San Kuai

- 10 Magnificent Killers
- Deadly Duo
- Legend Of A Fighter
- Killer Clans
- Bruce Li, The Invincible
- Dreadnaught
- Crack Shadow Boxers
- Broken Oath
- Fury Of The Blackbelt
- Kung Fu Vs Yoga
- Fist Of The Double K
- The Condemned
- Killer Constable
- We're Going To Eat You
- The Bloody Fists
- Clones Of Bruce Lee
- Duel Of The 7 Tigers
- Bolo, The Brute
- Sacred Knives of Vengeance
- Bruce Li In New Guinea
- The Buddhist Fists
- Story Of Drunken Master
- Bruce Le's Greatest Revenge
- 7 Blows Of The Dragon
- Karado, The Hong Kong Cat
- The Greatest Thai-Boxing
- Kung Fu the Head-Crusher
- Incredible Master Beggars
- Kung Fu Means: Fists, Strikes, & Swords
Biography
Just as intense as Chen Sing when fighting (though he can get a little wild with the arm-swinging), he's become one of those faces, that you just can't help but notice in a crowd of bad guy. As a womanizer, he'll go Feng Ko-An one better by killing the women that he rapes (sometimes he just kills them because he gets upset with them). His temper is what normally sets him apart from other villains in that he will just "lose it" and then people start dying left and right.
Against the hero, he'll give him enough of a fight to allow the main villain a chance to get away, but he's normally a part of a gang and rarely is the main villain, except in the film Kung Fu, The Head-Crusher. His weapons of choice are usually a knife and/or a gun and he won't hesitate to use them on you or anyone in the vicinity when his temper flares up. You can usually find him starring in films along side his partner in crime Fang Yeh. They've starred in so many movies together you'd think they were the villain-version of Shaw studios' David Chiang and Ti Lung. They would culminate their talents to make 10 Magnificent Killers, featuring their own brand of kung-fu comedy.
Like many, he started out as a stuntman at Shaw Bros' working on such films as 7 Blows Of The Dragon and the obscure - Greatest Thai-Boxing, with Chin Han. For some reason he would take film roles that would show him as the comic-relief (Incredible Master Beggars, Story Of Drunken Master, and Crack Shadow Boxers), where he seemed to think rolling his eyes in the back of his head was Comedy. Instead, he would somehow forsake that which made him famous, that cutthroat, madman we've come to know and love. As they say - "When he's bad, he's so much better."