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1[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/master_flying_guillotine.jpg]]
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3''Master of the Flying Guillotine'' is a 1975 Taiwanese / Hong Kong martial arts film starring Jimmy Wang Yu, who also wrote and directed the film. It is a sequel to Yu's 1971 film ''Film/OneArmedBoxer'', and thus the film is also known as ''One-Armed Boxer 2'' and ''The One-Armed Boxer vs. the Flying Guillotine''. It is (also) loosely based of the film ''Film/FlyingGuillotine''.
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5The film concerns Creator/JimmyWangYu's one-armed martial arts master, Tien Lung, being stalked by an Imperial assassin named Fung Sheng Wu Chi (Kang Chin), the master of two fighters (the Tibetan Lamas) who were killed in the previous film. When the One-Armed Boxer is invited to attend a martial arts tournament, his efforts to lay low are unsuccessful when the assassin soon tracks him down with the help of his three subordinates competing in the tournament: a Thai boxer named Nai Men (Chien-Po Tsen), an Indian named Yoga Tro La Seng, and a Japanese kobujutsu user nicknamed "'Wins-without-a-knife' Yakuma." (Fei Lung)
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7The title refers to the assassin's unique weapon, the so-called "Flying Guillotine" which resembles a hat with a bladed rim attached to a long chain. Upon enveloping one's head, the blades [[OffWithHisHead cleanly decapitate the unlucky victim]] with a quick pull of the chain.
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9''Master of the Flying Guillotine'' is considered a classic martial arts movie and has influenced many films of the genre that followed, as well as earning a shoutout in the Music/WuTangClan's classic track "Wu-Tang Clan Ain't Nothin ta F Wit'"[[note]]Fatal flying guillotine chops off your fuckin' head![[/note]]. It enjoyed a surge of popularity in the early 2000s when ''Film/KillBill'' referenced the villain's {{leitmotif}}, an excerpt of the song "Super 16" by Music/{{Neu}}.
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12!!''Master of the Flying Guillotine'' provides examples of:
13* ActionGirl: Wu Shao Tieh. She gets in over her head when she challenges the Thai Boxer and needs to be rescued, but she handily wins her bout in the tournament.
14* AntagonistTitle: The ''Master of the Flying Guillotine'' title refers to the villain.
15* BaldOfEvil: Fung Sheng Wu Chi
16* BeardOfEvil: Fung Sheng Wu Chi
17* BerserkButton: Tien Lung brushes off personal insults and threats with equanimity. Desecrate his school's shrine to General Kwan, and he will end you.
18* BigOlEyebrows: Fu Sheng has ridiculously long fake eyebrows.
19* {{Brownface}}: La Seng, the Indian, is played by a Chinese man. It's pretty obvious.
20* CombatPragmatist: The One-Armed Boxer is a great martial artist, but he relies on an incredible amount of pre-planning to give him the edge in his duels against the various villains.
21* CreatorProvincialism: This Taiwan/Hong Kong film portrays a multicultural tournament where the ethnically Chinese fighters are the best. The ForeignRulingClass of the Qing Dynasty also serve as a GreaterScopeVillain, as in many kung fu movies.
22* CurbStompCushion: Wu Shao Tieh gets in a few good shots against the Thai Boxer early on, but that just makes him start taking the fight seriously, at which point it becomes clear that she's out of her league.
23* {{Determinator}}: To avenge his students Fung Sheng Wu Chi will kill any one armed man he encounters.
24* DisabilitySuperpower: The best martial artists in China are apparently a one-armed man and an old blind man.
25* EntitledToHaveYou: Wins Without A Knife Yakuma toward Wu Shao Tieh after he saves her life. She acknowledges that she owes him her life, but that doesn't mean she owes him ''herself''.
26* EvilOldFolks: The title character is an old man, and the main villain of the film.
27* ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin: The villain is in fact a master of the flying guillotine
28* ExploitedImmunity: The Chinese characters customarily wear shoes, while the Thai Boxer doesn't. They lure him into a fighting environment that attacks his feet.
29* ExtendableArms: La Seng is an Indian man with the power to extend his arms to an absurd length. He is generally agreed to be the inspiration for Dhalsim from the ''Franchise/StreetFighter'' series, another Indian character with the same ability.
