- Tv Series Kung Fu Episodes
- Kung Fu 1972 Tv Series Download Torrent Download
- Kung Fu 1972 Tv Series Download Torrent 2017
- Download Kung Fu YIFY Torrent - The adventures of a Shaolin Monk as he wanders the American West armed only with his skill in Kung Fu.
- The series aired on ABC from October 1972 to April 1975 for a total of 63 episodes. Kung Fu was preceded by a full-length feature television pilot, an ABC Movie of the Week, which was broadcast on February 22, 1972.
This is a list of episodes for the television series Kung Fu:
Download Kung Fu (1972) TV Series with David Carradine? Season 1 torrent or any other torrent from category. Direct download via HTTP available as well. Download Kung Fu (1972) TV Series with David Carradine? Season 1 Torrent.
- 2Episodes
Series overview[edit]
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | ||||
Pilot movie | February 22, 1972 | ||||
1 | 15 | October 14, 1972 | May 3, 1973 | ||
2 | 23 | September 27, 1973 | April 11, 1974 | ||
3 | 24 | September 14, 1974 | April 26, 1975 |
Episodes[edit]
Pilot movie (1972)[edit]
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kung Fu: The Way of the Tiger, The Sign of the Dragon | Jerry Thorpe | Story by : Ed Spielman Teleplay by : Ed Spielman & Howard Friedlander | February 22, 1972 | |
Caine, the Shaolin priest, begins his journey in contention with a railroad boss. Flashbacks reveal his Shaolin beginnings. |
Season 1 (1972–73)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code [1] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | 'King of the Mountain' | Jerry Thorpe | Herman Miller | October 14, 1972 | 166141 |
Caine finds work with a widowed ranch woman and also finds he has romantic feelings for her. But the arrival of a bounty hunter (John Saxon) and the likelihood that others will follow cast an ominous shadow on their love. Winner of the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Drama (to Herman Miller)[2] | ||||||
2 | 2 | 'Dark Angel' | Jerry Thorpe | Herman Miller | November 11, 1972 | 166142 |
Caine shows a recently blinded preacher, Serenity Johnson (John Carradine), how to rely on his other senses. Serenity, in turn, uses his new awareness to persuade Caine's closed-minded grandfather to accept the wandering monk. | ||||||
3 | 3 | 'Blood Brother' | Jerry Thorpe | Herman Miller | January 18, 1973 | 166143 |
Caine refuses to leave Kilgore, Arizona until he discovers what has happened to his Shaolin friend. | ||||||
4 | 4 | 'An Eye for an Eye' | Jerry Thorpe | John Furia, Jr. | January 25, 1973 | 166144 |
A southern family seeks vengeance against the yankee soldier who raped and impregnated their daughter (Lane Bradbury), setting in motion an escalating cycle of violence that Caine may be powerless to stop. Winner of 2 Emmy Awards: (1) Best Director (Jerry Thorpe) and (2) Best Cinematography Jack Woolf.[3] | ||||||
5 | 5 | 'The Tide' | Walter Doniger | A. Martin Zweiback | February 1, 1973 | 166147 |
A man with a price on his head can spark a lot of ambitions. A woman wants to capture Caine so she can offer him to the Chinese government in exchange for her imprisoned father, a dissident author, while a killer hiding behind a badge simply wants to get rich. | ||||||
6 | 6 | 'The Soul Is the Warrior' | Richard Lang | Ron Bishop | February 8, 1973 | 166145 |
Caine's quest to meet his half-brother Danny leads him to a ranch where his sibling once worked and plunges the priest into a confrontation where he proves his mettle by walking through a pit of rattlesnakes. | ||||||
7 | 7 | 'Nine Lives' | Allen Reisner | Herb Meadow | February 15, 1973 | 166146 |
After the death of a mining camp's feline mascot, Caine and an Irish gold prospector embark on a trek to find a new cat – a journey that ultimately has the pair trapped at the bottom of a rapidly filling well. | ||||||
8 | 8 | 'Sun and Cloud Shadow' | Robert Butler | Halsted Welles | February 22, 1973 | 166148 |
Caine brokers a settlement between a landowner and Chinese miners, but the landowner adds an unacceptable condition to the deal. A karate master intends to capture Caine. | ||||||
9 | 9 | 'Chains' | Robert Butler | Story by : Paul Edwards and Gene L. Coon Teleplay by : Gene L. Coon | March 8, 1973 | 166151 |
Imprisoned in an army outpost, Caine escapes – chained to his hulking, mountain-man cellmate…and pursued by a relentless sergeant determined to recapture them both. | ||||||
10 | 10 | 'Alethea' | John Badham | William Kelley | March 15, 1973 | 166150 |
Jodie Foster guest-stars as a young girl Caine befriends, whose eyewitness testimony leads to the priest being tried for murder… and sentenced to death by hanging. | ||||||
11 | 11 | 'The Praying Mantis Kills' | Charles S. Dubin | Richard Lewin | March 22, 1973 | 166149 |
Murderous thugs come looking for Caine after he identifies them as perpetrators of a bank robbery. A youth's ideas of what it means to be a man are challenged by Caine's quiet heroics. | ||||||
12 | 12 | 'Superstition' | Charles S. Dubin | Story by : Dave Moessinger Teleplay by : Ed Waters | April 5, 1973 | 166152 |
