| Ekin Cheng | ... | Chan Ho Nam (as Cheng Yee Kin) | |
| Jordan Chan | ... | Chicken Chiu | |
| Chingmy Yau | ... | Ting Siu-Yiu | |
| Gigi Lai | ... | 'Smartie / Stammer' So | |
| Anthony Wong Chau-Sang | ... | Tai Fai (as Wong Chau Sang) | |
| Halina Tam | ... | K.K. (as Haloira Tam) | |
| Jerry Lamb | ... | Pou-Pan | |
| Michael Tse | ... | Dai Tin-Yee | |
| Jason Chu | ... | Banana Skin | |
| Spencer Lam | ... | Father Lam (as Lam Shueng Yee) | |
| Moses Chan | ... | Ko Chi | |
| Sau Leung 'Blacky' Ko | ... | Blackie Koh Chi-Wah (as Ko Shou Liang) | |
| Shun Chee Yee | |||
| Simon Yam | ... | Chiang Tin-Sung (as Simon Yan) | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Kelly Lai Chen | ... | Lui Kung | |
| Lik-Chi Lee | (as Lee Lik Chee) | ||
Directed by | |||
| Wai-keung Lau | (as Andrew Lau) | ||
Writing credits(in alphabetical order) | ||
| Sharon Hui | written by | |
| Manfred Wong | characters | |
| Manfred Wong | written by | |
Produced by | |||
| Spencer Chan | .... | producer | |
| Wai-keung Lau | .... | producer (as Andrew Lau) | |
| Kai Ming Man | .... | associate producer | |
| Manfred Wong | .... | executive producer | |
| Manfred Wong | .... | producer | |
Original Music by | |||
| Clarence Hui | |||
| Ronald Ng | |||
Cinematography by | |||
| Wai-keung Lau | (as Andrew Lau) | ||
Film Editing by | |||
| Marco Mak | (as Marco) | ||
Art Direction by | |||
| Cyrus Ho | (as Cyrus Ho Kim Hung) | ||
Costume Design by | |||
| Pik Kwan Lee | (as Lee Pik Kwan) | ||
Production Management | |||
| Debbie Lam | .... | assistant production manager | |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director | |||
| Pou-Soi Cheang | .... | assistant director (as Cheang Pou Soi) | |
| Dion Lam | .... | action director | |
| Dave Nam | .... | assistant director | |
| Wai Man Yip | .... | assistant director (as Yip Wai Man) | |
Music Department | |||
| Clarence Hui | .... | music designer | |
Other crew | |||
| Siu-Kei Lee | .... | consultant (as Lee Siu Kay) | |
| Chi Hung Ng | .... | consultant (as Ng Chi Hung) | |
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| Gu huo zi 3: Zhi zhi shou zhe tian | 97 goo waak jai: Jin mo bat sing | Gu huo zi: Zhi ren zai jiang hu | Infernal Affairs II | San goo waak chai ji siu nin gik dau pin |
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| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| IMDb Action section | IMDb Hong Kong section |
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
YOUNG AND DANGEROUS 2 (Gu Huo Zai 2: Zhi Meng Long Guo Jiang)
Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Sound format: Mono
Rushed into theaters mere months after its predecessor unexpectedly hit box-office gold, this superior sequel uses much the same cast and crew (including writer Manfred Wong and director-cinematographer Andrew Lau), to much better effect. Whilst hiding out in Taiwan following events in the previous film, Hung Hing triad member Jordan Chan worms his way into the rival San Luen group and endears himself to boss Kelly Lai, who is currently running for high office in the country's parliament. However, Chan is forced to act as mediator between the San Luen and Hung Hing triads during fraught negotiations over some lucrative casino properties, while his old friend (Ekin Cheng) is distracted by a turf war with villainous rival Anthony Wong (THE UNTOLD STORY). Chan falls under the spell of Lai's beautiful mistress (Chingmy Yau), leading to a terrible betrayal which places Chan and Cheng in mortal danger...
Working with a much tighter script this time around, director Lau avoids many of the time-wasting fripperies and stylistic flourishes which almost sank the previous entry, and the tone is much more dramatic, as the characters are forced to deal with the fallout from an unexpected murder, and old loyalties are tested to breaking point. Chan dominates the film as a happy-go-lucky guy, loyal to his friends and masters but careless of triad etiquette, while sex-bomb Yau (NAKED KILLER) plays her signature role of the duplicitous beauty whose outward appearance masks depths of violence and depravity. Wong is obnoxious and colorful in the kind of role he was born to play, and he's involved in a climactic twist that will take most viewers quite by surprise. Like its predecessor, the film looks rushed and sloppy in places, but it's well-played by an engaging cast, and the pace is relentless. Spencer Lam, Jason Chu, Simon Yam and Moses Chan appear in minor supporting roles. Hugely successful, the movie was followed by YOUNG AND DANGEROUS 3 (1996), which opened to similar box office returns later the same year.
(Cantonese and Mandarin dialogue)