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If you told Hua Ying-Xiong (literally "China Hero"), the young son of a blacksmith and his sword-master wife, that he would be protecting Chicago's Chinatown from Kung-Fu Mafiosi and dueling to the death with a blind samurai master on the Statue of Liberty 17 years from now, he would probably laugh. The boy was content flirting with his childhood sweetheart Jie Yu ("Pure Jade"), helping his father at the forge, and playing pranks on the arrogant Westerners who terrorized his village, like any other red-blooded Chinese boy during the Great Depression.

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If you told Hua Ying-Xiong (literally "China Hero"), the young son of a blacksmith and his sword-master wife, that he would be protecting Chicago's Chinatown from Kung-Fu Mafiosi and dueling to the death with a blind samurai master on the Statue of Liberty Art/StatueOfLiberty 17 years from now, he would probably laugh. The boy was content flirting with his childhood sweetheart Jie Yu ("Pure Jade"), helping his father at the forge, and playing pranks on the arrogant Westerners who terrorized his village, like any other red-blooded Chinese boy during the Great Depression.
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Thus begins ''Chinese Hero'' (or "Zhong Hua Ying-Xiong"), the martial arts magnum opus of Hong Kong ''{{manhua}}'' (the Chinese equivalent of ''manga'') artist Ma Rong-Chen. It is an epic melodrama of violence, compassion, evil, honor and bravery, featuring some of the most creative interpretations of western villains with kung fu.

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Thus begins ''Chinese Hero'' (or "Zhong Hua Ying-Xiong"), the martial arts magnum opus work of Hong Kong ''{{manhua}}'' (the Chinese equivalent of ''manga'') artist Ma Rong-Chen. It is an epic melodrama of violence, compassion, evil, honor and bravery, featuring some of the most creative interpretations of western villains with kung fu.



This ''{{manhua}}'' masterpiece provides examples of the following:

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!! This ''{{manhua}}'' masterpiece {{manhua}} provides examples of the following:
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* MonumentalBattle: The CrowningMomentOfAwesome of the entire franchise: a final battle atop the Statue of Liberty itself.

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* MonumentalBattle: The CrowningMomentOfAwesome of the entire franchise: a A final battle atop the Statue of Liberty itself.
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http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chinesehero.png

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* DiseaseBleach: Such was the effort that Ying-Xiong put into creating his School Of Swordsmanship ''Zhong Hua Ao Zue'' ("Techniques of Chinese Pride", pictured above), his hair turned white from the exertion.



* MysticalWhiteHair: Such was the effort that Ying-Xiong put into creating his School Of Swordsmanship ''Zhong Hua Ao Zue'' ("Techniques of Chinese Pride", pictured above), his hair turned white from the exertion.

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* MysticalWhiteHair: Such was the effort that Ying-Xiong put into creating his School Of Swordsmanship ''Zhong Hua Ao Zue'' ("Techniques of Chinese Pride", pictured above), his hair turned white from the exertion.



* WhiteHairedPrettyBoy: Such was the effort that Ying-Xiong put into creating his School Of Swordsmanship ''Zhong Hua Ao Zue'' ("Techniques of Chinese Pride", pictured above), his hair turned white from the exertion.

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* WhiteHairedPrettyBoy: Such was the effort that Ying-Xiong put into creating his School Of Swordsmanship ''Zhong Hua Ao Zue'' ("Techniques of Chinese Pride", pictured above), his hair turned white from the exertion.
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* BattleinTheRain

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* BattleinTheRainBattleInTheRain
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* BattleinTheRain
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For another {{manhua}} by the same author, see ''Film/TheStormRiders''.
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* DangerousForbiddenTechnique: The "China Secret" in the movie. The death part is averted.

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* DangerousForbiddenTechnique: The "China Secret" in the movie. The death part is averted.
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* DangerousForbiddenTechnique: The "China Secret" in the movie.

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* DangerousForbiddenTechnique: The "China Secret" in the movie. The death part is averted.
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* MonumentalDamage: With their swords and energy techniques, they manage to cut up bits of the Statue of Liberty mentioned above.
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* DangerousForbiddenTechnique: The "China Secret" in the movie.
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Added DiffLines:

http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chinesehero.png

If you told Hua Ying-Xiong (literally "China Hero"), the young son of a blacksmith and his sword-master wife, that he would be protecting Chicago's Chinatown from Kung-Fu Mafiosi and dueling to the death with a blind samurai master on the Statue of Liberty 17 years from now, he would probably laugh. The boy was content flirting with his childhood sweetheart Jie Yu ("Pure Jade"), helping his father at the forge, and playing pranks on the arrogant Westerners who terrorized his village, like any other red-blooded Chinese boy during the Great Depression.

