| Michael Chow Man-Kin | ... | Bodyguard, Dai Kin | |
| Liz Kong | ... | Governor's Daughter | |
| Eric Kot | ... | Lugo | |
| Spencer Lam | ... | Bao | |
| Kar-Ying Law | ... | Last Governor of Hong Kong | |
| Koon-Lan Law | ... | Mrs. Chong-Fong On Sum | |
| Yuk-Man Wong | |||
| Chingmy Yau | ... | Lugo's Wife |
Directed by | |||
| Alfred Cheung | |||
Writing credits(in alphabetical order) | ||
| Alfred Cheung | ||
| Jing Wong | ||
Original Music by | |||
| Ho-Kit Wan | |||
Cinematography by | |||
| Chi-Wai Tam | (director of photography) | ||
Film Editing by | |||
| Angie Lam | |||
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| The Second Civil War | Charlie's Angels | Eddie Murphy Raw | CBC Winnipeg Comedy Festival | Charlie Wilson's War |
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| Full cast and crew | Company credits | IMDb Hong Kong section |
The laughs are few and far between in this comedy take on the transference of power from Britain to China in 1997. If you think that sounds like a set-up for mass hilarity, you're mistaken. Kar-Ling Yaw plays an Anglo-Chinese cook who is called upon to serve out the term of governor 'Christ Pattern' (Chris Patten). He's encumbered by two inept bodyguards who supply most of the 'comedy', which is generally of the broadest physical and scatalogical variety. The film is also weighted down by a boring romantic sub-plot. Overall, one for the least demanding of HK film buffs.