Kong San

Most Popular Kong San Trailers

Total trailers found: 12

The Great Plot Trailer (1970)

01 January 1970

The Great Plot is a Hong Kong Martial Arts movie

Lewd Lizard Trailer (1979)

19 October 1979

A young suitor loses his girlfriend to a wealthy businessman. At first he's angry. Then in a fit of depression, he goes to the sea shore where he finds lizards.

The Magic Lamp Trailer (1964)

23 January 1964

Adapted from one of China's most well-known fairy tales, the Goddess of Mount Hua falls in love with a young mortal scholar Liu Yanchang and gives birth to a baby son, Chenxiang.

Bloody Gloves Trailer (1961)

06 December 1961

HK mystery film.

Monkey Comes Again Trailer (1971)

26 January 1971

Sequel to the 1969 Cathay Studios film The Monkey In Hong Kong.

The Devil's Skin Trailer (1970)

17 September 1970

Yang buys a painting of fox fairy. When he faces the painting and calls "Qing Mei", a fox fairy will get out the painting and stay together with Yang.

Forbidden Killing Trailer (1970)

01 October 1970

In "Forbidden Killing" Melinda Chen Man-Ling plays a highly trained swords woman who gets involve in a power struggle between two groups mandarins in the government.

The Rivals Trailer (1970)

14 May 1970

The Northern and Southern Champion swordsmen discover the Tartars have murdered their families and the only thing on their minds is revenge.

Romance of the Forbidden City Trailer (1964)

08 October 1964

Hong Kong drama directed by Wong Tin-Lam.

Lotus Camp Trailer (1969)

11 June 1969

Melinda Chen Man-Ling stars in another Cathay wuxia flick.

The Spirits Trailer (1969)

16 July 1969

Three tales taken from author Pu Songling's collection of famous classical ghost stories. Wu Qiuyue- Wang Ding falls in love with a ghost and fights with the guards of Hades to bring her back.

Cold Blade Trailer (1970)

31 December 1970

Chor Yuen was Gu Long before he started filming Gu Long. The director's first wuxia film, made at Shaws' rival Cathay, finds him relishing in a mode of expression that would later become the signature style of the 'martial-arts suspense thriller' mini-genre.