36th Chamber Of Shaolin Site
The film popularized the "training montage" trope. We see San Te fail, bleed, and struggle. This makes his eventual transformation into a master feel earned, rather than accidental.
Have you seen The 36th Chamber? What’s your favorite training montage in film history? Drop a comment below—just don’t challenge me to a staff fight. 36th chamber of shaolin
What makes San Te different from Bruce Lee’s avenging angels or Jet Li’s prodigies is that he isn't naturally gifted. He’s a nerd. He’s a bookworm. He gets his ass kicked constantly. The film popularized the "training montage" trope
On the surface, the plot is a standard revenge tale. San Te (played by the incomparable Gordon Liu) is a young student whose family is slaughtered by the Manchu government. He flees to the Shaolin Temple, learns kung fu, and returns to exact justice. But to describe the film by its plot is to describe a cathedral by its exit signs. The true substance of the film lies in the middle hour—the training—and the profound philosophy it espouses about the difference between learning a skill and forging a soul. Have you seen The 36th Chamber