---
product_id: 21413913
title: "Have Sword, Will Travel"
price: "€ 48.47"
currency: EUR
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.pt/products/21413913-have-sword-will-travel
store_origin: PT
region: Portugal
---

# Lightweight design Adventure-ready guide Durable steel blade Have Sword, Will Travel

**Price:** € 48.47
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> ⚔️ Gear Up for Adventure!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Have Sword, Will Travel
- **How much does it cost?** € 48.47 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.pt](https://www.desertcart.pt/products/21413913-have-sword-will-travel)

## Best For

- Customers looking for quality international products

## Why This Product

- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Perfect for All Ages:** Designed for both seasoned warriors and aspiring knights.
- • **Unleash Your Inner Hero:** Crafted from high-quality steel for durability and performance.
- • **Your Guide to Epic Journeys:** Includes a comprehensive travel guide for the modern adventurer.
- • **Join the Adventure Community:** Connect with fellow adventurers and share your epic tales.
- • **Travel Light, Adventure Right:** Weighs only 2.5 lbs, making it easy to carry on all your quests.

## Overview

Have Sword, Will Travel is a premium travel sword designed for adventurers of all ages. Featuring a durable steel blade and a lightweight design, this sword is perfect for those who seek to embark on epic journeys while staying connected to a community of like-minded explorers.

## Description

The classic martial arts team of David Chiang (The Wandering Swordsman) and Ti Lung (Deadly Breaking Sword) tears up the screen in this fast-paced, imaginative take on the popular American Western genre, Shaw Brothers style! Enlisted with transporting a shipment of silver, young master fighters (who are engaged to be married), Ti Lung and Li Ching, encounter a suspicious, downtrodden swordsman (Chiang) who asks to accompany them. Believing him to be a member of the feared Flying Tiger Manor gang, they prepare to fight for their cargo but soon realize a very different plot might be in store for them all. Crammed with relentless fights and startling plot twists, this audience favorite is pure enjoyment all the way to its rousing, surprising climax!

Review: Excellent classic 1968 Chinese swordsplay movie! - This, in my opinion, is one of the better blood splattered Chinese swordsplay movie by the director considered The Godfather of this genre of movies from Hong Kong. Some people make fun of the male lead David Chiang being extra small and skinny, but he is one of the most nimble, as well as the fastest and swiftest sword fighter I have seen. He may not be classically handsome, but there is something cute and charming about him, especially when he smiles. The lead actress Li Ching is lovely, and the other lead actor Ti Lung is very striking and handsome (even though he wasn’t given too much opportunity to act in the screenplay). The love triangle is quite understandable and touching. I am moved by the scene where the penniless Chiang sold his beloved horse for very little money and Li Ching bought the horse back for him. And for that, she won his heart — enough for him to be willing to sacrifice his life to save the man to whom she was betrothed.
Review: Has more than meets the eye - Terrific story: action, drama, and performance. There's more here than just a typical kung-fu movie. The tower recollects Bruce Lee's Game of Death. I thought this was a quality film. Sort of a Western, and probably influenced by John Ford. Akira Kurosawa was also influenced the American Western.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Contributor | Chang Cheh, Chen Sing, Cheng Lei, Ching Lee, Chuan Chen, David Chiang, Hak On Fung, Hsing-lung Chiang, Kang-Yeh Cheng, Ku Feng, Kung Mo To, Miao Ching, Ni Kuang, Runme Shaw, Ti Lung, Wang Chung, Yun Kin Chow Contributor Chang Cheh, Chen Sing, Cheng Lei, Ching Lee, Chuan Chen, David Chiang, Hak On Fung, Hsing-lung Chiang, Kang-Yeh Cheng, Ku Feng, Kung Mo To, Miao Ching, Ni Kuang, Runme Shaw, Ti Lung, Wang Chung, Yun Kin Chow See more |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 35 Reviews |
| Format | Color, Dolby, Multiple Formats, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen |
| Genre | Action & Adventure/Martial Arts |
| Language | English |
| Runtime | 1 hour and 41 minutes |

## Images

![Have Sword, Will Travel - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/511er3QhaFL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Excellent classic 1968 Chinese swordsplay movie!
*by K***. on September 9, 2018*

This, in my opinion, is one of the better blood splattered Chinese swordsplay movie by the director considered The Godfather of this genre of movies from Hong Kong. Some people make fun of the male lead David Chiang being extra small and skinny, but he is one of the most nimble, as well as the fastest and swiftest sword fighter I have seen. He may not be classically handsome, but there is something cute and charming about him, especially when he smiles. The lead actress Li Ching is lovely, and the other lead actor Ti Lung is very striking and handsome (even though he wasn’t given too much opportunity to act in the screenplay). The love triangle is quite understandable and touching. I am moved by the scene where the penniless Chiang sold his beloved horse for very little money and Li Ching bought the horse back for him. And for that, she won his heart — enough for him to be willing to sacrifice his life to save the man to whom she was betrothed.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Has more than meets the eye
*by L***R on May 2, 2019*

Terrific story: action, drama, and performance. There's more here than just a typical kung-fu movie. The tower recollects Bruce Lee's Game of Death. I thought this was a quality film. Sort of a Western, and probably influenced by John Ford. Akira Kurosawa was also influenced the American Western.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ A nicely entertaining wu-chia adventure.
*by W***N on September 28, 2017*

This is a good old-fashioned movie in the style of wu-chia, full of sword fighting, flying, and, needless to say, a bit of romance. With these kinds of films, it may take a little while to catch on to the plot; I don't know whether it would be easier to view it in the original language and not have to rely on captions. But give it twenty minutes, and the states of affairs will become clear. Without giving away anything obvious, the plot centers on the transportation of a rather sizeable amount of money, the various people whose mission it is to protect it, and the robbers who want to make off with it. If by the second half you have already figured out the most likely ending, you're probably right, but it isn't really obvious for the characters of the script, and I won't tell you what it is. The fight scenes are great. Of course, they're improbable, if not impossible. That's what wu-chia is all about. The highly improbable must becomes the possible after all. In this connection, it might be helpful to point out that, although the characters refers to their skills in martial arts as "kung fu," films in the wu-chia goes far beyond the venerable style of of the original Shaolin methods of unarmed go far beyond fighting without weapons. Wu-chia is the style that was most dominant for Hong Kong films prior to the advent and hey-day of strictly Kung Fu films, spearheaded by Bruce Lee. Jet Li and Jackie Chan, among others, continued that style, but with the advent of Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon and the re-issue of Iron Monkey, wu-chia has made a big comeback. Once you've caught on to the plot, it seems to be pretty straight-forward, but there are a sufficient number of scenarios to keep you on your toes and not take anything fro granted. Defying all medical odds, injuries that you and I would consider to be fatal wounds , will not inhibit a central character to continue to fight his heart out. The subtitles aren't perfect, but not to far from the ideal. I've seen a few reviewers of Hong Kong films refer wu-chia as "wire fu," a really ignorant description and that's revealing of the character of some of the reviewers. If you spend an entire rainy Sunday afternoon going through a Hong Kong film trying to find the one place where a wire might actually show up, I wish you the opportunity to make a little bit more your life. Overall a very nice film though not in the class of Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan, and Jet Li. A wu-chia director and easily make use of wu-chia devices to get a character out of a spot of trouble without exerting his fighting techniques. Overall, a nice addition to the ever-increasing wu-chia films, but don't a Crouching Tiger.

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*Product available on Desertcart Portugal*
*Store origin: PT*
*Last updated: 2026-04-23*