I bought tickets to this. $12 for all three films
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/nglive/washingtondc/s2008/china/kungfu.html Kung-fu Cinema: Masters of Shaolin
Saturday, June 14, 2008 at 1 p.m. order tickets | ticket info
Movie poster: 36th Chamber of Shaolin
A movie poster for The 36th Chamber of Shaolin
(c) Licensed by Celestial Pictures Limited. All Rights Reserved
To celebrate the opening of the new National Geographic Museum
exhibition Shaolin: Temple of Zen—Photographs by Justin Guariglia,
enjoy an afternoon with three kung-fu movie classics, all set in
China's legendary Shaolin Temple! Produced by the legendary Shaw
Brothers Studios, which set the standard for martial-arts films and
influenced later filmmakers such as Quentin Tarantino, John Woo, and
Ang Lee, these films offer superbly choreographed action, plus
insights into Chinese history, religious thought, and culture. The
films will be introduced by Dr. Craig D. Reid, an expert in the genre
who became one of the first non-Asian actors/stuntmen in Chinese
kung-fu movies, subsequently learning fight choreography from the
legendary Jackie Chan, and working as a fight choreographer for
American production companies.
We'll be screening the following films:
1:30 p.m. Shaolin Temple (1976, 126 min.) Considered to be director
Chang Cheh's masterpiece, the film chronicles the fall of the Shaolin
Temple, and features an impressive roster of the Shaw Brothers'
legendary kung-fu stars.
http://www.kungfucinema.com/?p=687 4 p.m. Executioners from Shaolin (1977, 100 min.) This early work by
the great martial arts film director Liu Chia Liang picks up the story
where Shaolin Temple leaves off, with a father-and-son team of master
fighters seeking vengeance for the destruction of the Temple.
http://www.kungfucinema.com/?p=290 VIDEO 6 p.m. The 36th Chamber of Shaolin (1978, 119 min.) Hoping to seek
revenge against the oppressive Manchus, a young man enters the Shaolin
temple to master its unique fighting techniques. According to the New
York Times, this film is "widely considered to be the greatest kung-fu
flick of all time."
http://kungfucinema.com/?p=782 VIDEO The National Geographic Museum exhibition Shaolin: Temple of
Zen—Photographs by Justin Guariglia opens Wednesday, June 11