Walls imprison the men unjustly sentenced to work as miners at a brutal labor camp. Yet an even greater barrier holds them captive: fear of the camps ancient Indian curse. But Caine knows no such fear. | ||||||
13 | 13 | 'The Stone' | Robert Butler | A. Martin Zweiback | April 12, 1973 | 166153 |
A Brazilian skilled in the capoeira fighting style of his homeland accuses Caine of stealing a diamond. Street urchins offer Caine their savings of $4.08 if he'll kill an Armenian saloon piano player who jilted their mother. | ||||||
14 | 14 | 'The Third Man' | Charles S. Dubin | Robert Lewin | April 26, 1973 | 166154 |
Lucky at cards, unlucky in life. A gambler on a hot streak entrusts his winnings to Caine. But the money is soon stolen, the gambler is killed, and Caine seeks answers to the mysteries surrounding both events. | ||||||
15 | 15 | 'The Ancient Warrior' | Robert Butler | A. Martin Zweiback | May 3, 1973 | 166155 |
Ancient Warrior (Chief Dan George), an aged Indian accompanied by Caine, seeks burial in his sacred, ancestral land, But the burial site is located dead center in a violent, Indian-hating town called Purgatory. |
Season 2 (1973–74)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code [4] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
16 | 1 | 'The Well' | Jerry Thorpe | Kittridge Barton | September 27, 1973 | 166201 |
Sickened by tainted water, Caine recovers at the farm of an ex-slave (Hal Williams) who has a working well – but whose embittered spirit keeps him from sharing the water with his drought-stricken neighbors. | ||||||
17 | 2 | 'The Assassin' | Richard Lang | Spooner Glass and Dan Ullman | October 4, 1973 | 166202 |
A long-festering blood feud keeps young lovers from hostile families apart…and puts Caine on a showdown course with a murderous ninja employed by one of the families. | ||||||
18 | 3 | 'The Chalice' | Jerry Thorpe | William Kelley | October 11, 1973 | 166203 |
Caine promises a dying priest (Victor Millan) that he will return the liturgical chalice the priest stole, plunging the Shaolin into conflict with covetous thugs…and sparking Caine's recall of events that followed Master Po's death. | ||||||
19 | 4 | 'The Brujo' | Richard Lang | Kathryn Terry and Michael S. Michaelian | October 25, 1973 | 166204 |
A powerful male witch paralyzes a small town with fear and earth. But Caine, drawing on the experience gained when he fell under a sorcerer's sway while he was a boy, knows how to fight evil. With Rodolfo Hoyos, Jr., as Esteban, Benson Fong as Sorcerer Liu, Henry Darrow as Don Emilio Fierro, and Keye Luke as Master Po | ||||||
20 | 5 | 'The Squawman' | John Llewellyn Moxey | Arthur Dales | November 1, 1973 | 166206 |
Marcus is welcome…as long as the townsfolk don't also have to welcome his Indian wife. But Caine helps hard luck Marcus to see there's much more to self-worth than the whiskey and approval of others. | ||||||
21 | 6 | 'The Spirit-helper' | Walter Doniger | John T. Dugan | November 8, 1973 | 166205 |
Is Caine the answer to a young Indian brave's prayer? The youth is convinced Caine is his Spirit Guide as the two set out to rescue the boy's kidnapped mother. With Don Johnson. | ||||||
22 | 7 | 'The Tong' | Robert Totten | Robert Schlitt | November 15, 1973 | 166208 |
Slave child Wing flees his master and is sheltered by Caine and a missionary woman, leading to a confrontation between the Shaolin priest and Chinese crime lords who demand the return of the boy. | ||||||
23 | 8 | 'The Soldier' | Richard Lang | Story by : Calvin Clements, Jr. Teleplay by : Ed Waters | November 29, 1973 | 166209 |
His duty is to shoot to kill when so ordered. But a cavalry lieutenant (Tim Matheson) unable to take a life finds another way to prove his heroism after he falls under the influence of a fugitive he captures – a fugitive named Caine. | ||||||
24 | 9 | 'The Salamander' | Richard Lang | Del Reisman | December 6, 1973 | 166207 |
Caine seeks work in a mining boomtown gone bust and becomes a confidant to a mentally troubled youth…and a target in a claim jumper's treachery. Co-stars Ed Flanders. | ||||||
25 | 10 | 'The Hoots' | Robert Totten | Story by : Jason McKinnon Teleplay by : Lionel E. Siegel | December 13, 1973 | 166210 |
Members of the peaceful Hutterite religious sect offer no resistance when persecuted by bigoted cattlemen .. until they learn from Caine that, like the chameleon, they can change and yet remain the same. | ||||||
26 | 11 | 'The Elixir' | Walter Doniger | A. Martin Zweiback | December 20, 1973 | 166211 |
Caine rescues the hawkers of the cure-all Theodora's Elixir from a hostile crowd, earning the come-hither gratitude of Theodora and the resentment of her jealous male partner. | ||||||
27 | 12 | 'The Gunman' | Richard Lang | Robert Lewin | January 3, 1974 | 166212 |
The nature of love is explored in this tale of a gunslinger whose quick-draw defense of Caine and a ranch widow makes him the object of a posse's search .. and the victim of an itchy-fingered bounty hunter. | ||||||
28 | 13 | 'Empty Pages of a Dead Book' | John Llewellyn Moxey | Charles A. McDaniel | January 10, 1974 | 166213 |