Fate, in all her cruelty, filled the hearts of the white invaders with greed for his family's priceless heirloom on his 18th birthday. Such was the ''Chi Jian'', a sword of crimson metal that glows with murderous red when given its drink of blood. For this fabled weapon his parents were murdered. Avenging their deaths by killing the western murderers, Ying-Xiong himself was forced into exile in America.

Coincidence after miraculous coincidence followed in his journey in the west, as Ying-Xion chanced upon one Chinese master after another, who like himself had fled to America. Inheriting their combined strength, swordsmanship and martial arts, Hua Ying-Xiong became the champion of the Chinese people in the crime-ridden and racist city of Chicago by his 35th year. Standing alongside faithful comrades like Gui-Pu (Ghost Servant) the armless assassin and Lo-Han the monk, Ying-Xiong fearlessly wages war against the machinations of the Black Dragon Syndicate, a Western criminal army whose warriors' skills are such that they rival criminals who stoop to using guns.

Thus begins ''Chinese Hero'' (or "Zhong Hua Ying-Xiong"), the martial arts magnum opus of Hong Kong ''{{manhua}}'' (the Chinese equivalent of ''manga'') artist Ma Rong-Chen. It is an epic melodrama of violence, compassion, evil, honor and bravery, featuring some of the most creative interpretations of western villains with kung fu.

The story reaches its high point in the "Invincible" arc, wherein Ying-Xiong is forced into conflict with Invincible, a samurai so obsessed with battle he abandoned his family and destroyed his own eyes to be rid of all "unnecessary" emotions. This culminates in a climactic battle on top of the Statue of Liberty, in which the pride of Chinese and Japanese martial arts is put to the test.

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This ''{{manhua}}'' masterpiece provides examples of the following:

* AGodAmI: The consequence of mastering "Evil Kung Fu" is becoming a megalomanical tyrant.
* AffablyEvil: The Black Dragon Commander.
* AntiHero: Hua Ying-Xiong becomes progressively colder and crueler with every friend and loved one he loses.
* BattleAura
* BlessedWithSuck: Sure, Gui-Pu is a master of kicking... only he has [[DisabilitySuperpower no arms]] and is [[GoodScarsEvilScars hideously disfigured,]] hence [[EveryoneCallsHimBarkeep "Ghost Servant"]].
* ComplexityAddiction: In spite of Ying-Xiong's mother being ''shot to death'' in China in the first chapter, the Mafiosi of ''Chicago'', cesspool of gun-violence in the real 1930s, conveniently forgot how to fire a gun and use spears, crossbows and kung fu instead.
* ConservationOfNinjitsu: The Black Dragon Syndicate's laughably weak mooks.
* ContrivedCoincidence: One or two masters, it's easy to accept, but having almost ''every'' major master of the Chinese Warrior Arts flee to Chicago in America is just a bit too much to swallow.
* EverybodyWasKungFuFighting: Even Mafiosi who run guns.
* GoodScarsEvilScars: Hua Ying-Xiong's signature vertical facial scar: Good Guy.
* GunsAreWorthless: One of the best examples of this trope.
* HonorBeforeReason
* KatanasAreJustBetter: Averted. This is a Chinese work and the Chinese straight-sword, the ''jian'', is the finest weapon in this world.
* KickTheDog
* LiveActionAdaptation: In two flavors - the '80s TV series that lasted two seasons and remained quite faithful to the source, or the BigDamnMovie ''A Man Called Hero'' in '99, which was... ''[[AdaptationDistillation not]]'' so close.
* MacGuffin: The invincible Red Sword Chi-Jian.
* MonumentalBattle: The CrowningMomentOfAwesome of the entire franchise: a final battle atop the Statue of Liberty itself.
* OldMaster: Jing-Ao (Golden Pride), South Palm God, Sword Saint.
* ScrewDestiny
* RuleOfCool: This is an idealized world in which traditional Chinese warrior culture was ''not'' destroyed before the mid 20th century by a malign combination of European colonialism, Japanese invasion, and China's collapse into war and chaos.
* ToBeAMaster
* TragicHero: Ying-Xiong was literally born under the Star of Death, dooming anyone who associates with him, friend, family, or foe, to die a tragic death.
* TrainingMontage: Nicely done ones too, particularly in the earlier volumes.
* UnluckyChildhoodFriend: Jie-Yu, Ying-Xiong's doomed wife and the mother of his son Jian-Xiong.
* WhiteHairedPrettyBoy: Such was the effort that Ying-Xiong put into creating his School Of Swordsmanship ''Zhong Hua Ao Zue'' ("Techniques of Chinese Pride", pictured above), his hair turned white from the exertion.
* {{Wuxia}}
* YouCantFightFate: Doesn't stop Ying-Xiong from trying though...
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