| Index | 5 reviews in total |
7 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Wong Jing's assault on Western Pop Culture continues, 8 August 2001
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Author:
Miyagis_Sweaty_wifebeater (sirjosephu@aol.com) from Sacramento, CA
Wong Jing's latest reunites his two stars from the early nineties with
his future stars in this hilarious comedy. Wong not only wrote,
produced and directed this gem of a film put he also stars as Fat
Dragon Ferrari. Nick Cheung, Suki Kwan, Stephen Chow and Sandra Ng are
equally as funny in this spoof on Western pop culture, films and
product placements. Nick Cheung stars as the self-titled King of the
Undercovers who has been assigned to work undercover to find enough
evidence to put Ferrari in prison. Suki Kwan plays his long suffering
girlfriend, Sandra Ng plays Suki's sister and Stephen Chow stars as the
Tricky Master Wong. This strange film manages to parody Mission
Impossible, American Pie, The Matrix, Entrapment and the God of
Gamblers series. He also takes a stab at Viagra, product placements and
the porn industry in Japan. If you're a Wong Jing fan or Stephen Chow
fan then this movie is right up your alley. It was great to see Wong
Jing back acting and reworking his old chemistry with his older stars
and showcasing his future stars in the process. Mr. Wong has been
contemplating retirement for awhile. But if he continues to make films
like this one then I would like him to reconsider. It seems like he is
the only director that could successfully parody Hollywood movies and
make them funny instead of tired, rushed, and poor executed puns.
Here's to Wong Jing and his continued success against the Hollywood
machine!!!
Highly recommended.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
visceral piece of Chow!, 31 March 2006
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Author:
cristom3 from United States
IMHO stephen chow was on his A game when he put this film out. sure it
may not have the amazing high production effects of films like Shaolin
Soccer or Kung Fu Hustle, but Tricky Master is a great tongue in cheek
presentation on popular Asian cinema. the parodies of Ringu and A man
called Hero are great examples of the combination of 'in' jokes and
also aesthetic humor. humor is not all about spectacle, as 'Hustle'
leads you to believe. 'Tricky Master' tips its hand towards more
script-oriented jokes and a lovable storyline which follows an amazing
comedy duo. the best piece of his (Jing's) thus far.
the film really kicks into high gear at the get go when it lets you
into the prison environment and gets you up to speed with Chow. and as
lovable as he is, you almost forget that the movie has to come back to
him as it follows the lead through his problematic life. there are very
entertaining montages, great spoofs, and above all - amazing physical
comedy.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
A Great Movie, 21 November 2005
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Author:
hasanlucky13 from United Kingdom
This is an excellent movie. The previous reviewer, though i respect his opinion is unaware that this movie is the equivalent to Scary movie series. It takes the mick out of other Chinese movies made in hong Kong. If you do not watch other Chinese movies, specially the action and drama ones, you will not understand this movie at all. if u really want to appreciate this work, watch God of Gamblers (made in 1989) and some Bruce Lee movies. u will start liking this movie. god of Gamblers is a great movie on its on, Chun Yau Fat is in it (worked in Crouching tiger hidden dragon). Stephen chow is a great actor and all his movies (with the exception of King of Comedy) are amazing.
Twisted but Funny nonetheless, 26 April 2003
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Author:
mindless_junk
A pretty good parody of the "god of gamblers" genre of movies. Stephen
Chow
gave a stoic but laughable performance as a retired god of gamblers who
was
forced into the gambling society. Nick Cheung tried too hard to be
funny,
but I found his scenes to be more childlish humor. Some scenes are sick,
such as licking of the shoes for example.
Some very good looking women also appear in this movie: Kelly Lin as
"First
Love", an absolute stunning beautiful who was not afraid to expose her
assets, and Suki Kwan as Pizza, Nick's fiancee in the movie.
There was not really a lot of original ideas in the movie. Some scenes
spoof on Hong Kong TV commercials, so foreigners may find them humorless
without making the mental connection.
As a whole, a 6/10
3 out of 21 people found the following review useful:
TERRIBLE!, 4 February 2003
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Author:
pspower from Washington, DC
I got this movie after watching the great Shaolin Soccer. I wanted more
of
the same kind of entertainment. This movie was very disappointing. It
seems
to happen a lot with me in terms of Hong Kong movies; I run into a great
one, then when I look into the other movies the star and/or director
made,
90% of them suck.
The movie starts off getting me excited, with Stephen Chow in a prison.
Then
it goes to this other guy for the next ten or so minutes straight and
RUINS
the entire experience. Its the kind of movie you start watching leaning
forward, but soon have your hand on your chin in boredom. This is about
1%
of the entertainment value of Shaolin Soccer. This other guy, Nick
something, has no talent and has no ability to entertain. I think he's
pretty popular over in Asia, but outside the area and all the hype, where
we
just see him as an actor, it is easy to tell how much he
sucks.
What's the matter with the script. It just cuts back and forth from
random
scene to random scene, and all of it is boring! If you want to make a
random
style movie, it can be extremely funny if done correctly. This was not.
IT
IS BORING. Why do many Asian films think they can do the same joke over
and
over for decades? Like the man running on the beach in slo-mo, Baywatch
style. It was funny a million years ago when it was still
new.
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