A son tries to honor his deceased Texas Ranger father by bringing to justice the criminals the lawman had listed in a book. But good intentions based on wrong premises lead to trouble for the son .. and for Caine. With Robert Foxworth and Slim Pickens. | ||||||
29 | 14 | 'A Dream Within a Dream' | Richard Lang | John T. Dugan | January 17, 1974 | 166214 |
Caine reports that he saw a corpse hanging in a marsh. But no one in town believes Caine's report, and no body is subsequently found – yet the town's populace is mysteriously on edge. With Tina Louise and John Drew Barrymore. | ||||||
30 | 15 | 'The Way of Violence Has No Mind' | Lee Philips | David Michael Korn | January 24, 1974 | 166215 |
A Chinese immigrant gang that has adopted the violent ways of the American outlaw is challenged by the physical and spiritual strength of Caine. Note: Caine's wardrobe changes from a brown shirt to a saffron yellow shirt to commemorate the passing of Bruce Lee.[5] | ||||||
31 | 16 | 'In Uncertain Bondage' | Richard Lang | Abe Polsky and Ed Waters | February 7, 1974 | 166216 |
When Caine and a Southern belle are held captive in a deep pit by kidnappers that include the woman's servants, it prompts his recall of lessons from Master Kan about the server and the served. | ||||||
32 | 17 | 'Night of the Owls, Day of the Doves' | John Llewellyn Moxey | Story by : Frank Dandridge and Ed Waters Teleplay by : Ed Waters | February 14, 1974 | 166217 |
Land bequeathed to brothel prostitutes will help them build new lives if vengeful cattlemen don't seize the land. Caine defends the women .. and also rights a long-ago wrong done by the Shaolin priesthood. | ||||||
33 | 18 | 'Crossties' | Richard Lang | Robert Schmitt | February 21, 1974 | 166218 |
Caine is the man in-between during a land-rights war between farmers and railroad security agents, trying to persuade farmers to accept an offer of amnesty .. and trying to stop agents from using amnesty as a trap. With Harrison Ford. | ||||||
34 | 19 | 'The Passion of Chen Yi' | John Llewellyn Moxey | John T. Dugan | February 28, 1974 | 166219 |
Unable to visit a wrongly jailed ex-Shaolin disciple, Caine commits a crime so that he can be put behind bars near him – and perhaps both right an old misunderstanding and help free the ex-Shaolin | ||||||
35 | 20 | 'Arrogant Dragon' | Richard Lang | Story by : Barbara Melzer, Kathryn & Michael Michaelian Teleplay by : Kathryn & Michael Michaelian | March 14, 1974 | 166220 |
Judgment is clear: Wu Chang must take his own life or face death at the hands of a Tong executioner. But Caine contemplates a third option, one that can help Wu Chang fake his death and escape the Tong terror. | ||||||
36 | 21 | 'The Nature of Evil' | Robert Michael Lewis | Gerald Sanford | March 21, 1974 | 166221 |
An ominous killer holds the town of Nineveh in his evil grip, and only fearless but aged blind preacher Serenity Johnson (John Carradine) and his devoted friend Caine dare to confront him. | ||||||
37 | 22 | 'The Cenotaph (Part 1)' | Richard Lang | William Kelley | April 4, 1974 | 166222 |
A mad mountain man, Logan McBurney, hijacks the armored gold transport Old Ironsides to haul the enormous box that he says contains his wife. As Caine rides with him, the eccentric Scotsman's devotion prompts priestly memories. In flashbacks to China, Caine falls in love for the first time. | ||||||
38 | 23 | 'The Cenotaph (Part 2)' | Richard Lang | William Kelley | April 11, 1974 | 166223 |
Caine resolves his adventures with McBurney and -- in flashbacks to China -- a marathon kung fu battle with a warlord to win a concubine's (Nancy Kwan) heart. |
Season 3 (1974–75)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code [6] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3940 | 12 | 'Blood of the Dragon' | Richard Lang | John T. Dugan | September 14, 1974 | 166257166258 |
Caine returns to his grandfather's town to see him, but too late. The old man has been murdered and Caine will not leave town until he identifies the killer, even though Chinese martial arts experts bent on revenge are on his trail. Caine faces two formidable foes: a remorseless, iron-willed woman who was once his grandfather's lover and three highly trained Chinese warriors, one of whom knows how to summon forth demon fighters. Patricia Neal and Eddie Albert guest star. | ||||||
41 | 3 | 'A Small Beheading' | Richard Lang | Eugene Price | September 21, 1974 | 166254 |
A sea captain (William Shatner) presents Caine with a pardon from the Emperor that will allow the priest to return to China if Caine agrees to submit to a small punishment: the removal of a little finger. | ||||||
42 | 4 | 'This Valley of Terror' | Harry Harris | Story by : Katharyn Michaelian and Michael Michaelian Teleplay by : Katharyn Michaelian | September 28, 1974 | 166253 |
Caine comes across a young woman (Sondra Locke) escaped from a mental ward. He recognizes her affliction as true visions and accompanies her on a quest to discover the source of her torment. | ||||||
43 | 5 | 'The Predators' | Harry Harris | Story by : John Menken Teleplay by : Lloyd Richards and Ed Waters | October 5, 1974 | 166255 |
Caine travels with two unlikely companions: a witness who can clear him of a criminal charge .. and a wounded Apache warrior eager to kill the witness. | ||||||
