Hong Kong satirist Stephen Chow wrote, directed, and stars in this hilarious spoof of sports and kung fu movie cliches. Chow plays 'Mighty Steel Leg' Sing, who can kick soda cans through walls, and is a natural soccer star in the eyes of crippled coach Fung (Patrick Se Yin), who is looking to challenge his arch rival Hung, the .. Read more
| Starring | Stephen Chow, Vicki Zhao, Man Tai Ng |
|---|---|
| Director | Stephen Chow |
| Genres | Action/Adventure, World Cinema |
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After combining kung fu and cuisine in The God of Cookery, Stephen Chow turns to football in this cartoonish underdog comedy, which broke box-office records in his native Hong Kong. Opening with a monochrome flashback to a deliberately missed penalty, the action centres on the efforts of Ng Man Tat's disgraced, disabled ex-pro teaming with Chow's Shaolin monk to coach a side capable of defeating Patrick Tse's team of ruthless over-achievers. The action is everything here, although Chow also tosses in some ingenious effects, the odd movie parody and several throwaway in-jokes (notably Cecilia Cheung and Karen Mok cameoing as excessively hirsute blokes). The result is fast, furious fun.
Enjoyable broad slapstick comedy that takes the usual sports movie cliché Ð of an over-the-hill coach training a team of no-hopers and turning them into winners Ð and treats it in an infectiously ridiculous manner.
Coming on with extreme silliness and a plethora of goodwill, Shaolin Soccer is the kung fu-football comedy... read more on Time Out
Me and my flatmate were crying with laughter at this, and still talk about some of the scenes to this day! The trick is not to take it too seriously. Even still, it has some amazing special effects, and is a film I could watch again and again. Wonderful stuff!
I returned this disk unwatched as, to my horror, I popped the film into my DVD player only to be presented with the dubbed, Miramax-hacked International version. I'd rather stick pins in my eyes than suffer the pain of a dubbed film.
Where's the original cut, with 20 (read 'em: 20) extra minutes? The answer is, of course: on the retail disk.
This is a comedy and it is funny. It has OTT action, with a band of former Shaolin martial artists re-banding to use their martial arts skills to try & win a football journament. Sheer genius!
Great shame that the film is dubbed in English, no option for choice. All foreign films should be screened in its native language and subtitled. Completely ruins it. Most irritating. Information for languages unclear and should be listed at the summary level of list of foreign films whether dubbed or not. Great NO NO for dubbed films.
Obviously whoever made this had never watched a game of football in their life, but thats no bad thing. If you liked anime and streetfighter meets premier league football then this is a gem of a movie, especially the effects at the end of the game. I won't give anything away but remove your brain, dim the lights, crank up the surround sound and you have a good way to while away a Monday night.
Might be ever better after a couple of beers...
Me and my flatmate were crying with laughter at this, and still talk about some of the scenes to this day! The trick is not to take it too seriously. Even still, it has some amazing special effects, and is a film I could watch again and again. Wonderful stuff!
I returned this disk unwatched as, to my horror, I popped the film into my DVD player only to be presented with the dubbed, Miramax-hacked International version. I'd rather stick pins in my eyes than suffer the pain of a dubbed film.
Where's the original cut, with 20 (read 'em: 20) extra minutes? The answer is, of course: on the retail disk.
This is a comedy and it is funny. It has OTT action, with a band of former Shaolin martial artists re-banding to use their martial arts skills to try & win a football journament. Sheer genius!
Me and my flatmate were crying with laughter at this, and still talk about some of the scenes to this day! The trick is not to take it too seriously. Even still, it has some amazing special effects, and is a film I could watch again and again. Wonderful stuff!
A steaming turd of a movie! Whose idea was this? It's neither funny or spectacular! Waste of time!!
I am not a football follower and usually avoid football related movies, but
this is a very clever and funny movie about an underdog football team
using kung fu during matches to win a tournament.
SFX are OTT and suit this style of movie. Stephen Chow is a master of this kind of comedy/romance.
I viewed it on an import with subs, but the UK release should
have an English dub.
This is one of those 'bad movies' that is entertaining because it's so bad. The acting is awful, the dubbing is even worse, and the story is implausible. Stephen Chow dubs himself into English, but most of the other Chinese characters are dubbed by white Americans putting on really bad Chinese accents, which is probably terrible if you were a native Chinese speaker! Well the premise of this film is ridiculous, but I knew that before I rented it - these former monks and kung fu masters try and win a football tournament by incorporating kung fu techniques with the beautiful game. Some of the effects are quite good, and you'll see where a lot of TV commercials get their inspiration (is it Continental tyres? I think so).
However, this DVD is seriously lacking. THIS FILM IS DUBBED INTO ENGLISH and there is NO ORIGINAL CANTONESE OPTION which is criminal in my view ... who wants to see something badly dubbed into English when you can watch it in the original? - or at least provide both as an option! HALF AN HOUR HAS BEEN CHOPPED OUT eek, the original Cantonese movie is almost two hours long, and this version is less than an hour and a half! But the criminal thing is, THEY ARE NOT OFFERED AS EXTRAS meaning that we do not see the deleted scenes. Why not? Criminal, again. There are not even any subtitles for the English hard of hearing - a pain since I watched this film at 2 in the morning and could have done with making it a little softer so as not to wake up the neighbourhood. If none of these things bother you, go ahead. You'll laugh a couple of times, and you may be impressed by some of the effects. But if you are a purist like me, avoid this DVD like the plague. There, I can't put it fairer than that can I! Hope this review has helped someone make up their minds as to whether or not to rent this.
It has Kung Fu, Soccer, action and a script so bad that it is almost good. There was almost somebody acting in it as well but I think that was a mistake. Despite all this it has some funny moments in it and the special effects where good except I don?t think the director was quite sure where to put them so you get them just pop up for no apparent reason along with them some seriously dodgy dance routines. If you like bad films to laugh at, and I do mean at not with this is the film for you.
The four stars are for the sheer bottle at producing it.
If you like Quentin Tarantino, Airplane, Kung Fu flicks, Hong Kong cinema, exploitation flicks and film in general I can't see how you wouldn't enjoy this film.
Great film. Totally irreverent, silly, slapstick fun. This is a HK film taking the 'michael' out of kung fu movies. It so daft that it's great. I laughed so much I almost cried. It will make you cringe it is so cheesy, but so very funny.
After combining kung fu and cuisine in The God of Cookery, Stephen Chow turns to football in this cartoonish underdog comedy, which broke box-office records in his native Hong Kong. Opening with a monochrome flashback to a deliberately missed penalty, the action centres on the efforts of Ng Man Tat's disgraced, disabled ex-pro teaming with Chow's Shaolin monk to coach a side capable of defeating Patrick Tse's team of ruthless over-achievers. The action is everything here, although Chow also tosses in some ingenious effects, the odd movie parody and several throwaway in-jokes (notably Cecilia Cheung and Karen Mok cameoing as excessively hirsute blokes). The result is fast, furious fun.
Enjoyable broad slapstick comedy that takes the usual sports movie cliché Ð of an over-the-hill coach training a team of no-hopers and turning them into winners Ð and treats it in an infectiously ridiculous manner.
Coming on with extreme silliness and a plethora of goodwill, Shaolin Soccer is the kung fu-football comedy... read more on Time Out
Brilliant... could well be the best football movie ever made.
Match of the Day meets The Matrix.
Insanely funny.