Part II abandons the quiet, Gothic horror of the temple for political satire and monster brawls. The Tree Devil is gone. In its place is a giant, glowing centipede that sheds human skin. The romance is secondary to the acrobatics.
In the pantheon of Hong Kong cinema, few films balance the ethereal and the electric quite like (1987). Directed by Ching Siu-tung and produced by the legendary Tsui Hark, the film—and its two immediate sequels—did more than just scare audiences; it invented a new visual language. Combining wuxia swordplay, slapstick comedy, Arthurian romance, and jaw-dropping special effects, the trilogy remains the definitive benchmark for the supernatural action-romance genre. A chinese ghost story I II III -1987-1990-1991-...