Añade un argumento en tu idiomaA young martial artist embarks on an adventure, encountering other martial artists in battle until one day he meets an aging blind man who will show him the true meaning of martial arts and ... Leer todoA young martial artist embarks on an adventure, encountering other martial artists in battle until one day he meets an aging blind man who will show him the true meaning of martial arts and life.A young martial artist embarks on an adventure, encountering other martial artists in battle until one day he meets an aging blind man who will show him the true meaning of martial arts and life.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
- Morthond
- (as Anthony de Longis)
- Martial Artist
- (as Michael Vendrell)
- Ferryman
- (sin acreditar)
- Warrior
- (sin acreditar)
- Arena Announcer
- (sin acreditar)
- Young Monk
- (sin acreditar)
- Monkeyboy
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
As it happened, I was somewhat let down by the film: I'm all for exotic action/adventure stuff a genre which got something of a revival during this era but, despite the various trimmings (martial arts, mystical overtones, plus a number of rather superfluous cameo appearances by the likes of Roddy MacDowall, Eli Wallach and Christopher Lee), THE SILENT FLUTE came across as invincibly low-brow! Besides, while David Carradine is ostensibly the star (and even gets to play four different parts for no discernible reason!), the hero proper of the narrative was played a beefy protégé of his Jeff Cooper whose wooden performance here really drowned the film for me!!
The plot the winner of a martial arts tournament is assigned the task of seeking the whereabouts of a famous wizard (played by horror legend Lee) who is in possession of an all-powerful book sounds intriguing on paper but, to be honest, the way this plays out on screen it's not terribly compelling; worse still, the denouement is a real cop-out! That said, the numerous action sequences and Carradine's characterization of a blind shepherd (himself a martial arts champion) who guides Cooper on his danger-fraught journey make the film palatable for the most part.
Despite the obvious low-budget at his disposal, too, one-time-only director Moore (his more typical credit is as a cinematographer) lends the film reasonable visual style accentuated by the expansive Israeli locations (which constitutes the film's main asset along with Australian composer Bruce Smeaton's beautiful score). As a matter of fact, Moore admits in the disc's Audio Commentary that the main reason that seemed to have gotten him the assignment in the first place was because his background as a cameraman assured (in the eyes of the producers, at least) outstanding visuals!
THE SILENT FLUTE is, ultimately, a hodgepodge of disparate ideas (with its most bizarre element being Wallach's masochistic "Man In Oil" and his diatribe on the virtues of a life without one's own genitalia!) which don't really jell and, consequently, it works only in fits and starts...
How well the movie accomplishes it's goal depends on how seriously you take eastern philosophies. It's all too easy to watch a few minutes of it and dismiss it as some weird barbarian movie with lots of karate. It is decidedly low budget.
However, if you watch the movie and *listen* to what it's trying to tell, it's extremely engrossing, as it addresses questions and concepts that all of us wonder about at some time or another.
The man making the journey in this movie, "Cord," is acceptable, if a rather generic role. David Carradine plays several roles, but his most striking is that of an eerie blind man who fights off his opponents with a hollow staff that whistles as he twirls it.
This is a hard movie to find, but it does crop up sometimes on late night TV or cable, and is worth checking out.
It's not a great movie, but it addresses great questions and, if you look at it through the lens of metaphor, it can point you towards an answer or two. As well as that, it's a punctuation mark--if not a prose passage--from the '80s era of movies that asked us to keep believing things we knew were probably not true, but would be oh-so-cool if they were.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesBruce Lee and James Coburn, beside Stirling Silliphant, wrote the original story with the intention of starring in the movie.
- PifiasDuring the fight between Changsha and the Black Giant David Carradine's wig falls off after a high kick.
- Citas
[Cord repeatedly steps in a stream]
The Blind Man: It can't be done!
[after pausing, Cord continues to step in the stream]
The Blind Man: You can't do it!
Cord: Can't do what?
The Blind Man: You can't step on the same piece of water twice.
- Versiones alternativasUK cinema and video versions were cut by 51 secs by the BBFC to remove footage of fighting staff, a throwing star and a shot of a cow receiving a karate blow to its neck. The cuts were fully waived for the 2008 Orbit DVD release.
Selecciones populares
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 4.000.000 US$ (estimación)
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