Wang Sha Trailers
The Love of Immortal TrailerThe Emperor and the Minister TrailerBlack Lizard Trailer
Wang Sa (real name Heng Kim Ching) (1924 – 18 January 1998) was a Singaporean comedian. He was part of a pair of Singapore comedy duo, who were akin to the Laurel and Hardy of the East. With Ye Fong, Wang often performed as a duet at the New World Amusement Park and on television in the 1960s and 1970s. They were also well-known in Malaysia, Taiwan, and Hong Kong.
Wang died of chronic lung disease on 18 January 1998.[1][4]
Most Popular Wang Sha Trailers
Total trailers found: 24
17 December 1976
Ah Niu, swindled of his fortune by cunning crooks, hits rock bottom. A fateful encounter with devious thugs reunites him with Uncle Chou, prompting their escape to the vibrant city of Singapore.
01 March 1980
The year is 1756 and the Emperor journeys to Soochow, where he encounters a famous courtesan and gets involved with in all sorts of un-emperor-like activities.
14 October 1977
A swordsman does everything it takes to bring justice. However, he has a drinking problem which eventually leads to his downfall.
09 January 1976
A movie on the life of the renowned Bruce Lee, especially his relationship with his mistress.
01 January 1980
Complex plots? This director didn't want them. Expensive, famous stars? Didn't need them. Glorious sets and costumes? He could take them or leave them.
10 October 1975
Boss Chai (Wang Sha) serves as the leader of a group of thieves and skilled pickpockets. One fateful night, his most prized possessions fall into the hands of his senior disciple, Hsiao Hsiang Kung (Ye Feng), a renowned master thief among thieves.
26 November 1981
Young swordsman Lung Fei encounters strange omens portending the death of his fiancee Ting Tzu-chu. His enquiries with the help of Chief Constable Tieh Hu reveal an astounding story.
24 July 1980
Kao is given a mission by his elderly master to take a cursed sword and solve petty squabbles between skilled martial masters.
01 January 1981
Cheng Tai-nun is a young martial-arts champion. She marries an elderly landowner so that he can keep his estate from falling into the greedy and corrupt hands of his brother, Yu Yung-Sheng.
20 November 1982
The story about royal intrigue with the ingenious Lord Liu, whose intelligence was envied by the Emperor himself.
03 June 1977
Emperor Chien Lung uses disguises to experience life among his subjects.
02 May 1980
The plot is a trifle about an obnoxious restaurant delivery boy causing trouble with some local bad guys for the cook who secretly knows kung fu, eventually learning some techniques and finally, with the cook, confronting the bad guys.
03 April 1980
A gang of thugs led by a ruthless bully (Hwang Jang Lee) has been terrorizing the residents of a small Japanese town for years, and the townspeople have finally had enough.
31 October 1980
Sha Yung (Wang Sha) and Shuang La (Lin Hui-huang), a sly duo with some kung fu skills, make their living through clever schemes.
02 October 1976
The beloved cartoon character Master Q gets a hilarious live-action adaptation in the side-splitting comic adventure Mr.
08 February 1975
Following the lives of three downtrodden but resilient outcasts, John Lo Mar's gritty social drama paints a sense of realism rarely seen in Hon Kong movies.
22 May 2020
The film tells that Yan Xian's master passed him a demon catcher before he died, but the demon catcher was stolen by the three cat demon.
06 October 1978
In the 18th century, Emperor Chien Lung makes a journey into Southern China.
01 January 1979
It's Meng Yuan-wen (star of The Master Strikes) versus Kuan Feng in this wild and wacky wushu saga of a priceless pole with a spectacular secret.
18 November 1978
The beloved king of Hong Kong comic book characters, Old Master Q, is back in live action again by popular demand.
01 January 1977
Cheng Meng-chi (Liang Tian), celebrated for his cunning, embarks on a clever scheme to outwit his mischievous neighbour, Wu Tien-chuang (Wang Sha).
01 June 1974
A bittersweet comedy about a simple hick who arrives in the big city to seek his fortune, "The Crazy Bumpkins" is about Ah Niu, who leaves his native village to live with an uncle in Hong Kong, not realizing he is a crook.
07 February 1976
In 1974, John Lo Mar co-directed The Crazy Bumpkins, a new variation on the time-tested, beloved Cantonese comedy "Country Bumpkin" tradition.
30 May 1975
The sequel to John Lo Mar and Chang Yang's original film finds the naive village immigrant, Ah Niu (Yeh Feng) leaving jail to work and live with his crooked Uncle Chou (Wang Sha) again.