| english title | Spiritual Boxer |
| original title | 神打 |
| french title | Wang Yu défie le Maître du Karaté |
| year | 1975 |
| country | Hong-Kong |
| director | LIU Chia-Liang - 劉家良 | |
| actor | WONG Yu | |
| CHAN Shen - 詹森 | ||
| SHUT Chung-Tin | ||
| LEE Sau Kei | ||
| LIN Chen-Chi | ||
| NG Hong-Sang | ||
| NGAAI Fei | ||
| FUNG Hak-On | ||
| LEE Hoi-San | ||
| TI Lung - 狄龍 | ||
| CHEN Kuan-Tai - 陳觀泰 | ||
| TIN Ching | ||
| HA Ping | ||
| WONG Ching Ho | ||
| producer | Runme SHAW | |
| scriptwriter | NI Kuang | |
| artistic director | Johnson TSAO | |
| editor | David WU Tai Wai | |
| Norman WONG Chi-Hung |
| genres | kung-fu |
| production studio | Shaw Brothers 邵氏 |
Acclaimed action director Liu Chia-liang makes a mind-boggling directorial debut in The Spiritual Boxer, which not only quickly established Liu as a genius director but he was also credited with introducing comedy into the kung-fu genre; the pre-cursor for Jackie Chan's kung-fu comedies. Its Ghostbusters meets George C. Scott's The Flim-Flam Man as a pseudo-ghost catcher, wittily portrayed by kung-fu comedienne Wang Yu, and catches more than he bargained for.

