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The Monkey King (2014 film) The Monkey King (miniseries) The Monkey King 2; The Monkey King 3; The Monkey King Conquers the Demon; Monkey King Festival; Monkey King vs. Er Lang Shen; The Monkey King (2023 film) The Monkey King (manga) Monkey King: Hero Is Back; The Monkey King: Quest for the Sutra; The Monkey King's Daughter; Monkey Kung Fu
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 6 February 2025. Character in Chinese mythology For other uses, see Monkey King (disambiguation). "Wukong" redirects here. For other uses, see Wukong (disambiguation). "Qi Tian Da Sheng" redirects here. For Pu Songling's story, see The Great Sage, Heaven's Equal. A request that this article title be ...
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The Monkey King (also known as The Monkey King: Havoc in Heaven's Palace) is a 2014 Hong Kong [1]-Chinese [2] action-fantasy film directed by Soi Cheang and starring Donnie Yen as the titular protagonist Sun Wukong. Yen also serves as the film's action director. The film co-stars Donald Chow, Aaron Kwok, Joe Chen and Peter Ho.
Researchers going through the game code in the 2010s have been unable to figure out how the game's maze-generating algorithm managed to consistently generate playable mazes. The original coder says he got it from another programmer who wrote it while drunk.
A sequel, The Monkey King 3, was released in China on 16 February 2018. [20] Zhao Liying was cast in the role of the Ruler of Women's Country. [21] The original cast members of The Monkey King 2, Aaron Kwok, Feng Shaofeng, Xiaoshenyang, and Him Law, reprised their roles in the film. [22]
Greenshot is a free and open-source screenshot program for Microsoft Windows. It is developed by Thomas Braun, Jens Klingen and Robin Krom [1] and is published under GNU General Public License, hosted by GitHub.
The Monkey King, also known as The Lost Empire, is a 2001 television miniseries produced by NBC and the SciFi Channel. It is a contemporary take on the classic 16th-century novel Journey to the West. It stars Bai Ling, Thomas Gibson, Russell Wong, Eddie Marsan, and Randall Duk Kim.