44 | 6 | 'My Brother, My Executioner' | Jerry Thorpe | John T. Dugan | October 12, 1974 | 166252 |
Kwai Chang is not the only one looking for Danny Caine. Gunfighters say Danny is the best quick-draw fighter around .. and they're eager to match their deadly skills against his. | ||||||
45 | 7 | 'Cry of the Night Beast' | Richard Lang | Story by : Abe Polsky and Ed Waters Teleplay by : Ed Waters | October 19, 1974 | 166251 |
In the Old West, Caine hears the sound of a baby crying in a babbling brook and feels compelled to protect the life of a lone buffalo calf separated from its mother, remembering the time when he was a boy in the Shaolin temple when he could hear the cry of a child before it was born. Meanwhile, bounty hunters close in on him. | ||||||
46 | 8 | 'The Devil's Champion' | Robert Michael Lewis | Katharyn Michaelian and Michael Michaelian | November 1, 1974 | 166260 |
In China, a champion challenges Master Kan in ritual combat to the death. Master Po, sensing an evil power supporting the champion, sends Caine to confront the devil in the palace. | ||||||
47 | 9 | 'The Garments of Rage' | Marc Daniels | Theodore Apstein | November 8, 1974 | 166261 |
Caine begins working on a railroad team that is plagued by a saboteur. The saboteur is revealed to be Master Lee, angry with the railroad for the death of his nephew. Note: At the end of this episode, Caine's costume changes from the yellow shirt to a white shirt and a black jacket. | ||||||
48 | 10 | 'Besieged – Part One: Death on a Cold Mountain' | David Carradine | William Kelley | November 15, 1974 | 166262 |
In China, a woman (Barbara Hershey) wishes to become a member of the Shaolin in order to escape marriage to a cruel warlord. She is given shelter at the temple and runs up against strong resistance. | ||||||
49 | 11 | 'Besieged – Part Two: Cannon at the Gates' | David Carradine | William Kelley and David Michael Korn | November 22, 1974 | 166263 |
In China, enemy forces threaten the temple from outside its walls. A saboteur threatens from within. And Nan Chi (Barbara Hershey), the woman who wishes to join the Shaolin group, tries to resolve the crisis alone. | ||||||
50 | 12 | 'The Demon God' | David Carradine | Story by : George Clayton Johnson Teleplay by : George Clayton Johnson and David Michael Korn | December 13, 1974 | 166259 |
In China, a prince (Brian Tochi) poisons young Caine in order to discover what it's like to journey into death, causing the Shaolin novice to experience mysterious visions of himself in the American West. | ||||||
51 | 13 | 'The Vanishing Image' | Barry Crane | Gustave Field | December 20, 1974 | 166256 |
Caine finds a photographer (Lew Ayres) who may be able to identify his brother Danny in a group photo and an Indian (Tom Nardini) who wants to kill the photographer for stealing his spirit. The photographer reminds Caine of a man (Benson Fong) he knew in China who made beautiful mosaics from broken pieces of pottery. Winner of the Emmy Award for Outstanding Single Performance by a Supporting Actor in a Comedy or Drama Series to Lew Ayres | ||||||
52 | 14 | 'A Lamb to the Slaughter' | Harry Harris | Story by : Robert Specht Teleplay by : Robert Specht and David Michael Korn | January 11, 1975 | 166264 |
Caine finds the son (Alejandro Rey) of a man who died saving his father from a robber. Caine offers to fulfill his obligation with work, but he asks Caine to teach him how to fight the man (Joe Santos) exacting tribute from his village. | ||||||
53 | 15 | 'The Forbidden Kingdom' | Gordon Hessler | Story by : David Michael Korn and Norman Katkov Teleplay by : Norman Katkov | January 18, 1975 | 166268 |
Caine must find a way out of China. His path to the Forbidden Kingdom (Tibet) is blocked by Po Li (Adele Yoshioka) who betrays him to an Imperial soldier (James Shigeta) in an attempt to secure her brother's (Clyde Kusatsu) release. He must flee to the United States instead. Note: Po Li will appear again as the mother of Caine's child in Kung Fu: The Movie (1986) | ||||||
54 | 16 | 'One Step to Darkness' | Marc Daniels | Story by : Gerald Sanford Teleplay by : Robert Sherman and Theodore Apstein | January 25, 1975 | 166265 |
Caine's attempt to help a drug abuser plunges him into an interior world where he must combat a fierce demon of his own creation. | ||||||
55 | 17 | 'Battle Hymn' | Barry Crane | Story by : D. C. Fontana Teleplay by : Herman Miller | February 8, 1975 | 166267 |
A bounty hunter falls from his horse and dies while pursueing Caine. Caine buries the man, collects his things, and sets out to return them to his widow. Along the way, he joins two musicians (José Feliciano and Cannonball Adderley) on a quest to find a mystical cave. It turns out that the bounty hunter's widow (Beverly Garland) and the local sheriff (Joe Maross) are all looking for the cave too and its rich lode of silver. Meanwhile Caine remembers his conversations with Master Po about his future life outside his temple. Note: Caine shaves his head early in this episode. | ||||||
56 | 18 | 'Barbary House' | Marc Daniels | Stephen Karpf and Elinor Karpf | February 15, 1975 | 166269 |
