
Through roundabout circumstances, the two team up with Master Charlie Chiang (Yuen Biao), a Taoist priest who’s an ace at exorcisms and general laid-back ass-kickery. Cheng is Big Nicky, a crappy triad whose lone follower is the virginal afro-sporting Boo (Philip Ng). With Sifu VS Vampire, Ronald Cheng appears in his seventh film of 2014, and he may hit double digits before the year is out. Sifu VS Vampire does a decent job in both genres, meaning its status as a geung si film props it up while its Wong Jing-ness brings it straight down. The second genre: cookie-cutter Wong Jing wackfests, of which Hong Kong Cinema has produced countless despite their acknowledged questionable quality. The first genre: the geung si film, a Hong Kong Cinema staple featuring Chinese vampires fighting stalwart Taoist priests, e.g., Mr. So it goes with Sifu VS Vampire, the latest entry in two separate genres. If you aim low, reaching those reduced expectations can be pretty easy.
Sifu vs.vampire movie#
Not bad if this type of movie floats your boat.

Sifu VS Vampire is a generic and generically entertaining movie about wacky dudes fighting vampires, courtesy of junk cinema maestro Wong Jing. Ho-Man, Bonnie Wong Man-Wai, Wong Shee-Tong, Hiro Hayama, Edward Ma Chi-Wai, Ken Law, Michael Chan, Cheung Ka-Lun, Sean Tierney

Ronald Cheng Chung-Kei, Yuen Biao, Philip Ng Won-Lung, Jiang Lu-Xia, Michelle Hu, Kelvin Kwan Chor-Yiu, Bella Law Chi-Kiu, Ricky Yi Fan-Wai, Tony Ho Wah-Chiu, Winnie Leung

Ronald Cheng, Yuen Biao and Philip Ng in Sifu VS Vampire.
