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A sword charged under the light of the moon made of Chinese coins can be used in an attack against the vampire. To stop a hopping vampire (zombie) in its place, take a small amount of blood and place it on the creature's forehead. To banish the hopping vampire, a person can throw sticky rice at the creature drawing out the evil in it.
The Close Encounter of the Vampire (Chinese: 殭屍怕怕; pinyin: Jiang shi pa pa), [1] also known as The Close Encounters of Vampire, [2] [3] Dragon vs. Vampire, [4] [5] or Dragon Against Vampire, [6] [7] is a 1986 Cantonese-language Hong Kong comedy horror film directed by Lau Kar-leung. It is a jiangshi film based on Chinese folklore.
The cloak, a motif from Hollywood's adaptations of Dracula, appears in the jiangshi films Vampire vs Vampire and A Bite of Love. [ 14 ] The 1980 film Encounters of the Spooky Kind , directed by Sammo Hung , popularized the production of films based on the jiangshi of Chinese legends in the Hong Kong film industry, though it was not the first.
The Spiritual Boxer Part II (Chinese: 茅山殭屍拳; pinyin: Mao shan jiang shi quan; lit. 'Maoshan Zombie Fist'), also known as The Shadow Boxing, is a 1979 Mandarin-language Hong Kong martial arts comedy film directed by Lau Kar-leung. It is the thematic sequel to his debut film The Spiritual Boxer (1975). Several of the actors from the ...
During daylight phases, players manage the Chinese restaurant, then during nighttime phases, the Jiangshi appear. Successfully running the restaurant gives players bonuses to fight the Jiangshi, while unfinished chores generate mechanical consequences. [1] [6] The game mechanics mix elements typical of both tabletop role-playing games and board ...
Person B, who became a vampire after being bitten by Person A or another direct victim of Cheung-San, is a third-generation vampire, and so on. At the end of the second season, it is revealed that Pangu , the creator of the universe in Chinese mythology , is not a single entity, but a clan of divine beings who are all first-generation vampires.
Mr. Vampire 1992, also known as Chinese Vampire Story, is a 1992 Hong Kong comedy horror film directed by Ricky Lau. The film is the fifth of a series of five jiangshi films directed by Ricky Lau in the Mr. Vampire franchise. The Chinese title of the film literally translates to New Mr. Vampire.
In a village in Hong Kong in 1988, Daiyu is a stuntman who does not believe in jiangshi but is performing in a jiangshi film. His daughter Bee makes friends with a child jiangshi who gets separated from its class on a field trip to the land of the living and gets lost in the forest.