Caine is working for a fighter (Ji-Tu Cumbuka) in order to be near Danny's son, Zeke (John Blyth Barrymore). When Corbino (Leslie Nielsen) learns that Caine has fighting skills, he forces him into the ring. | ||||||
57 | 19 | 'Flight to Orion' | Harry Harris | Stephen Karpf and Elinor Karpf | February 22, 1975 | 166270 |
Caine, Zeke (John Blyth Barrymore) and Zeke's mother (Lois Nettleton) travel to the city of Orion in search of Danny Caine. Corbino (Leslie Nielsen) has sent a search party out looking for them and Danny Caine. Along the way, they meet a station keeper (Don Keefer) who helps them, then betrays them; a rattlesnake; and an Indian who accuses Caine of stealing and sentences him to an ordeal. Zeke escapes and falls into the hands of Corbino. | ||||||
58 | 20 | 'The Brothers Caine' | Harry Harris | Stephen Karpf and Elinor Karpf | March 1, 1975 | 166273 |
Corbino (Leslie Nielsen) tricks Zeke (John Blyth Barrymore) into revealing that his father Danny his hiding in Orion before Caine busts in and rescues him. Caine and Zeke arrive in Orion to find it overrun with bounty hunters searching including Bad Sam (Carl Weathers). Zeke meets his grandfather (John Vernon) and promises to return to San Francisco with him in exchange for $1000 which he gives to his foster mother (Joanna Moore) in exchange for his father's hiding place. Zeke gives the information to Caine before leaving with his grandfather. Caine finds Danny (Tim McIntire) hiding in the silver lode mine, but not before Sam has told Danny that a Chinese bounty hunter is coming after him. | ||||||
59 | 21 | 'Full Circle' | Marc Daniels | Stephen Karpf and Elinor Karpf | March 8, 1975 | 166274 |
Kwai Chang and Danny Caine (Tim McIntire) avoid bounty hunters while traveling together to San Francisco to rescue Zeke (John Blyth Barrymore) from General Cantrell (John Vernon). Caine tries to persuade the General to release Zeke from his promise to live with him. The General refuses and conspires with Corbino (Leslie Nielsen) to kill Danny. | ||||||
60 | 22 | 'The Thief of Chendo' | Harry Harris | Story by : Bernard B. Bossick, Larry H. Gibson and Simon Muntner Teleplay by : Simon Muntner | March 29, 1975 | 166266 |
Under Master Po's guidance, young Caine imagines what life as a priest will be like, envisioning an adventure involving a thief and a princess who fall in love. | ||||||
61 | 23 | 'Ambush' | Gordon Hessler | Norman Katkov | April 4, 1975 | 166272 |
Serenity brings trouble. Blind preacher Serenity Johnson (John Carradine) returns, asking Caine to help him escort a shipment to San Francisco. What neither man knows is that the shipment is stolen silver bars. Rhonda Fleming guest stars. | ||||||
62 | 24 | 'The Last Raid' | Alex Beaton | John T. Dugan | April 26, 1975 | 166271 |
Caine is visiting the Brown family when their son and his friend are taken hostage by a Confederate raider who believes the war isn't over .. and that he may kidnap children in the name of honor. |
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- Pilato, Herbie J. (1993). The Kung Fu Book of Caine: The Complete Guide to TV's First Mystical Eastern Western. Boston: Charles E. Tuttle Company. ISBN0-8048-1826-6. Retrieved 2013-08-28.
- ^'Kung Fu Season 1'. Retrieved 2017-07-11.
- ^'Kung Fu Episode Guide: King of the Mountain'.
- ^'Kung Fu Guide: An Eye for an Eye'.
- ^'Kung Fu Guide Season 2'. Retrieved 2009-08-12.
- ^Carradine, David (1991). Spirit of Shaolin. Charles E. Tuttle Co. p. 36.
- ^'Kung Fu Guide Season 3'. Retrieved 2009-08-10.
External links[edit]
- List of Kung Fu episodes on IMDb
- Kung Fu at TV Guide
- List of Kung Fu episodes at TV.com
Kung Fu | |
---|---|
Genre |
|
Created by | |
Starring |
|
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 3 |
No. of episodes | 63 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Jerry Thorpe |
Camera setup | Single-camera |
Running time | 50 minutes |
Production company(s) | Warner Bros. Television |
Distributor | Warner Bros. Television Distribution |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Audio format | Monaural |
Original release | October 14, 1972[2] – April 26, 1975[3] |
Chronology | |
Followed by | Kung Fu: The Movie Kung Fu: The Next Generation Kung Fu: The Legend Continues |
Kung Fu is an American action-adventuremartial arts westerndrama television series starring David Carradine. The series follows the adventures of Kwai Chang Caine, a Shaolin monk who travels through the American Old West, armed only with his spiritual training and his skill in martial arts, as he seeks Danny Caine, his half-brother.[4]
Many of the aphorisms used in the series are adapted from or derived directly from the Tao Te Ching, a book of ancient Taoist philosophy attributed to the sage Lao-tzu.[5][6][7]
- 2Cast
- 3Production
- 3.1Development
- 5Sequels and spin-offs
Plot[edit]
Kwai Chang Caine (David Carradine) is the orphaned son of an American man, Thomas Henry Caine (Bill Fletcher), and a Chinese woman, Kwai Lin, in mid-19th-century China.[8] After his maternal grandfather's death he is accepted for training at a Shaolin Monastery, where he grows up to become a Shaolin priest and martial arts expert.
