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6 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
patched together Low Wei junk, 27 June 2006
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Author:
(winner55) from United States
There some good bits pieced together from outtakes and other films; but
this is not Fearless Hyena II, there IS no fearless Hyena II.
After Jackie Chan finally got out of his contract with Lo Wei, Lo Wei
too the le4ft-overs from Chan's last film with Lo Wei's production
company (fearless Hyena, obviously), which Chan himself had written and
directed, and pasted it together with no rhyme or reason other than to
make some extra dough.
A more cynical hack than Lo Wei could hardly be imagined.
Fearless Hyena is an excellent film.
This "II" thing - total junk. Skip it.
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Avoid!, 27 May 2002
Author:
abentenjo from Swindon, UK
Jackie had well and truly left the Lo Wei Motion Picture Co when this hodgepodge was put together, a mindless cash-in that mixes scenes of Chan with that of a disguised double, creating a truly awful sequel that bares little resemblance to its successful predecessor. Some actors return (Yen Si Kuan seems to have come back from the dead) with the story concerning the Heaven and Earth fighters who wipe out any combatants of rival styles, of which includes Jackie's father and summarily the former seeks vengeance but it's all pretty bad stuff, proof if proof be needed of this being Lo Wei's last grab at credibility which ultimately concludes as a wasted exercise. Thankfully the real Jackie Chan went on to live, and work, happily ever after.
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
1 out of 10, 5 July 2001
Author:
dragon ma young (DrAgOnMaYoUnG@aol.com)
jackie didnt want this film released, and hes only really in it a little of the time. so i hated it. jackie should have ot his way and this should have never been released. because chan is the man and is always right. by the way, this is a terrible movie. if it had chan more, i might have liked it more. if chan would have endorsed it, i might have liked it more. but he isnt, and he didnt, so im with him all the way.
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
A great disappointment., 21 July 2000
Author:
has_no_pseudonym from US
Compared to Fearless Hyena this movie lacks almost everything that made its predecessor so good. Granted it has a few pleasing fight scenes, but after that it's complicated plot lines and characters, makes the movie hard to watch. I can understand why Jackie left the movie halfway through. The obvious double for Jackie and the footage from the original Fearless Hyena make the final fight scene laughable. Watch Fearless Hyena before watching Fearless Hyena 2. The movie isn't a complete waste, there are several amusing sequences, but overall the movie is a flop.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
That long-haired hippie!, 25 September 2006
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Author:
Shawn McKenna (srmckenna@hotmail.com) from Modesto, California
In cinema, regardless of country, there is a tendency to try to
capitalize on the success of a film by remaking it Ad Nauseam. The most
common approach is the sequel. Generally sequels will never perform as
well as the original (there are exceptions such as Godfather and
Drunken Master). When the star of the original film will not appear in
the sequel this is normally a recipe for disaster. However, this does
not compare to when the lead actor leaves during production (either
through death or other problems) yet they continue on with the project
trying to complete it. This happened with atrocities such as Trail of
Pink Panther and Game of Death when they employed such fraudulent
techniques as splicing in old footage, using body doubles while mixing
with the original material to create an Ed Woodian style of film. This
would also happen with Fearless Hyena II.
With the success of Fearless Hyena there was obviously going to be a
sequel. Jackie Chan decided to leave for the greener pastures of Golden
Harvest during the early filming of movie. Now instead of quitting
production, Lo Wei obtained the rights to produce this film, part of
the infamous bargaining agreement between the Triads, Jackie, Lo and
Wang Yu and employed the use of old footage, body doubles and mixed
this with the already completed footage.
This "sequel" borrows the same premise as the original and tries to
follow the same format. Heaven and Earth (Yam Sai-kwoon aka Yen
Shi-Kwan who was also the original nemesis in the first film and Kwan
Yung Moon), wearing capes to appear villainous and silly, are tracking
down all members of the Yin-Yang clan to exterminate them to prove that
they have the greatest Kung Fu. Notice that they fight a young James
Tien though later in the film he will age considerably. If you take
note of every continuity error, or where the Jackie Chan footage comes
from, you will probably have more fun watching this film.
We are then introduced to a nude Jackie Chan getting fish, putting
snakes down his pants and killing chickens. These introductory scenes
of Lung are courtesy of the previous Lo Wei film Spiritual Kung Fu.
Like in the first film Lung's guardian (the ubiquitous James Tien)
wants him to get a job. This leads to one of the best scenes in the
film that is actually left over from the first Fearless Hyena (I am not
sure how much extra scenes were originally cut from the first film, but
I've read at least an hour or more though I do not know how much still
exists). Lung asks to get a job from Jaws Four (a great part from Dean
Shek) in a restaurant and results are similar from his previous job
with the other brother (a quadruplet) the coffin salesman. This scene
is also infamous because of the post dubbing insults that were added
against Jackie like "Look at your ugly face. Small eyes and a big
nose. You(r) hair is even longer than a goddamn monkey" and "That
goddam long-haired hippie".
