As a producer and director, Hung helped launch the careers of several HK stars including Michelle Khan (a.k.a. Michelle Yeoh), Yuen Biao and Leung Kar Yan. More often than not, they were better served by Hung's productions than by projects of their own. He breathed new life into the fighting females sub-genre in the 1980s by producing such landmark films as "Yes, Madam" (1985) which introduced the popular woman warriors Michelle Khan and Cynthia Rothrock as a distaff "buddy" cop team. He was also a major force in the horror-kung fu-comedy subgenre directing and acting in films like "Spooky Encounters" (1981), "Hocus Pocus" and "Mr. Vampire" (1985). The large-scale comedy "Shanghai Express" (1987) has been described as a Chinese equivalent of "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World" as it is filled with stars, sight gags and stunts.
Behind-the-scenes, as the primary martial arts choreographer at the leading HK film studio Golden Harvest, Hung determined the fighting style employed by some of the industry's most popular stars. He had a gift for being able to take actors untrained as fighters and put them through their paces so convincingly as to fool even the most savvy HK audiences. Hardcore martial arts film fans treasure many of Hung's films including "The Iron-Fisted Monk" (his 1978 directorial debut), "Warriors Two" (1978) and, his own favorite directorial outing, "The Prodigal Son" (1981). The latter two are particularly notable as Hung's Wing Chun movies. This was a southern Chinese fighting style that rose to prominence in the West as word spread that Bruce Lee had received his basic training in this effective close-range fighting system that helped a smaller, weaker combatant defeat a larger, stronger opponent. Hung routinely instructed his writers to research the development of Chinese kung fu so as to find story ideas.
General wisdom pinpoints Hung's failure to achieve stardom outside of Asia on his plump physique--which incidentally, has not stopped him from being an awesome martial artist. Further clashing with Western ideals of male attractiveness, Hung has augmented his non-glamorous Everyman persona with haircuts reminiscent of The Three Stooges' Moe Howard. He tends to favor an innocent expression that gives him the appearance of a large child yet he often incurs facial bruising in his films' punishing fight scenes. Hung's early roles had him playing a screen "heavy" who menaced the more conventionally attractive stars. He did not start landing leads in Golden Harvest films until 1977 in films like "Sholin Plot" and his own "The Iron-Fisted Monk". Though loyal to Golden Harvest, Hung accepted an outside offer to helm, choreograph and star in "Enter the Fat Dragon" (1978), playing a swineherd who idolizes Bruce Lee. Hung also proved effective in dramatic roles such as a turn as a harsh instructor teaching young boys in a Peking Opera School in Stanley Kwan's "Painted Faces" (1988).
"Painted Faces" was loosely based on Hung's own childhood experiences learning at the Chinese Opera Research Institute where he studied mime, acrobatics, singing, kung fu and other techniques of Peking Opera under Sifu (Master) Yu Jim Yuen. He entered the school at age 10 and soon became the foremost member of the Seven Little Fortunes children's performance troupe. More than seven of these children (including Jackie Chan and Yuen Biao) grew up to become leading lights in the HK action film industry. Nicknamed 'Big Brother', he eventually aided in the martial arts instruction of his younger classmates and became the first member of his group to gain success as an adult working in the movies. Eventually Chan would emerge as the superstar of the group but even he continued to look to Hung for advice and encouragement.
Hung helped revitalize Chan's career as the helmer and co-star (with Biao) of "Project A" (1984), an uproarious pirate picture set in the early 1900s which set the mold for many of Chan's subsequent action comedies. One of the best of these was the follow-up "Wheels on Meals" (1984), also directed by Hung, a contemporary film that place the trio in Barcelona for an outlandish adventure. The three former classmates joined forces once again to play change-of-pace roles in the Hung-lensed "Dragons Forever" (1987), the least of their collaborations but still far superior to the standard HK action fare.
Ironically, Hung's best work as a director--the Eastern Western "The Millionaire's Express/Shanghai Express" (1985) and the war movie "Eastern Condors" (1987) and the 30s-set comedy-drama "Pedi-Cab Driver" (1990)--coincided with his commercial decline in the industry that he had served for some two decades. After a string of box-office disappointments, he left Golden Harvest in 1991 after a dispute with studio head Raymond Chow over the premature withdrawal from theaters of the Hung-produced thriller "Into the Fire". While continuing to produce films through his company Bojon, Hung failed to equal his early successes. His fortunes improved somewhat as the helmer of "Mr. Nice Guy" (1997), a long-awaited reteaming with Chan.
In 1998, CBS surprised many by scheduling "Martial Law", a one-hour comedy-drama built around Hung on Saturday nights. Preceding "Walker, Texas Ranger", the show, executive produced and occasionally directed by Stanley Tong, proved successful, appealing to the same demographics as "Walker". Hung, the only Asian headlining a primetime network series, soon found himself besieged by the press for interviews.