Here’s a complete, ready-to-post tribute/review for (also known as The Legend of Drunken Master in the US). You can use this on a blog, social media (Facebook/Instagram caption), or a Letterboxd review. Title: The Unbreakable Final Form: Why Drunken Master 2 is Still the King of Kung Fu Cinema
If you’ve only seen the original 1978 film, stop everything. This loose sequel (directed by Lau Kar-leung and Jackie himself) isn’t just a remake—it’s a supernova. It takes the comedic “Drunken Fist” style and weaponizes it into the most breathtaking, bone-crushing, and dangerous action spectacle ever filmed.
Jackie plays Wong Fei-hung, a folk hero who accidentally steals a shipment of Chinese antiquities from British smugglers. The twist? The bad guys aren’t just thugs—they’re steel-limbed, axe-wielding maniacs. To save his family and his country’s honor, Wong must use the forbidden “Drunken Eight Immortals” technique—a style that requires drinking industrial-grade alcohol to numb his body for superhuman feats. jackie chan movies drunken master 2
Drunken Master 2 is Jackie Chan at his physical peak (age 40)—wise enough to choreograph genius, young enough to survive it. It’s funnier, faster, and fiercer than 99% of modern action movies.
There are martial arts movies, and then there is (1994). This loose sequel (directed by Lau Kar-leung and
If you show someone one Jackie Chan film, make it this one. Pour a drink. Bow to the master.
🍶 This isn’t silly stumbling. Jackie demonstrates eight distinct personalities of the drunken immortals—from the weepy beggar to the regal emperor. Every sway has a purpose. Every fall becomes a sweep. It’s slapstick evolved into a lethal art form. The twist
The US dub (“The Legend of Drunken Master”) replaces the amazing original score with generic 90s rock. Seek the original Cantonese version with subtitles. Trust me.