The Outnumbered Fighter & The Repelling of Despair
After watching Kung Fu Hustle, there was one type of scenario that really stuck with me. When one person (or few--like when the three kung fu masters go up against the axe gang) successfully battles a mass of opposing fighters. The odds of the lone fighter (or small group) winning the battle often seems so improbable. But contrary to the looming doom presented by being completely surrounded and outnumbered, there seems to often be hope in these scenes. The fighter(s) moves with the fluid movement of a Hong Kong cinema fight scene and staves away their potential downfall. The experienced fighter skirts just on the edge of potential failure, but in the end is able to surmount their problems with the human body alone. I think that this in a way speaks to people's emotions of fear, hope, and despair. It would be so easy to feel despair when completely surrounded--and in a way, this sort of despair is not too distanced from the everyday. In these fights, the individual must face up against something that is much larger than them. And sometimes that individual must get creative and use whatever they can find--like how the three masters use their surrounding objects in Kung Fu Hustle. Watching these scenes shows someone confronting a wall of potential calamity without despair and without failure.

The particular fight scene that you describe was really created and perfected by Shaw Brothers studios in the 1970s to highlight particular stars, including Bruce Lee. It is interesting to see its evolutions to its current form and especially as you say how it can be used to advance story and character.
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