Then we are introduced to the lazy son of Chan Chi Pei (Chan Wai-Lau as
the Unicorn in the first film) Ah Tung who does have an interesting
Rube Goldberg device that was done before Pee Wee's Big Adventure and
Brazil (could they have copied this film? :-) Probably not). He is a
disappointment to his father (though he has good inventor skills) and
has a weak knowledge of Kung Fu. He is also friends with a local
malcontent named Frog (Hon Gwok-Choi). Frog is the comic relief in the
film (and we all know what happens to the comic relief in a Hong Kong
film).
The plot is vary familiar once you have the introductions of the
characters and especially if you have seen Fearless Hyena. Jackie is
going to take revenge along with his new found friend (who are they
going to take revenge for, well I will not spoil that if it is not
obvious). This leads to a shoddy finale that has new scenes filmed
mixed with the climax of Fearless Hyena. There is no comparison to the
awesome finale of the first film.
After watching this movie for the first time I felt it was OK. After
subsequent views I disliked it more and more. The biggest problem is
the piecemeal approach to this movie. The doubles they used did not
look like Jackie and did not move like Jackie (though the one in the
beard was a decent fighter). Obviously Lo and Chan Chuen (the director)
did not care about continuity and made lots and lots of mistakes in
editing. For (another) example there is a good fire stunt in the film
until they cut away and show the stunt man in complete protective garb
ruining the decent scene. Oh and when they were not taking music from
Raiders of the Lost Ark they were using a horrid electronic soundtrack.
The pluses of this film are the contraptions that Lazy Tung creates and
several scenes with the real Jackie, especially the scene with Dean
Shek and the out-of-place betting scene involving turning a shirt
inside out. Though even the new scenes Jackie does not appear to
"giving it all" and sometimes appears to be out-of-place. Though some
of that is because those scenes are from different films.
I have a couple of R1 versions of this film. I have one of the
full-screen prints (there are many of these out there) and the Columbia
version. The full-screen print should definitely be avoided in favor of
the Columbia version. This has a great transfer, Cantonese dialog
option and looks quite good for this mediocre film. The worst attribute
is the ever present malady that afflicts most Hong Kong R1 films
dubtitles.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
A terrible injustice..., 15 April 2005
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Author:
gunsnroses2005 from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This was a terrible injustice on the director, Lo Wei's part. Jackie quit working for Lo Wei early on in this film. So, what does Lo Wei do? He edited clips and out takes with Jackie in them from the first movie and put an actor with no face, "meaning you never see his face," to complete the ending fight sequence and he then spliced a new movie together. There are only a few early scenes in which Jackie appears that are not cut from the first movie. Jackie tried to sue Lo Wei for releasing such a horrible piece trash with his name on it. However,to my understanding there was a deal cut that would release Jackie from Lo Wei, unfortunately part of the deal was that he would receive all rights to the movies that Jackie made for him. On the up side, there is a great shot of Jackie's butt as he jumps out of the pond while trying to catch a fish!
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
This is for the Dutch people, 29 October 2002
Author:
Joost (Joost_van_Steeg@Hotmail.com) from Emmen, Holland
The Fearless hyena II as being reviewed here is Fearless Hyena I in Holland which was distributed by Prime Time. This is a big mistake, because Fearless Hyena I (II in Holland) was done by Jackie himself (fighting scenes) and in nr II he was doubled some times and there were even scenes cut and pasted from part one.
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Nope..., 14 May 2000
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Author:
smakawhat from Washington, DC
The second movie compared to the first, is not as good as the first, even
though Jackie is good and they try to devise new tricks, eg, Jackie
defeats
a guy with a pair of slippers, and there is a hilarious shirt tugging
twisting scene.
However, the movie still falls a little flat.
Martial rating 6 out of 10
Overall Rating 4 out of 10
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Jackie Chan In Another Bad Lo Wei Film, 12 March 2004
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Author:
CitizenCaine from Las Vegas, Nevada
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
The fact that legendary Hong Kong hack Lo Wei directs this film should be enough warning to anyone thinking of viewing it. This is supposedly a sequel to The Fearless Hyena, 1979. What we get is Jackie Chan in a few new scenes combined with scenes of a Chan look-alike. At least two-thirds of the film is with the look-alike. The plot is pretty lame; two brothers try to battle those responsible for their father's death. Nothing new there. Jackie Chan plays one of the brothers. In true Lo Wei style, he uses much of the final fight sequence from The Fearless Hyena and other outtakes to make this film. As a result, the film has a choppy quality that is hard to follow. Scenes follow scenes with no logical progression or connection at times. The dialog and dubbing are laughable, and the music is terrible. Chan lost a law suit trying to prevent Lo Wei from releasing this film. Too bad Jackie Chan wasn't directed by a Lo Wei look-alike with a head for better direction. 1/2 star of 4.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Feeble garbage that Jackie Chan wouldn't even finish filming., 2 July 1999
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Author:
Phil from Ottawa, Ontario
This is the last Lo Wei film that Jackie worked on. He walked out in the middle of the filming and as a result, the film was finished with a Jackie look-a-like and existing footage from Fearless Hyena. The various plot lines are connected by the thinnest of threads and come together to a mildly climactic final fight (which most of is taken from Fearless Hyena). This film is only recommended if you have nothing better to do on a Sunday afternoon and you watch it with your eyes closed and your ears plugged.
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