30* ForeignRulingClass: Tien Lung's masters in the Manchu government of China.
31* GreaterScopeVillain: As in many kung fu movies, the Qing Dynasty are the power behind the main villain.
32* GuiltByCoincidence: Fung Sheng Wu Chi knows that a one-armed man killed his disciples, so he'll kill every one-armed man he meets.
33* HellIsThatNoise: All of the victims of the Flying Guillotine let out a very throaty scream a second before their heads get lopped off, [[OhCrap because they know what is about to happen to them]].
34* ImpossiblyCoolWeapon: The Flying Guillotine itself.
35* KungFoley: Quite a lot, being a wuxia film from the '70s. Most noticeable with the flying guillotine, which makes a gunshot sound whenever it's thrown.
36* {{Leitmotif}}: Fung Sheng Wu Chi has a grinding, droning theme song taken from a song by the Krautrock band Neu! that is quite noticeable for a period martial arts film.
37* MadeOfIron: The Mongolian fighter's power is total immunity to attacks, until his eyes are poked out. Perhaps he practices [[Film/FiveDeadlyVenoms Toad Style kung fu]].
38* MartialPacifist: This was actually due to Jimmy Wang Yu being a poor martial artist in real life.
39* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: The One-Armed Boxer picks a particularly brutal way to defeat the Thai boxer. He locks him in a room where the floor slowly heats up, so that his bare feet are roasted. Unable to fight back, he gets beaten and cooked to death.
40* NonIndicativeName: "Wins-without-a-knife" invariably pulls a knife on his opponents for the win. He uses the nickname as a disarming tactic, [[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial so they won't expect it]].
41* UsefulNotes/NonNaziSwastika: The Swastika that Fung Shen Wu Chi wears has nothing to do with Nazism. Instead, it's a Buddhist holy symbol, meant to add to his disguise as a "Buddhist Lama".
42* OddlyCommonRarity: There seems to be a lot of one-armed men walking around China.
43* OffWithHisHead: What the title weapon does to anyone it's used on.
44* PopculturalOsmosis
45* PublicDomainSoundtrack: Most of the film's soundtrack is made up of {{Krautrock}} songs, by Music/{{Neu}}, Music/TangerineDream and Music/{{Kraftwerk}} in particular. This later caused rights issues when it was released as a DVD, and in Japan its entire soundtrack had to be replaced with a new score.
46* RetiredBadass: Flying Guillotine comes out of retirement to avenge his students' deaths.
47* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: Flying Guillotine intends to kill every one-armed man in China until someone tells him that he got his man.
48* RuleOfCool: The flying guillotine is obviously a fictitious weapon, but it's cool.
49* ShoutOut: The bum who kills seven flies with one blow, then makes a belt about it and passes his feat off as killing seven ''people'' with one blow, is taken from the European fables of Literature/JackTheGiantKiller and Literature/TheBraveLittleTailor.
50* StalkerWithACrush: Yakuma to Wu Shao Tieh. He does treat her wounds from the fight where her father was murdered, but ''immediately'' upon her awakening, he tells her to stop thinking about her father and start thinking about running away with him. Later, when he suspects she may be interested in the One-Armed Boxer (which there have been, at best, a few hints of), he gets violent.
51* SuspiciouslySpecificDenial: "Wins Without a Knife" Yakuma. Who said anything about a knife?
52* TakeThat:
53** The villain of the film is a former Imperial assassin. Taiwan's long-time president Chang Kai-chek was a leader in the revolution that overthrew the Imperial regime.
54** The Japanese villain of the film is a particularly duplicitous fighter who claims to "win without a knife" but conceals knives in his tonfa. Taiwanese people of the period had a low opinion of Japan due to having been occupied by the nation from 1895 until after World War II.
55* TournamentArc: A martial arts tournament is where all the characters meet. A bunch of different styles are showcased, a good number of fatalities occur, and once Fung Shen Wu Chi kills another one-armed fighter, then the guy running it, it's mostly forgotten about.
56* UnderdogsNeverLose
57* {{Yellowface}}: The cast of Hong Kong actors portray a variety of Asian ethnicities. The most obvious example is La Seng, the Indian fighter.

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