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Shanghai Knights (2003)
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Reviews Counted:31
Fresh:23
Rotten:8
Average Rating:6.3/10
Consensus: A silly, anachronistic mess, but the pairing of Chan and Wilson makes the movie fun.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for action violence and sexual content
Runtime: 1 hr 54 mins
Genre: Comedies
Theatrical Release:Feb 7, 2003 Wide
Box Office: $60,447,592
Synopsis: In this entertaining sequel to SHANGHAI NOON, Chon Wang (Jackie Chan) and Roy O'Bannon (Owen Wilson) are reunited on an adventure that leads them to Great Britain. Upon hearing of his father's... In this entertaining sequel to SHANGHAI NOON, Chon Wang (Jackie Chan) and Roy O'Bannon (Owen Wilson) are reunited on an adventure that leads them to Great Britain. Upon hearing of his father's murder in China at the hands of Englishman Lord Rathbone (Aidan Gillen), Wang leaves his law-enforcing life in Nevada and heads east. In New York City, he tracks down Roy, who now works as a waiter/gigolo. After a close encounter with New York's finest, Wang and Roy travel to London, where they team up with Wang's sister, Lin (Fann Wong), also out to avenge their father's death. Their search uncovers a plot to assassinate the royal family and brings them into contact with many touchstones of turn-of-the-20th-century British culture. A fitting follow-up to Chan and Wilson's first pairing, SHANGHAI KNIGHTS takes the fish-out-of-water element of the original and doubles it, as both Wang and Roy navigate the highs and lows of Victorian London. Chan, as always, astounds with a series of acrobatic fight sequences that involves unusual accessories such as revolving doors, fruit stands, and Chinese vases. And Wilson once again aptly fills the role of the wisecracking opportunist with a conscience who has a wry quip for every occasion. Meanwhile, Fann Wong is luminous as Wang's high-kicking sister; Aidan Gillen sneers superbly as the scheming Rathbone, and Hong Kong legend Donnie Yen makes the most of his small role as Rathbone's co-conspirator. In addition to incorporating Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Charlie Chaplin, and Jack the Ripper into the story, David Dobkin's amusing film also features knowing nods to SINGING IN THE RAIN and the Harold Lloyd classic SAFETY LAST. [More]
Starring: Jackie Chan, Owen Wilson, Fann Wong, Aidan Gillen
Starring: Jackie Chan, Owen Wilson, Fann Wong, Aidan Gillen, Tom Fisher, Donnie Yen, Aaron Johnson, Gemma Jones
Director: David Dobkin
Director: David Dobkin
Screenwriter: Alfred Gough, Miles Millar
Producer: Roger Birnbaum, Gary Barber, Jonathan Glickman
Composer: Randy Edelman
Studio: Touchstone Pictures
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Release:
Jul 15, 2003
Reviews for Shanghai Knights
It's a merry surfeit, lofted by calisthenic wow above the usual level for late-era Jackie and Wilson's mellow-gold delivery.
Like an Abbott & Costello comedy, Shanghai Knights is truly dumb, sometimes inconsistent, but awfully funny.
Knights will surely find an enthusiastic following before it gets to video.
A desperately unfunny action comedy, mirthless not only in its effect on an audience but in its whole aura.
[Chan and Wilson] imbue Shanghai Knights with an aura of collegial high spirits, even when the writers leave them hanging.
Except for some doubles, Chan performs his fight scenes in this film live on camera while doing his most creative choreography in years.
If Knights isn't exactly great filmmaking, it is at least a lot of silly fun.
A nice mindless diversion of a film that provides a few chuckles, and some pretty fancy footwork by the always invincible Jackie Chan and the constantly optimistic Wilson.
The movie is just the sort of mindless entertainment we're ready for after all of December's distinguished and significant Oscar finalists.
So appallingly slipshod in all the usual departments is this sequel to the engaging martial-arts comedy Western Shanghai Noon that you're tempted to cite its makers for contempt.
Wilson has his surfer-dude moments of humor, but he's doing his best with creatively dead material.
A pretty entertaining movie, in a kick-you- in-the-pants kind of way.
Far from great but greatly entertaining, Jackie Chan's Shanghai Knights is certainly one of the best of his English-language pictures.
Although the movie doesn't contain wall-to-wall action, the martial-arts set pieces are on a par with Chan's best work.
Latest News for Shanghai Knights
July 13, 2006:
Box Office Preview: Dupree and Little Man Bust Into Your Home
A pair of new star-driven comedies will try to steal away some treasure from the record-breaking hit Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest in a laugh-filled battle for the... More...
August 15, 2002:
Nothing shocking, but just the kind of chemistry that made the last installment work just right. ![]()
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