooky Kind at AllMovie
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Spooky Encounters
- Sammo Hung
- Rigor Mortis (film)
- Wu Ma
- Daftar episode Mr. Bean: The Animated Series
- Encounters of the Spooky Kind
- Encounters of the Spooky Kind II
- Jiangshi fiction
- Lam Ching-ying
- Sammo Hung
- Mang Hoi
- Rigor Mortis (film)
- List of comedy horror films
- Kung Fu (Ash song)
- Dick Wei