Tsui Hark's Vampire Hunter
Directed by Wellson Chin
Written by Tsui Hark
Starring Danny Chan, Michael Chow, Ken Chang
Release Date August 12th, 2002
Tsui Hark’s Vampire Hunters (2002) mixes martial arts mayhem with supernatural splatter. Discover why this overlooked Hong Kong horror-comedy deserves cult classic status in our 31 Days of Horror series.
The Forgotten Hong Kong Horror Gem
Tsui Hark’s Vampire Hunters (2002) feels like Hong Kong’s answer to Army of Darkness — a film where wire-fu and gory slapstick coexist in a gloriously chaotic dance. Though not directed by Hark himself (that duty fell to Wellson Chin), his fingerprints are all over it.
The project bears his name not as a lazy producer credit but as a creative stamp. Hark wrote the film, infusing it with the manic energy and visual excess that made him one of Hong Kong cinema’s wildest innovators. If Wes Craven reinvented American horror with Scream, Hark was doing the same for Chinese folklore — turning it into genre-bending pop spectacle.
A Crouching Tiger–Style Vampire Tale
The story opens in a dark monastery, where a wise master tells his disciples that vampires are real — and their duty is to stop them. These disciples are no ordinary students: they’re elemental warriors named Thunder, Lightning, Rain, and Wind.
Their first battle against the dreaded Vampire King ends in tragedy, with their master slain and the team scattered. Months later, the survivors arrive at the sprawling home of a strange old man named Jiang, whose oafish son is marrying the lovely Sasa. But something’s off — Jiang’s son has been married several times before, and every bride met a grim fate.
Add in a snake lurking in the walls, a mysterious barn full of preserved corpses, a wife who doesn’t quite look alive, and a legendary stash of gold… and you’ve got the perfect Hong Kong horror stew.
Goofy, Gory, and Gloriously Over the Top
The plot of Vampire Hunters isn’t exactly tight — subplots branch in every direction, romantic diversions appear out of nowhere, and the elemental powers of our heroes are barely used. But that’s not the point.
This movie isn’t about coherent storytelling — it’s about the experience: the wire-fu acrobatics, the hopping zombies, and the wildly exaggerated gore. The effects are gloriously cheesy, somewhere between Mr. Vampire and a low-budget wuxia epic.
Director Wellson Chin keeps the tone deliberately offbeat, turning every fight into a blend of horror and slapstick. The climactic battle with the Vampire King — who looks like an undead scarecrow pulled from a fever dream — is pure pulp fun.
Blood, Bones, and B-Movie Bliss
For all its silliness, Tsui Hark’s Vampire Hunters delivers moments of genuine gross-out horror. The Vampire King doesn’t just bite victims — he sucks the soul straight out of them, leaving behind nothing but bones and a puddle of flesh. It’s gruesome, inventive, and totally in the spirit of early-2000s Hong Kong horror.
Two decades later, it’s baffling that Vampire Hunters hasn’t achieved cult status. It’s exactly the kind of movie midnight audiences should have rediscovered by now: a messy, funny, high-energy collision of martial arts and monster madness.
If you like your horror with a side of chaos — and don’t mind a little camp — Tsui Hark’s Vampire Hunters is a forgotten gem worth digging up.
Rating: 3.5 out of 5
When it was released I read a critic who referred to Tsui Hark’s Vampire Hunter was a brilliant mix of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and The Evil Dead and I could not put it better myself. That line is a perfect encapsulation of the glorious skill and silliness that combines to make this a deeply underrated horror comedy classic.