| Wenzhuo Zhao | ... | Tang Yunlong | |
| Mi Yang | ... | Tian Xin | |
| Siu-Wong Fan | ... | Shui Heyi (as Louis Fan) | |
| Yu-Hang To | ... | Bai Long (as Dennis To) | |
| Jiao Xu | ... | Tang Ning, Yunlong's daughter (as Josie Xu) | |
| Hee Ching Paw | ... | Shui Heyi's paralyzed mother) (as Nina Paw) | |
| Shaun Tam | ... | Paul Chen |
Directed by | |||
| Patrick Leung | |||
Produced by | |||
| Kuo Hsing Li | .... | executive producer (as Kwok-Hing Lee) | |
| Kwok Lam Sin | .... | producer | |
| Patrick Tong | .... | producer | |
| Charley Zhuo | .... | executive producer | |
Original Music by | |||
| Kin Law | |||
Cinematography by | |||
| Tony Cheung | (director of photography) | ||
Film Editing by | |||
| Ka-Fai Cheung | |||
Art Direction by | |||
| Chris Wong | |||
Costume Design by | |||
| Mabel Kwan | |||
| Emi Wada | (designer for Mini Yang) | ||
Art Department | |||
| Eddy Wong | .... | art consultant | |
Sound Department | |||
| James Ashton | .... | sound effects editor | |
| Wei He | .... | sound re-recording mixer | |
| Wei He | .... | supervising sound editor | |
| Zheng 'Joe' Huang | .... | sound effects editor | |
| Zheng 'Joe' Huang | .... | sound re-recording mixer | |
| Zheng 'Joe' Huang | .... | supervising dialogue editor | |
| Jilian Liu | .... | dialogue editor | |
| Xu Miao | .... | foley artist | |
| Jiajia Mok | .... | sound effects editor | |
| Wei Wang | .... | foley editor | |
| Yanchao Yang | .... | foley editor | |
Stunts | |||
| Fang Liu | .... | martial arts | |
| Corey Yuen | .... | action director | |
| Recent Posts (updated daily) | User |
|---|---|
| A Chinese movie that start out semi-interesting... | chirpie |
| A review from Singapore | dmar9147 |
| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| News articles | IMDb Action section | IMDb China section |
The problems of most Chinese martial arts movies are always avoidably many: 1) the time frame or the historical background is always stupidly ridiculous; 2) the scenario, the plot and the storyline are nothing but nonsense; the 3) the costumes, the hairdos, the way of talking are always weird; 4) the actors, male or female, are always looked too modern; 5) the dialog is always stupid and awkward, making the actors become even worse when delivering the stupid dialog. With these fatal shortcomings pointed out as aforementioned, this movie is no exception. Guy met his wife in a Chinese Restaurant? Yeah, right. "Supermarket" in 1912? The mysterious female Kung-fu fighter wearing what? Her hair style? The tablet hung on the facade looked like just out of from a wooden artifact production line. Guy with his daughter came from America almost killed mother duck on the mountain trail, yet a Chinese guy knew to protect the duck? Once the father and his daughter arrived at Wu Dang Mountain, the screenplay and the storyline just turned into absurd and stupid status, it damaged viewers intelligence and common sense.