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 from their home in the USA to England. Upon hearing of his father's murder in China at the hands of the English Lord Rathbone (Aidan Gillen), Wang leaves his law-enforcing life in .. Read more
| Starring | Jackie Chan, Owen Wilson, Fann Wong, Fan Man-Fong |
|---|---|
| Director | David Dobkin |
| Genres | Action/Adventure, Audio Descriptive, Comedy |
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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 from their home in the USA to England. Upon hearing of his father's murder in China at the hands of the English 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.
| Starring | Jackie Chan, Owen Wilson, Fann Wong, Fan Man-Fong, Aidan Gillen |
|---|---|
| Director | David Dobkin |
| Studio | TOUCHSTONE HOME VIDEO |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 50 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Action/Adventure, Audio Descriptive, Comedy |
| Language | English, English Audio Description |
| Hearing-impaired | English |
| Released | DVD: 06 Oct 2003 Production year: 2003 |
| Format | DVD |
Jackie Chan's Chinese sheriff and Owen Wilson's slacker outlaw reteam and relocate to what is meant to be Victorian London (actually Prague) for this spry sequel to the immensely successful action comedy Shanghai Noon. After a brisk intro involving the theft of an Imperial seal and the murder of Chan's father, the action slows a little so they can plod through some unimaginative gags about the English (they drive on the wrong side of the road, have bad teeth and give strange names to food). However, Chan's action sequences are as spectacularly inventive and meticulously choreographed as ever — a fight scene that pays tribute to Singin' in the Rain is the real crowd-pleaser — while Wilson's trademark laid-back delivery remains amusingly off-beam.
"...Propelled by potent chemistry between Jackie Chan and Owen Wilson, SHANGHAI KNIGHTS proves that, sometimes, bigger actually can be better. A hugely entertaining and more lavishly mounted follow-up to 2000's SHANGHAI NOON..."
This film has little in suprises for anybody who saw the first film, it is very much the same action and same banter but set in England. Despite this, it is still very entertaining and the many references to Victoria England, bad teeth, Sherlock Holmes, Charlie Chaplin, Jack the Ripper, do provide many chucklesome moments. You may not laugh out loud but Owen Wilson is still extremely entertaining as Jackie Chan's comic partner. This is much better than either of the Rush Hour films and at least you do not get the irritating Chris Tucker who just SHOUTS everything.A good night in with enough action and laughs that will not offend anybody.
Quality. Just what you expect after Shanghai Noon and not at all disappointing. Owen Wilson has great lines and great delivery and Jackie Chan is the man!
Negotiations are in progress for a Christmas comedy starring Vince Vaughn (Wedding Crashers, Mr And Mrs Smith, Dodgeball) as Santa Claus' loser brother, reports Variety magazine. The film is to be directed by David Dobkin (Shanghai Knights, Clay Pigeons), who worked with Vaughn on last year's comedy hit Wedding Crashers, as well as 1998's Clay Pigeons. The Warner Brothers comedy, entitled Fred Claus, sees Vaughn as Santa's deadbeat brother forced to move back to the North Pole where he gets a... Read more