Kung Fu·Wing Chun

Zhang Tongzu
Bai Jing, Yu Shaoqun, Hui Yinghong, Zou Zhaolong, Xiao Jian, Yuan Hua, Yuan Qiu, Hui Tianci, Huang Younan
2010
Mainland China, Hong Kong
Completed
Cantonese, Mandarin
110 minutes
Detailed introduction
This film (drama)Also known as功夫·咏春,is aMainland China, Hong KongProducerwomen sex,At2010Released in year
。The dialogue language isCantonese, Mandarin,Current Douban rating5.5(For reference only)。
Wing Chun master Yim Wing Chun (played by Bai Jing) and her father, who used to be a lay disciple of Shaolin, move from Guangdong to the Dabie Mountain area in Sichuan due to false accusations, relying on a tofu restaurant for a living. Yim Wing Chun is lively and combative, often using the martial arts taught by her father to play rough in the market. One day, her father's family friend, Liang Bochao (played by Yu Shaoqun), is sent by his elders from afar to meet Yim Wing Chun, and coincidentally catches her "in action." Startled, Liang Bochao, who also possesses martial skills, hurriedly flees. Subsequently, Yim Wing Chun works hard to learn how to behave like a proper lady, but this only attracts teasing from local rascals. In a crisis, the wandering Shaolin Master Wu Mei (played by Hui Yinghong) takes Yim Wing Chun as her disciple and teaches her a set of boxing techniques that enable her to defeat the bullies. Liang Bochao and his parents visit the Yim family again, and through martial arts sparring, the two young people finally draw closer. Meanwhile, the Shaolin traitor Jin Ying (played by Zou Zhao Long) leads the Qing court's enforcers to hunt down Master Wu Mei and other Shaolin disciples, and the peaceful small town in Dabie Mountain is about to face continuous fierce battles...