A poor Chinese laborer learns important lessons after his son gets a strange new toy. Read more
| Starring | Stephen Chow, Kitty Zhang Yuqi, Chi Chung Lam, Min Hun Fung |
|---|---|
| Director | Stephen Chow |
| Genres | Comedy, Sci-Fi/Fantasy, World Cinema |
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A poor Chinese laborer learns important lessons after his son gets a strange new toy.
| Starring | Stephen Chow, Kitty Zhang Yuqi, Chi Chung Lam, Min Hun Fung |
|---|---|
| Director | Stephen Chow |
| Studio | SONY PICTURES HOME ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 26 mins Blu-ray: 1 hr 28 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Comedy, Sci-Fi/Fantasy, World Cinema |
| Language | Cantonese |
| Released | DVD: unknown Blu-ray: unknown Production year: 2008 |
| Format | DVD |
I think it was the Canadian filmmaker Don McKellar who observed that ET is nothing but a boy-and-his-dog movie, Lassie with supernatural powers. Take that literally and you wind up with CJ7,... read more »
Like all Stephen Chow films, they all center around the 'underdog' story. However, it has been Stephen Chow as the center of this 'underdog' story in his previous films, such as Shaolin Soccer and The King of Comedy. This time, the camera is centered on Jiao Xu as Dicky, a boy who has to deal with the problems he faces while growing up, such as low wealth, bullying, and underachieving - yet overcoming such obstacles and making it work out for the better. This hasn't changed the way Chow films his productions - you can still see the parodies (watch for scenes parodying Kung Fu Hustle, M:I 2, etc), the slapstick (Buster Keaton style), the humour, as well as the wacky Stephen Chow style acting across the talent. The biggest surprise is Stephen Chow, who takes a more serious role as Dicky's father. Jiao Xu instead takes on what Chow normally would do in his films - facial expressions, movements and dialogue. The isn't without its flaws such as earlier scenes that could have been elaborated on or just edited out just to make the story complete. Maybe a few cameos from his previous films wouldn't go a miss to replace some of the generic characters on TV reports, etc. Its also not as witty or fast pace as his previous works, but that does mean that this film is more accessible to a wider audience such as the western markets. Overall, its worth watching, especially in its original language with subtitles.
I think it was the Canadian filmmaker Don McKellar who observed that ET is nothing but a boy-and-his-dog movie, Lassie with supernatural powers. Take that literally and you wind up with CJ7, the latest from Hong Kong comedy actor-director Stephen Chow – best known here for the brilliant Kung Fu Hustle and the patchier Shaolin Soccer. Jackie Chan is regularly compared to Buster Keaton, but Chow has more in common with the sentimental slapstick of Charlie Chaplin. Here he’s an... Read more