| Index | 10 reviews in total |
8 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
A sweet off beat comedy with kong fu, aliens, acting awards, gadgets and gizmos, concubines, transsexuals, prostitutes and the bizarre, 4 November 2007
Author:
Jizdenky from Fraggle Rock
What makes 'Daai laap mat taam 008' different from other Kong Fu comedies is that it's slightly more offbeat and has less kong fu. But hang on, it's funny as hell and endearing. I love the character Ling Ling Fat (Stephen Chow) and his wife Kar Ling (Karina Lau). Chow as Fat is a royal servant, an inventor, a medicine man, a devoted husband and a cop is amazing. He shows another side of his comedic talent that is very different from what he did in 'Shaolin Soccer' and 'Kung Fu'. Carina Lau displays her versatility by playing a comic role as the devoted and loving wife Kar. The relationship of the two characters is very well portrayed and is one of the highlights of the film. There are also many funny characters as I mentioned in the summary that just make the movie experience more fun. The over the top fight scenes are both comical and well shot, fitting well with the context. Yes, a lot of the scenes are done in a cheesy way, a lot of them are far fetched too but then again, it just adds to the humour. There are several laugh out loud moments and very funny twists. I am pretty sure that one will be unstoppably laughing throughout the film. I find 'Daai laap mat taam 008' to be a very refreshing comedy but it's probably the kind one would either hate or like very much.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Over the top comedy of exaggeration, 1 February 2006
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Author:
Chung Mo from NYC
Many of the same sort of visual gags found in Shaolin Soccer and Kung
Fu Hustle get their first sparks here. The comedy is very broad, as
usual for an HK production, and the production is uneven at times. The
kung-fu is more crazy-fu and shot in dizzying super wide angle close-
ups. In contrast the non-fighting portions are photographed nicely.
Chow is a good comic actor following in the footsteps of notable actors
like Fu Sheng, Jacky Chan and others. The relationship between Chow's
character and the wife is very well done for this type of film. There
are lots of anachronistic media references and sometimes the film seems
more like a TV show. Much of the action seems to be influenced by Ng
See Yuen's Shaolin Drunkard films of the 1980's, not that that's bad at
all.
Not as polished as Chow's later films but good fun.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Incredibly funny gender bending martial arts comedy, 4 January 2009
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Author:
funkyfry from Oakland CA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
There's a special quality to the comedy in this film that's heightened
immeasurably by the really warm and vital characters that stand at the
center of this very goofy film. The story itself feels like it was
cooked up in an evening of drinking, but the way that it's executed by
director Vincent Kok (and uncredited collaborator/star Stephen Chow)
makes it so that story is always a side-consideration to character
development, rather than a necessary cause of changes. Zany and
cartoonish like Chow's more famous 2000s film "Kung Fu Hustle", but
anchored by the kind of convincing romantic relationship that made
"Shaolin Soccer" a better film, the film is nothing less than a joy to
behold.
Although the American title seems to imply that it's a cop story
(perhaps because of the 1990s popularity of Hong Kong police movies),
the film is actually more of a spoof of spy movies as its original
title implies. There's a very clever title sequence that spoofs the
Bond sequences, and then Chow plays a hero named Ling Ling Fat who is
an inventor of strange devices which he uses to defend the Emperor
(Tat-Ming Cheung). He is a secret agent, and has chosen gynecology as
his cover. In furtherance of his cover and to protect the curious
Emperor, he travels to an important medical conference in the Gum
province to see a "flying fairy" dissection. The leaders of Gum, a
brand of bizarre villains headed by "No Face", have set an obvious trap
for the Emperor and it's up to agent Fat to save him.
The most extraordinary aspect of the film is the wonderful chemistry
between Chow and his wife, played by Carina Lau. Lau is an incredible
actress to judge from this film, and Chow is a very good comedian, so
they create a unique coupling. I'll never be able to forget, nor would
I want to, some of Lau's more interesting double-takes and expressions.
The scenes with these two actors or the real treasure of the film.
