
Director
Jeong Chang-hwa
Born 1928 · Jincheon-gun, South Korea
Chang-Wha Chung (born November 1, 1928) is a South Korean film director, producer and screenwriter. Chung made his directorial debut with The Final Temptation (1953) and gained attention only when he released A Sunny Field in 1960. During the 1960s he started collaborating with the Hong Kong film industry. In 1968, he joined Shaw Brothers and directed martial arts classics such as King Boxer (1972) (the first Hong Kong movie to reach No. 1 on the U.S. box office in 1973). He moved to Golden Harvest in 1973, where he directed numerous productions until he returned to South Korea in 1977 to continue his career. Wikipedia contributors. "Jeong Chang-hwa." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 13 Mar. 2021. Web. 26 May. 2021.
Directed

Five Fingers of Death
Director · 1972
The Great Story of Jang-hwa and Hong-ryeon
Director · 1962

Special Agent X-7
Director · 1966

Rulers of the Land
Director · 1963

The Great Plain
Director · 1963

Yeraishang
Director · 1966

The Skyhawk
Director · 1974

Broken Oath
Director · 1977

The Devil's Treasure
Director · 1973

The Story of Jang-hwa and Heung-ryeon
Director · 1956

A Swordsman in the Twilight
Director · 1967

The Association
Director · 1974

Lady Jang
Director · 1961

The Swift Knight
Director · 1971

Temptress of a Thousand Faces
Director · 1969

Six Assassins
Director · 1971

Heads for Sale
Director · 1970

Forlorn Hope
Director · 1966
