En Kung Fu Cinema tienen esta lista realizada por Bey Logan:
«Chang Cheh: The ten best from the martial arts movie machine
Reprinted from Hong Kong Action Cinema by Bey Logan
Even this most prolific of kung fu film makers agreed that the quality of his work varied widely, but Chang Cheh remains a true phenomenon within the genre, both in terms of the number of films he made and the careers he's launched.
Golden Swallow (1969, Shaw Brothers): Swordplay bloodshed on an epic scale in an actioner that unites [Jimmy] Wang Yu with then-queen of the kung fu scene, Cheng Pei Pei.
Vengeance (1979, Shaw Brothers): The film that established the house style of Shaw Brothers kung fu, as opposed to swordplay movies. The David Chiang/Ti Lung double act at its best, receiving stalwart support from the Shaw Brothers players.
Duel of Fists (1970, Shaw Brothers): An exceptional actioner, unusual in that it was set in the present day, since most of Chang's seventies productions were period pieces. Ti Lung stars.
The Boxer from Shantung (1972, Shaw Brothers): This intense actioner, featuring bloodletting of Sam Peckinpah proportions, made kung fu fighter Chen Kuan Tai a star.
Heroes Two (1974, Chang's Film Co./Shaw Brothers): The beginning of the Shaolin cycle. The influence of Lau Kar Leung was increasingly obvious in this movie and the subsequent traditional style martial arts films by Chang.
Men from the Monastery (1974, Shaw Brothers): Another epic detailing the Shaolin temple's role in the battle of Ming versus Ching.
Disciples of Shaolin (1975, Shaw Brothers): The Ill-fated Alexander Fu Sheng's finest hour, also known as The Hung Boxing Kid.
Chinatown Kid (1977, Shaw Brothers): Memorable for Fu Sheng's tragi-comic performance and the hilariously inept recreation of San Francisco's Chinatown. Some interesting modern-day style action.
The Five Venoms (1978, Shaw Brothers): The film that introduced the latter-day line-up of Shaws stars, including Lo Mang, Kuo Chui, and Sun Chiang. Huge cult following among kung fu fans.
Five Element Ninjas (1982, Shaw Brothers): Hilariously hokey, studio-bound production. Pre-dates Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles by several years, but works on the same level. »