However, it has much more to offer besides. First of all there is some
decent kung fu action, although most of this is confined to the early
and final sections of the film. Chow is no kung fu master and has no
desire to pretend to be, so the humorous devices he comes up with (such
as a pistol that he fires out of his mouth) are a great substitute and
provide plenty of action. More interesting still is the emphasis in
this movie on what could only be called trans-gender themes, the
instances of which are almost too numerous to recount. First there is
Fat's mysterious helper, a man dressed as a woman, whom he later
inexplicably claims is his sister. There is also a scene where Chow
himself crossdresses to get into a geisha house, and is surprised and
titillated by a masculinized geisha from Gum who he meets there.
Although this is a zany comedy, there are serious themes here
concerning the nature of identity. The villains all have ambiguous
identity and sexuality -- "No Face" has no gender, and his wife looks
almost like a man. His son calls himself "Two Face" and travels around
with an indescribably bizarre getup that allows himself to appear to
his enemies as either a man or a woman. Ling Ling Fat, as part of his
job as gynecologist, is called upon at one point to decide if the
"flying fairy" (who looks like a Roswell alien) is a man or a woman. He
decides the fairy must be a woman because of the lack of business down
there, but it turns out to be the Emperor in disguise. So much gender
confusion I have never seen in any film, much less in a martial arts
comedy. The point of it seems to be on the one hand to provide a very
different kind of humor, and on the other hand to put doubt in the
audience's mind about their own preconceptions on gender.
This is a unique, fascinating movie that has provided me with great
insight into the style and philosophy of Stephen Chow. There are many
hilarious scenes that I haven't even been able to hint at here,
particularly towards the end of the film. I'd say it's one of the most
unusual and memorable comedies of the 1990s.
3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Starts out funny, but gets lame, 4 February 2003
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Author:
pspower from Washington, DC
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This movie started out with so much potential, but like a lot of Stephen
Chow movies, the second half goes crazy and becomes TOO MUCH of a
cartoon.
**Possible minor spoilers**
The beginning of the movie is funny. We are introduced to Chow's
character,
Fat, who enjoys inventing things. Unfortunately his fellow Forbidden City
Cops, and the emperor, value martial arts more, so it seems like he is
not
needed. We are then introduced to his wife, who is very likable.
Following
this is a fight scene where all the Forbidden City Cops, with the
exception
of Fat, are ambushed and destroyed in the woods. This is a great scene
full
of action and humor. Up until THIS POINT the movie is great! It strikes a
good balance between believability and random humor.
Here's where the movie starts to SUCK. I'm not a professional movie
critic
so I probably cannot point out all the exact reasons why, but it's
obvious
that the movie becomes TOO far-fetched and random. The believability is
thrown completely out the window and the whole show becomes too much like
a
bad cartoon. The emperor, who was taken when the Forbidden City Cops were
ambushed, is dressed in an alien suit, and almost gets an autopsy by Fat.
It
may sound a little funny, but it's done in a very stupid and cheesy way,
and
doesn't match the level of realism in the first half (I know it's a
comedy,
but I would think you have to maintain a stable level of realism and not
just change halfway through the movie).
Then Fat uses some of the inventions we were introduced to in the
superior
first half do defeat the enemies. All this is done in the most stupid and
cheesy way possible. He uses staff shaped like a propeller to fly by
spinning it around in his hands! Then he sticks a gun like object in his
mouth to shoot down all the enemies! All this is done in that ugly blue
light Hong Kong movies use so much. The scene is totally stupid, and what
more, all the enemies seem destroyed! Shouldn't the movie finally be
done?
Nope. Seems only 56 or so minutes have passed to they need to add more
movie. What follows is an idiotic storyline about how the emporer gets
Fat
to go look for a good looking prostitute because all his concubines are
fat
(yes there is a scene with a lot of fat women running at the screen).
It's
just all totally stupid from here. I'm done with this review. The first
half
was so good, too.
