Year of release
1978
1978
Directed by
Richard Moore
Richard Moore
Written by
Bruce Lee (story)
James Coburn (story)
Stanley Mann (script)
Stirling Silliphant (script and story)
Bruce Lee (story)
James Coburn (story)
Stanley Mann (script)
Stirling Silliphant (script and story)
Starring
David Carradine
Jeff Cooper
Christopher Lee
Eli Wallach
David Carradine
Jeff Cooper
Christopher Lee
Eli Wallach
The Silent Flute
(aka Circle of Iron)
(aka Circle of Iron)
Plot – A warrior by the name of Cord (Cooper) competes in a fighting competition for the right to go on a quest to find a warrior called Zetan; the holder of the Book of All Knowledge. He is disqualified for his rough actions but vows to find Zetan and the book anyway. Along the way he faces numerous challenges and tests, and meets a supremely skilled but blind man (Carradine) who takes him under his wing.
A warrior named Cord wanders the Earth seeking Zetan, the protector of a mystical book of enlightenment. He finds a man (Eli Wallach) in the middle of the desert, sitting in a cauldron of oil. He has been doing this for 10 straight years. Why is he doing this? To dissolve his penis in the ultimate vow of chastity! He wants to insure his celibacy. Seriously! Oh and David Carradine's blind man plays a flute in the background. And you know what is perhaps the weirdest thing about that? It doesn't seem all that weird here. If anything it feels rather run of the mill and normal.
As you will probably be able to gather from the scene I've described there this is an odd little film. The best way to describe it is probably as an existential martial arts flick; mixing martial arts with zen teachings, with a touch of fantasy thrown in for good measure. It is a true oddity. In a number of ways it actually reminded me of an episode of the classic, original series of Star Trek. The environment it takes place in feels suitably otherworldly (as the prologue tells us it takes place in a world that “never was, and always is”) and the costumes feel like those worn by alien civilisations. Except of course that all the aliens are humanoids for budgetary reasons! And as for our hero Cord he has the appearance of a barbarian from a Conan film, with the hair from an 80s heavy metal band!
Film trivia – The story was originally conceived by the trio of Bruce Lee, James Coburn and Oscar-winning screenwriter Stirling Silliphant. It happened when Coburn and Silliphant were students of Lee's.
The acting is well....I'll be kind and say it's enthusiastic. Jeff Cooper really is quite dreadful, some of the most wooden and cringeworthy acting I've seen in quite some time. Though to be fair David Carradine redeems it by being a bit of a treat to watch, as he usually tends to be. And there is quite a bit of fun to be had with some of the unusual cameo spots such as Roddy McDowall as the judge of the martial arts competition and Christopher Lee as Zetan.
And sadly the martial arts sequences don't excite as you would hope. They come across as stiff and lacklustre, very much cheap TV standards. Not close to what you'd expect had Bruce Lee been involved as originally intended.
Film trivia - While the fight sequences don't look all that convincing try telling that to the actors. During filming Jeff Cooper had a tooth knocked out and as for David Carradine, he had his nose broken twice, his toe gouged and injured his knee.
Conclusion – The acting is on the whole poor, the dialogue laughable in its self-importance and the martial arts action disappointing. And yet somehow the longer the film went on the more my heart began to soften to its unique charms.
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JayDee's Movie Musings (Reviews - Frailty / Total Recall / Lone Ranger / Nightcrawler / Whiplash / Imitation Game / Birdman / Avengers: Age of Ultron / Mad Max: Fury Road)