In the pilot episode Caine's beloved mentor and elder, Master Po, is murdered by the Emperor's nephew; outraged, Caine retaliates by killing the nephew. With a price on his head, Caine flees China to the western United States, where he seeks to find his family roots and, ultimately, his half-brother, Danny Caine.
Although it is his intention to avoid notice, Caine's training and sense of social responsibility repeatedly force him out into the open, to fight for justice or protect the underdog. After each such encounter he must move on, both to avoid capture and prevent harm from coming to those he has helped. Searching for his family, he meets a preacher (played by real-life father John Carradine) and his mute sidekick Sonny Jim (played by real-life brother Robert Carradine), then his grandfather (played by Dean Jagger).
Flashbacks are often used to recall specific lessons from Caine's childhood training in the monastery from his teachers, the blind Master Po (Keye Luke) and Master Chen Ming Kan (Philip Ahn). Part of the appeal of the series was undoubtedly the emphasis laid, via the flashbacks, on the mental and spiritual power that Caine had gained from his rigorous training. In these flashbacks, Master Po calls his young student 'Grasshopper' in reference to a scene in the pilot episode:
Master Po: Close your eyes. What do you hear?
Young Caine: I hear the water, I hear the birds.
Po: Do you hear your own heartbeat?
Caine: No.
Po: Do you hear the grasshopper which is at your feet?
Caine: Old man, how is it that you hear these things?
Po: Young man, how is it that you do not?[9]
During four episodes of the third and final season ('Barbary House', 'Flight to Orion', 'The Brothers Caine', and 'Full Circle'), Caine finds his brother Danny (Tim McIntire) and his nephew Zeke (John Blyth Barrymore).
Cast[edit]
Main cast[edit]
- David Carradine as Kwai Chang Caine (63 episodes)
- Radames Pera as Young Caine (48 episodes)
- Keye Luke as Master Po (48 episodes)
- Philip Ahn as Master Kan (40 episodes)
Guest cast[edit]
- Keith Carradine as Young Caine (uncredited, 2 episodes)
- John Carradine as Rev. Serenity Johnson (3 episodes)
- Bruce Carradine as Capt. Roy Starbuck (2 episodes)
- Robert Carradine as Sonny Jim (2 episodes)
- Harrison Ford as Harrison (1 episode)
- James Hong as Chun Yen (9 episodes)
- Victor Sen Yung as Tamo (8 episodes)
- Tim McIntire as Daniel Caine (6 episodes)
- Clyde Kusatsu as Han Su Lok (5 episodes)
- Leslie Nielsen as Vincent Corbino (4 episodes)
- John Blyth Barrymore as Zeke (4 episodes)
- John Drew Barrymore as Alex McGregor (1 episode)
- Anthony Zerbe as Paul Klempt (2 episodes)
- Barbara Hershey as Nan Chi (2 episodes)
- A Martinez as Slade (2 episodes)
- Jim Davis as Joe Walker (2 episodes)
- Eddie Albert as Dr. George Baxter (2 episodes)
- Nancy Kwan as Mayli Ho (2 episodes)
- Jodie Foster as Alethea Patricia Ingram (1 episode)
- Clu Gulager as Sheriff Rutledge (1 episode)
- Moses Gunn as Isaac Montola (1 episode)
- Tim Matheson as Lt. Bill Wyland (1 episode)
- Diana Muldaur as Theodora (1 episode)
- Lew Ayres as Beaumont (1 episode)
- Robert Foxworth as Captain Clyde McNelly (1 episode)
- Andrew Prine as White (1 episode)
- William Shatner as Capt. Brandywine Gage (1 episode)
- Brandon Cruz as Peter Gideon (1 episode)
- Pat Morita as Arthur Chen (1 episode)
- Don Johnson as Nashebo (1 episode)
- Stephanie Powers as Edna (1 episode)
- Kiel Martin as Marshal (1 episode)
- Merlin Olsen as Perlee Skowrin (1 episode)
- Carl Weathers as Bad Sam (1 episode)
- Wilford Brimley as Blacksmith (1 episode)
- Gary Busey as Josh (1 episode)
- Mako as Wong Ti Lu (1 episode)
- Slim Pickens as Bart Fisher (1 episode)
- José Feliciano as Jonno Marcado (1 episode)
- Cannonball Adderley as Trim Delaville (1 episode)
- Will Geer as Judge Emmitt Marcus (1 episode)
David Chow, who was also a guest star in the series, acted as the technical and kung fu advisor, a role later undertaken by Kam Yuen.
