Jackie Chan Movie:

Ging chaat goo si Region 2



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Jackie Chan Movie:
Ging chaat goo si Region 2



Movie
Ging chaat goo si [Region 2]
Salesrank: 279390

Our Price: $28.69
Used Price: $2.74
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • P
  • A
  • L
  • Starring:

  • Jackie Chan
  • Maggie Cheung
  • Brigitte Lin
  • Kwok-Hung Lam
  • Bill Tung
  • Editorial Review:
    This classic Jackie Chan picture opens with one of the wildest police action set pieces ever filmed, an extended chase that includes the total destruction of a hillside shanty settlement, as fleeing crooks and pursing cops crash down through it with their vehicles. Overall, however, the picture is an awkward mixture of clashing elements. At first it is a little strange seeing Chan playing it (mostly) straight in a hard-edged police thriller. The fights are all extremely ferocious and real-looking, without the lighthearted slapstick stylization that leavens his best period vehicles, like Project A, Part II. The comedy elements (especially a recurrent cake-in-the-face gag) seem to come out of nowhere; they are no longer integral to the spirit of the movie. But there are wonderful set pieces, stunts, and action scenes, including Jackie struggling to answer a dozen jangling phones at once, when he's left alone at the police station, and the all-out, glass-smashing fervor of a climactic battle royal in a shopping mall. --David Chute

    Description of Ging chaat goo si [Region 2]:
    Jackie Chan has become a genre unto himself, and watching Police Story, you'll understand why. The plot is minimal: Chan is a hero cop involved in a raid that goes wrong. He's assigned to guard a witness, the kingpin's attractive female secretary (Brigitte Lin). For the rest of the film, Chan's protecting himself from the secretary, from the gangsters out to silence her, and from his own jealous girlfriend (Maggie Cheung). But watching Chan for plot is like watching porno for existential themes. While most modern action films steal cues from Westerns, Chan condenses those open mesas into the dense throngs of modern Hong Kong--and tosses in Buster Keaton slapstick. For example, when the opening raid goes haywire, there's an unbelievable car chase through the steep huddle of a hillside shantytown. That's through. No roads, just shacks. Flimsy shacks. As the film progresses, Chan scales a speeding bus using an umbrella, uses cow dung as an excuse to break into some Shaolin moonwalking, and transforms an urban shopping mall into a demented gymnasium (think clothes racks, escalators, and lots of plate glass displays). Chan is amazingly versatile both physically and emotionally--and he's a secure enough star-director to let his costars shine, too. --Grant Balfour

    Amazon.com essential video
    This classic Jackie Chan picture opens with one of the wildest police action set pieces ever filmed, an extended chase that includes the total destruction of a hillside shanty settlement, as fleeing crooks and pursing cops crash down through it with their vehicles. Overall, however, the picture is an awkward mixture of clashing elements. At first it is a little strange seeing Chan playing it (mostly) straight in a hard-edged police thriller. The fights are all extremely ferocious and real-looking, without the lighthearted slapstick stylization that leavens his best period vehicles, like Project A, Part II. The comedy elements (especially a recurrent cake-in-the-face gag) seem to come out of nowhere; they are no longer integral to the spirit of the movie. But there are wonderful set pieces, stunts, and action scenes, including Jackie struggling to answer a dozen jangling phones at once, when he's left alone at the police station, and the all-out, glass-smashing fervor of a climactic battle royal in a shopping mall. --David Chute

    Ging chaat goo si [Region 2] Reviews:
    Jackie's first Jackie Chan Movie 5 Star Review
    2009-12-09 - Jackie Chan movies are truly a genre in themselves. Part action, part comedy, with a tad of drama and story, they aren't really able to be catergorized in any way other than as "Jacki Chan Movies." So, when you see Police Story, you get to see the first really Jackie Chan movie. It's a bit more raw and imperfect compared to the rest, but is in many ways his best. Jackie almost kills himself with his stunts in this movie, most of which hold up incredibly well (FYI: One stunt caused Jackie to suffer a disclocated hip bone, something that had never occured before in recorded medical history until Jackie's accident). If I didn't know this was one of his first real movies, I would have never been able to tell the difference. I highly recomend this movie to Jackie Chan fans, and think this movie maybe be fresh enough to bring a few new Jackie Chan fans along for the ride. Give it a try.

    Jackie Chan: The Model Officer 4 Star Review
    2009-05-18 - By general consensus, Jackie Chan has made two very great movies above others: The Legend of Drunken Master and "Police Story". "Drunken Master" is a straight kung fu film while "Police Story" is more of a balanced action movie, incorporating gunfights and car chases with the martial arts. On the whole, I like "Master" more because its story progression is easier to understand and it has fewer pauses between action scenes, but "Police Story" is no slouch, either. While it does drag a bit in the middle, the film is a myriad of death-defying stunts and physical comedy; the movie's ability to perfectly balance the two is what has made it so unforgettable for a lot of folks.

