Seeing them go over Undefeatable reminded me that I thought they should feature more Godfrey Ho films on BOTW. He had all of those cut-and-paste films he "directed", produced in the 1980s with Joseph Lai of IFD Films and Thomas Tang of Filmark, and gathered aspiring B- and C-movie actors from around the globe to make his "ninja" movies, through methods like hiring expats who hung around shady locales frequented by low-level Triads and gwailo who'd come to Hong Kong to get away from a variety of things.. These films usually consisted of a couple of ninja fighting scenes being pasted into failed or unfinished Hong Kong or Korean movies, a lot of unauthorized music from various TV shows and films, and then editing the mess into something resembling a film. Attempting to take advantage of the "ninja" craze of the 1980s, these ninja were often white guys, wearing colorful outfits complete with headbands that had the word "NINJA" printed on them in faux-Oriental font. European B-movie actor Richard Harrison (who starred in "Blood Debts") featured in a lot of these splice jobs, but a lot of his footage was later spliced into many more of Ho's productions without his prior agreement, and Harrison retired from acting in 1990 feeling his career had been damaged by the association with this filmmaking outfit.
Ho also directed a few entries in what they call the "Girls with Guns" sub-genre of Hong Kong action back in the 1980s-1990s, such as the cop actioner
Angel Enforcers starring Sharon Yeung that unauthorized use of a certain movie theme (though Ho wasn't the only Hong Kong filmmaker whose movies involved this at the time)
and Princess Madam, starring HK action actresses like Yeung, Moon Lee and Michiko Nishiwaki., and the two totally unrelated
Lethal Panther movies, the first of which featured Sibelle Hu, and two starred noted action film actress Yukari Oshima.
Also, before
Undefeatable, he directed a Rothrock vehicle,
Honor and Glory, which featured some competent fighting in an otherwise goofy film where everyone, from reporters to pimps to random civilians seems to know the martial arts. The villain is an overacted yet simultaneously bored-sounding corrupt bank executive who at one point sneeringly turns down attending a pancake breakfast with Ronald Reagan. ("To hell with that old bastard.")