Alexander Fu Sheng
18 titles
Filmography
18 results

Chinatown Kid
(1977)Tan Tung flees to San Francisco to escape gang trouble at home, but when he finds the same men in the city, he plots an inside job to take them out.

Shaolin Martial Arts
(1974)Students at a temple learn martial arts techniques from masters and, after achieving good form, they face the best fighters in China.
Disciples of Shaolin
(1975)A wandering martial artist takes a job in a textile mill and teaches his co-workers how to defend themselves against attacks from their rivals at another mill.
The Brave Archer
(1977)A young man must complete a series of martial art tests and overcome assassins along the way.

Life Gamble
(1978)Life Gamble is the tale of a simple blacksmith (Kuo Chue) with extraordinary martial-arts skills who is entangled in a life-and-death struggle among swordsmen, thieves, con artists, a smooth dagger-slinger (Fu Sheng), a beautiful seductress (Lin Chen-chi).
The New Shaolin Boxers
(1976)A dynamic kung-fu classic about a carriage driver who finds love and death when he battles particularly homicidal street punks.
The Brave Archer 2
(1978)Clan rivalries reach an all-time peak leading a young maiden to be named leader of the Beggar Clan.

The Proud Twins
(1979)This tale of hidden treasure and a young wushu warrior in the Valley of Villains is considered among the best from director Chu Yuan and celebrated author Ku Lung. Making the production even more special is the presence of international favorite Alexander Fu Sheng.
My Rebellious Son
(1982)A man keeps testing his father's patience until they unite to battle a corrupt local dignitary and his army of evil outsiders.

The Treasure Hunters
(1981)This movie is both one of the best-loved action comedies ever, and Alexander Fu Sheng's comeback film after breaking both his legs. It left no doubt that he was truly back in action, taking on cops, monks, and bad guys galore!

The 8 Diagram Pole Fighter
(1984)After his family is ambushed and killed by the Mongol army, the son of a kung fu master retreats to the mountains and trains to seek his revenge.

The Avenging Eagle
(1978)With help from a mysterious warrior, a man targets his former gang leader.

Heroes Two
(1974)When the Ching attack the Shaolin temple, Hung manages to escape, but soon ends up in prison after being mistaken for a bandit. Fang now has to help Hung escape so that they can join forces against the evil Ching.

The Deadly Breaking Sword
(1979)The legendary Ti Lung unites with Jackie Chan's kung-fu comedic rival, Alexander Fu Sheng, to defeat an assassin being "acupuncturingly" controlled by the demented Dr. Kuo. Acclaimed choreographer Tang Chia's action bits and sight gags are bewitching to behold.

Heroes Shed No Tears
(1980)Alexander Fu Sheng's martial arts talents are awesomely featured in Heroes Shed No Tears as he plays the son of man a who's supposed to die at the hands of a sword with a forged teardrop on its blade.

Legendary Weapons of China
(1982)This production is the culmination of the visionary director, Liu Chia-liang's work - a beautifully realized action comedy, in which the groundbreaking magazine, Martial Arts Movies, called "the quintessential martial arts movie" and perhaps the greatest kung-fu movie ever made.

7-Man Army
(1976)In 1933, seven Chinese soldiers fight valiantly during the Sino-Japanese war.

Ten Tigers of Kwangtung
(1979)Ming partisan Chu is on the run from Manchu forces. Local merchant and kung fu enthusiast Li Chen-chau gives the fugitive shelter in his pawnshop and quietly recruits some of his fellow martial master associates to help protect the lad.