Production[edit]
Development[edit]
Kung Fu was created by Ed Spielman, directed and produced by Jerry Thorpe, and developed by Herman Miller, who was also a writer for, and co-producer of, the series.
Bruce Lee's involvement[edit]
In her memoirs, Bruce Lee's widow, Linda Lee Cadwell, asserts that Lee created the concept for the series, which was then stolen by Warner Bros. There is circumstantial evidence for this in a December 8, 1971, television interview that Bruce Lee gave on The Pierre Berton Show. In the interview, Lee stated that he had developed a concept for a television series called The Warrior, meant to star himself, about a martial artist in the American Old West (the same concept as Kung Fu, which aired the following year), but that he was having trouble pitching it to Warner Brothers and Paramount.
In the interview, Pierre Berton commented, 'There's a pretty good chance that you'll get a TV series in the States called 'The Warrior', in it, where you use what, the Martial Arts in Western setting?'
https://luckytango.netlify.app/blood-2-iso-download-windows-10.html. Lee responded, 'That was the original idea, ..both of them [Warner and Paramount], I think, they want me to be in a modernized type of a thing, and they think that the Western type of thing is out. Whereas I want to do the Western. Because, you see, how else can you justify all of the punching and kicking and violence, except in the period of the West?'
Later in the interview, Berton asked Lee about 'the problems that you face as a Chinese hero in an American series. Have people come up in the industry and said 'well, we don't know how the audience are going to take a non-American'?'
Lee replied, 'Well, such question has been raised, in fact, it is being discussed. That is why The Warrior is probably not going to be on.' Lee adds, 'They think that business-wise it is a risk. I don't blame them. If the situation were reversed, and an American star were to come to Hong Kong, and I was the man with the money, I would have my own concerns as to whether the acceptance would be there.'[10]
Whether or not Kung Fu was based on a concept by Lee, he was undoubtedly considered for the starring role, according to Herbie Pilato in his 1993 book The Kung Fu Book of Caine: The Complete Guide to TV's First Mystical Eastern Western (pages 32–33), and David Carradine himself in a 1989 interview mentions that Bruce Lee was passed over for the role.
Broadcast[edit]
The series aired on ABC from October 1972 to April 1975 for a total of 63 episodes. Kung Fu was preceded by a full-length (90 minutes, with commercial breaks) feature television pilot, an ABC Movie of the Week, which was broadcast on February 22, 1972. The series became one of the most popular television programs of the early 1970s, receiving widespread critical acclaim and commercial success upon its release.[11]
Sets[edit]
The Shaolin Monastery which appeared in flashbacks was originally a set used for the 1967 film Camelot. It was inexpensively and effectively converted for the setting in China.
Special effects[edit]
Where is my laptop serial number. The series used slow-motion effects for the action sequences, which Warner Brothers had previously utilized in the 1969 Sam Peckinpah film The Wild Bunch, and were also subsequently utilized for the action sequences in the science-fiction series The Six Million Dollar Man. Motogp pc game torrent download.
Episodes[edit]
Sequels and spin-offs[edit]
Kung Fu: The Movie[edit]
In Kung Fu: The Movie (1986) Caine (played by Carradine) is forced to fight his hitherto unknown son, Chung Wang (played by Brandon Lee). Herbie Pilato in The Kung Fu Book of Caine (page 157) also comments that Bruce Lee's son, Brandon Lee, was involved in sequels related to the series:
The late Brandon Lee, son of Bruce Lee, played Caine's son, Chung Wang. Toward the end of the film, Chung Wang asks Caine if he is his father. The question seems somewhat ironic since—in real life—Brandon's father was a contender for the role of Caine in the series. After Bruce Lee lost the part to Carradine, he went back to Hong Kong, where he made The Big Boss, the film that began his legendary career in martial arts movies.
Kung Fu: The Next Generation[edit]
Tv Series Kung Fu Episodes
In Kung Fu: The Next Generation (1987), the story moves to the present day and centers on the story of Johnny Caine (Brandon Lee), who is the great-grandson of Kwai Chang Caine. It explains the original Caine had married and become a town's medicine man. One night he died of heart failure. He appears as a ghost to his grandson and great-grandson, who later destroy a narcotics operation.
Kung Fu: The Legend Continues[edit]
Two decades after the first series ended, a second, related series titled Kung Fu: The Legend Continues running in syndication followed the adventures of Kwai Chang Caine's grandson, also named Kwai Chang Caine.[12] It again starred Carradine, this time as the grandson of the original Caine, and introduced Chris Potter as his son.[13] Caine mentor was played by Kim Chan as Lo Si (The Ancient) / Ping Hai. The second series ran for four years, from 1993 to 1997. The first season was released in Germany on DVD in 2009.
Announced follow-ups[edit]
In June 2006, Ed Spielman and Howard Friedlander announced that a feature film (which would serve as a prequel to the original Kung Fu series and take place in China) was in development. In September 2007, it was announced that Max Makowski would direct the movie and that he planned to make the film edgier than the original television series. Actor-director Bill Paxton was in talks to direct the adaptation of the TV series.[14] On April 11, 2014, The Hollywood Reporter reported that Baz Luhrmann was in talks to direct the film, and if the deal was made, Luhrmann was to rewrite the film's script.[15]
In September 2017, Fox, it was reported that Greg Berlanti and Wendy Mericle were developing a female-led reboot of the series.[16]
Home media[edit]
Warner Home Video released the entire series on DVD in Region 1 between 2004–2005.