    The story: Ka Kaui (Chan) is a Hong Kong policeman-turned-hero after he single-handedly captures a notorious druglord (Chor Yuen, Twin Dragons), but in midst of protecting the key witness to the gangster's trial (Brigette Lin, Chungking Express) and trying to keep his girlfriend (Maggie Cheung, In the Mood for Love) from leaving him, he is framed for the murder of another cop and attempts to clear his name without getting arrested or killed.
    The plotline is one of the two major issues I have with the film: I suppose that someone well-versed in Hong Kong cinema or proficient in Cantonese/translated subtitles would have less of an issue understanding what's going on, but I needed to read a synopsis to clarify some of the things that happened in the second half of the movie.

    My second beef lies in the amount of non-action going on in the film: rest assured, there is no shortage of action involved, but since I cannot really translate a subtitled or dubbed performance into appreciation for acting ability, I couldn't be swayed by the film's dramatic aptitude, even though I've been told that Jackie, Brigitte, and Chor Yuen, Lam Kwok-Hung (Police Story II), Bill Tung (Rumble in the Bronx), and company do a fairly good job as far as action cinema is concerned.
    Of course, Chan speaks a universal language with physical comedy; as far as I'm concerned, he has surpassed his idol, Buster Keaton, in how to make people laugh via body language and has perfected the art of "funny face" and taking a fall. This is especially well on display when his on-screen girlfriend assaults him with his own birthday cake upon assuming infidelity.

    Still, it's the film's award-winning action content that makes it stand out, and as much as I could go on about it, nothing I write can come close to expressing my amazement at how well it has been done. For starters, the martial arts scenes are not quite as technically-accurate as Chan would develop them in the future, but nonetheless amazingly choreographed and well within Chan's top-ten list. There are about three big ones of varying lengths, but the final one-against-many brawl in the shopping mall is as beautiful and brutal as one can hope for. Of course, no matter how very good these hand-to-hand encounters are, the definite highpoints of the picture are the stunt scenes: episodes within the movie that redefine the term "stunt". Since there are too many cool instances within the film to name and my review already is pretty long, let me highlight the most breathtaking ones: 1) Jackie and the villains drive three cars downhill through a shanty village, destroying literally dozens of scrap metal and straw shacks in their way, 2) Jackie uses an umbrella to haphazardly hang onto the side of a speeding bus, 3) the near-entirety of the shopping mall fight, culminating in Chan's legendary leap onto an electric lighting structure, down which he slides a legitimate seventy-five feet before crashing through a glass ceiling. In a word, astonishing.

    So, is it my favorite Chan flick? - no. Is it awesome anyway? - without a doubt. Should you buy the Dragon Dynasty release with a host of cool and exclusive special features? - of course, silly.

    Pure Jackie! Great Stunts! 5 Star Review
    2009-03-22 - This is an awesome look at the young Jackie Chan. In his prime, he was amazing -- fast, funny, and overwhelmingly powerful. This film has silly, stupid scenes that Jackie has become famous for. It has the great fight scenes and choreography that Jackie Chan is not only famous for, but in many ways, a style of film that he really put on the global market and created the world's appetite for.

    This film is awesome, fun, silly and fabulous.

    Who'd be a stuntman on a Jackie Chan film? 4 Star Review
    2009-01-18 - You have to wonder who on Earth would grow up wanting to be one of Jackie Chan's stunt team - looking at Police Story it's pretty obvious that you'll spend more time in the hospital than on the set. These guys aren't faking getting hurt - they really are getting hurt, and you don't need to see the end credits outtakes montage of them being carried away to work that out. But then, it's not as if Jackie Chan isn't sharing their pain. If it looks like there's a real sense of danger, that's because there was.

    Filmed comparatively cheaply (part of it even in Chan's own house) as a reaction to Chan's disappointment with US co-production The Protector, it's a mixture of impressive action, lacklustre plotting and broad comedy - this is the kind of film where the moment you see a birthday cake you know it'll end up in someone's face (the motivation can be found in this disc's deleted scenes if you're interested). If the comedy doesn't play so well with some Western audiences, there's no such qualms with the action, whether it's the 16-minute opening shanty town action scene that sees Chan hanging onto the outside of a speeding bus by an umbrella (and saw stuntmen hospitalised after a stunt stolen by Tango and cash went visibly wrong), and inventive fight scene in and around a car or the hardcore action finale in a shopping center where escalators, display cases, mirrors, lights, clothes racks and a motor bike (don't ask where that came from) all become deadly weapons. The bill for broken glass alone must have been huge, let alone the cost in broken bones.

    It's not Chan's best film despite being one of his breakthrough hits, but it's certainly one of the best. Sadly Dragon Dynasty's Region 1 NTSC DVD doesn't have as good or as clean a transfer as Hong Kong Legends' UK disc: it's acceptable but there's a lot of grain and its clear that they haven't spent too much time restoring it even if the print is clear. Where it scores is in the extras - deleted scenes, alternate outtakes, and an interview with Chan, and original trailer among them.

    POLICE STORY 5 Star Review
    2008-12-16 - JACKIE CHAN'S 1 OF HIS 1ST MOVIES HAS A PLOT BUT STILL CAN TIL IT IS DONE N JAP.










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