Liked it a lot, leaning toward 9, 26 January 2007
Author:
werdnahall from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
***Possible spoilers, though they won't mean much to you... I won't try to put this in perspective of HK movies because I haven't seen enough of them; but I know movies, and this one's a lotta fun. The action is interesting and inventive, if not always amazingly produced, and the story--yes, there is one--isn't bad either, at least on the more immediate level. Do we really know a lot about the villains' broader plans and ambitions? No, you could say the bigger picture is underdeveloped, as well as the villain characters generally, but frankly I was enjoying the comic bits too much to worry about it. Some scenes--the awards scene, the dance scene with disco moves, the scene of doctor/patient switching roles, perhaps--mostly borrow off other movies (with reference to other times & places I always think of Mel Brooks) and for that reason it was more a nod of acknowledgment than a laugh from me. But it was the little details throughout, a line here or there, that really were fresh, and got me loving this movie. If you like your comedy a little out of the mainstream, I think you'll see what I'm talking about. I'll resist quotes, it's hardly funny out of context... And yeah, I agree with others about his wife--it was surprisingly touching, watching their relationship. Again, I'd credit some nice details; it pays off. Sparking some emotional involvement in a kung-fu comedy, alright, you're doing something right.
If you find it, see it!, 27 July 2001
Author:
erock-3 from Seattle
I saw the movie in a theater during a Martial Arts HK movie festival and
like the other reviewer, couldn't stop laughing! It's silly, fun, not
historically accurate, there are some creative "side bits", i.e. the
academy
award scene mentioned in the other comment, but everything that happens in
the movie drives the plot and fits with the style of the
movie.
It's the one movie I always look for when I go to rent videos. It's hard
to
find, (there's only one place in Seattle that has it, as a DVD)but if you
see it at the store, or playing during a movie festival, go see
it!
2 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Far fetched farces has me pretty amused, 27 February 2000
Author:
Mick Pope from Sydney, Australia
This is a pretty off-beat sort of HK film with a fair share of action and a lot of silliness. Our hero may be incompetent at Kung Fu, but his gadgetry reminds me of Q from the Bond films, whose music is ripped off and whose sexy introductions are parodied at the start of the film. The usual HK blood spilling, a very twisting and contorting (and even surprising in its predictability) plot and a sentimental thread of the happy couple make this worth a look. It kind of sits between Jackie Chan and the Chinese Ghost Story series.
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Positive feedback? Hell yeah!, 12 October 2003
Author:
Digitise from Australia
Forbidden City Cop was a movie that suprised the hell out of me. When i
first saw a copy of the thing, i twisted my face up in confusion, not
knowing what the hell i was in for. Lucky, i picked up a copy and about an
hour and a half after chucking it into my vcr, i was still laughing my ass
off.
This film is the perfect mix of comedy, corruption, and sheer lunacy. The
fight scene with the magnets had me in tears, and the amount of golden
one-liners in the film was hilarious.
In the immoral words of the Faceless Ninja:
"BLAND AND FACELESS, MY SKILLS ARE UNFATHOMABLE!"
0 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
stupid - see it, 21 February 2004
Author:
bavski-knovril from england
This movie is one of those which I can't decide whether I like or not.
It has some crazy fight sequences (verging on ridiculous) which are great,
and some really impressive p**s-takes of james bond, butch cassidy etc...
the action is great if you like over-the top silliness.
However, after about the first hour, the plot takes a turn and when
'inspector gadget' goes off to find a new concubine for the emperor pretty
much nothing happens for about half an hour.
This is made up for in the final sequence which seemed surprisingly
high-budget.
You should see this film if you are willing to accept that it is not to be
taken seriously - and do not despair if you think they 'used up' all their
action when the first few fights were over - be patient.
0 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Screamingly funny, even in English, 26 August 1999
Author:
core-3 from Vancouver
Saw this on a flight from Tokyo to HK - had no idea what it was about
(still
don't, really) but it had my wife and I ROTFL. There's bits about the
alien
autopsy, Academy Award speeches and cooking shows, I think.
Doesn't make any sense, has cheesy effects and this isn't really acting,
just mugging for the camera and winking at the audience, but everyone's
very
charming and once you stop worrying about the story (there might have been
one, somewhere), you won't stop laughing.
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