A lively, visual treat.
Kung Fu Hustle (2005)
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Reviews Counted:170
Fresh:152
Rotten:18
Average Rating:7.6/10
Consensus: Kung Fu Hustle blends special effects, martial arts, and the Looney Toons to hilarious effect.
Runtime: 1 hr 39 mins
Genre: Foreign Films
Theatrical Release:Apr 8, 2005 Limited
Box Office: $17,025,579
Synopsis: Stephen Chow's follow-up to SHAOLIN SOCCER ups the over-the-top action quotient by about three zillion percent. The story is set in 1930s Hong Kong, with Chow as a shaggy-haired, would-be bad guy... Stephen Chow's follow-up to SHAOLIN SOCCER ups the over-the-top action quotient by about three zillion percent. The story is set in 1930s Hong Kong, with Chow as a shaggy-haired, would-be bad guy named Sing, who gets caught up in the middle of a war between the top-hat-wearing Axe gang and the hard scrabble inhabitants of Pig Sty Alley. Chow--who wrote, produced, and directed--doesn't step in as the star here for quite a while, letting the comic duties fly in a myriad of directions: a landlady in curlers (Yuen Qiu) has a yell that can flatten buildings; people get kicked across courtyards and through walls; musician assassins whip ghost sabers from lyre strings, and a mental patient in pink flip-flops named "the Beast" (Leung Siu Lung) catches bullets in his fingers. Buoyed by SOCCER's box office success, HUSTLE uses bigger production values and a dizzying amount of CGI-enhanced martial arts (imagine Bruce Lee vs. Bugs Bunny in THE MATRIX). It's full of references to other films and filmmakers, revering spaghetti westerns and '70s Shaw brothers movies a la Tarantino's KILL BILL (fight choreographer Yuen Wo Ping worked on both films). It also pays sly homage to the works of Wong Kar Wai, D.W. Griffith, Sam Raimi, Jean-Luc Godard, Stanley Kubrick, and Akira Kurosawa. Raymond Wong's inspired score matches each cinematic reference with the appropriate cue as the camera circles and swoops around the sprawling sets. This is a real treat, more than a great action film or comedy, it's a great film period, and one that set box office records in the East. [More]
Starring: Qiu Yuen, Wah Yuen, Stephen Chow
Starring: Qiu Yuen, Wah Yuen, Stephen Chow
Director: Stephen Chow
Director: Stephen Chow
Screenwriter: Tseng Kan Cheong, Chan Man Keung, Lola Huo
Producer: Jeff Lau
Composer: Raymond Wong
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for Kung Fu Hustle
When I saw it at Sundance, I wrote that it was 'like Jackie Chan and Buster Keaton meet Quentin Tarantino and Bugs Bunny.' You see how worked up you can get, watching a movie like this.
The hugely enjoyable Kung Fu Hustle races across the screen in a colorful collage of kung fu films, silent comedies and Tex Avery and Chuck Jones cartoons.
Kung Fu Hustle will not only please martial-arts fans, it's witty and energetic enough to engage those who usually ignore such choreographed Asian dust-ups.
Chow has created a hyper-animate fantasy world that honors kung fu movies as it satirizes them, and the similarities between it and a cartoon are entirely intentional.
There's nothing in Kung Fu Hustle you haven't seen before, but you've never seen it put together in quite this way.
...has a nasty streak that is at odds with the otherwise genial mood Chow creates.
Though I applaud kung-foolery and find Chow nimbly hilarious, Kung Fu Hustle's shotgun marriage of slapstick and brutality is unnerving in the make-'em-laugh, make-'em-gag manner of Quentin Tarantino.
Hatchet fu, shotgun fu, flowerpot fu, harp fu, cobra fu, disco fu, Zen fu, Kubrick fu, Road Runner fu, geezer fu, bullfrog fu. Kung Fu Hustle features every type of fu except déjà fu.
The action is so absurd and clever that it taps the funny bone more than the adrenal glands.
Hilarious, thrilling, toon-like martial arts flick that's an absolute joy to watch.
The second half suffers somewhat, but only in the sense that the inspired gags slow down to one or two per frame. More, please, and soon.
(Kung Fu) Hustle is a rapid-paced conglomerate of action and laughs, mixed with special effects that look like they were lifted from a Warner Bros. cartoon.
A full-on-the-mouth, sloppy-wet kiss to Hong Kong martial arts movies.
Stephen Chow's giddy genre grab bag of a movie is infectiously silly, breathtaking and easily the most exhilarating pure kung fu movie in years.
Kung Fu Hustle is so over-the-top that it could break Sly Stallone's wrist and stall his big rig circa 1987...
Latest News for Kung Fu Hustle
July 24, 2007:
Seth Rogen Wants Stephen Chow as His Green Hornet Sidekick
If the idea of Seth Rogen as a superhero sounds a little crazy, well, it is. But at least the guy has good taste in co-stars. He'd like to get Stephen Chow to play 'sidekick' Kato. More...
April 26, 2006:
Get Your Goofy MTV Movie Awards Noms Right Here
You thought the awards season ended with the Oscars? Please. MTV's just gearing up for their movie awards, which will be broadcast worldwide on June 8th -- but we have all the... More...
April 18, 2006:
Chow Puts His Second "Hustle" on Hold
Asian Cinema site MonkeyPeaches.com reports some good news and some bad: The good news is that there will be a Kung Fu Hustle sequel some time in the future. The bad news is... More...
January 10, 2006:
Broadcast Film Critics Dole Out Their Awards on National TV
The Broadcast Film Critics Association held their annual awards presentation live on The WB network, with plenty of mildly corny jokes, appreciative acceptance speeches,... More...
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