On November 14, 2017, Warner Home Video re-released all three seasons, as well as the complete series set on DVD in Region 1.
DVD Name | Ep # | Release Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
The Complete First Season | 16 | March 16, 2004 November 14, 2017 (re-release) | Image cropped by 25% to 16:9 ratio |
The Complete Second Season | 23 | January 18, 2005 November 14, 2017 (re-release) | Original fullscreen image |
The Complete Third Season | 24 | August 23, 2005 November 14, 2017 (re-release) | Original fullscreen image |
The Complete Series | 63 | November 6, 2007 November 14, 2017 (re-release) | No change (same as individual releases) |
Awards[edit]
- 1973: Emmy Award, Best Director - Drama Series, Jerry Thorpe
- 1973: Emmy Award, Best Cinematography - One Hour Drama, Jack Woolf.
- 1973: Writers Guild of America Award, Best Drama, Herman Miller, episode 'King of the Mountain'.[17]
In popular culture[edit]
In the film Office Space, characters Peter Gibbons and Joanna start a relationship when they both admit to being big fans of Kung Fu, and suggest watching it together.
In the film Pulp Fiction by Quentin Tarantino, Jules tells Vincent that he intends to 'walk the Earth like Caine in Kung Fu.' Tarantino later cast Carradine as the title character in his films Kill Bill: Volume 1 and Kill Bill: Volume 2.
The British comedy series The Goodies had an episode called 'Kung Fu Kapers' which was mostly a parody of Kung Fu.
Controversy[edit]
The casting of a Caucasian actor in the lead role of Kwai Chang Caine and other forms of cultural appropriation in the series have been discussed, including David Carradine performing in yellow face.[18]
References[edit]
- ^'Martial Arts Myths'. Inside Kung Fu. Retrieved August 4, 2010.
- ^'Season 1 air dates, Pilot aired February 22, 1972'. Retrieved December 3, 2018.
- ^'Season 3 air dates'. Retrieved December 3, 2018.
- ^Weber, Bruce (June 5, 2009). 'David Carradine, Actor, Is Dead at 72'. The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved August 17, 2010.
- ^Jonathan Herman (2013). Taoism For Dummies. John Wiley & Sons. p. 182.
- ^'The Tao of Kung Fu - a philosophy of life that is not about fighting'. Kung Fu Fitness and Defense. Retrieved December 1, 2014.
- ^'We only know good because of evil'. Tao of Kung Fu. Retrieved December 1, 2014.
- ^Pilot episode shows a telegram (59 min. in) dated November 1873, placing the character's birth squarely in the mid-19th century, 1840–1850.
- ^'Memorable quotes for Kung Fu (1972) (TV)'. Retrieved March 5, 2009.
- ^'From The Pierre Berton Show December 8, 1971 (comments near end of part 2 & early in part 3)
- ^'Independent Lens . SHAOLIN ULYSSES: Kungfu Monks in America . Kungfu Goes West - PBS'. www.pbs.org. Retrieved May 26, 2018.
- ^John Stanley (January 24, 1993). 'New Fu: David Carradine revives successful '70s series in 'Kung Fu: The Legend Continues''. San Francisco Chronicle.
- ^Jonathan Storm (January 27, 1993). 'Still Alive and Kickin' David Carradine Is Back in 'Kung Fu' – 150 Years Older and a Little Wiser'. The Philadelphia Inquirer.
- ^Fleming, Mike, Jr. (October 31, 2011). 'Bill Paxton In Talks To Direct 'Kung Fu''. Deadline Hollywood. Penske Media Corporation. Retrieved October 31, 2011.
- ^'Baz Luhrmann in Talks to Direct 'Kung Fu' for Legendary (Exclusive)'. The Hollywood Reporter. Guggenheim Digital Media. April 11, 2014. Retrieved April 11, 2014.
- ^Andreeva, Nellie. ''Kung Fu' Female-Led Series Reboot From Greg Berlanti & Wendy Mericle Set At Fox As Put Pilot'. Deadline Hollywood. Penske Media Corporation. Retrieved September 28, 2017.
- ^Pesselnick, Jill (May 11, 1999). 'Herman Miller'. Variety. Retrieved August 4, 2010.
- ^Matsumura, Rachel (September 27, 2017). 'David Carradine stars in ABC Network's Kung Fu'. Casting Controversies. Retrieved March 21, 2019.
Further reading[edit]
- Anderson, Robert. The Kung Fu Book: The Exclusive, Unauthorized, Uncensored Story of America's Favorite Martial Arts Show. Pioneer Books, Inc., 1994. ISBN1-55698-328-X.
- Carradine, David. Spirit of Shaolin: A Kung Fu Philosophy. Boston: Charles E. Tuttle, 1991. ISBN0-8048-1751-0.
- Pilato, Herbie J. The Kung Fu Book of Caine: The Complete Guide to TV's First Mystical Eastern Western. Boston: Charles E. Tuttle, 1993. ISBN0-8048-1826-6.
External links[edit]
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- Kung Fu on IMDb
- Kung Fu at TV Guide
- Kung Fu at TV.com