Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueMichelle Yip of the Hong Kong police is a mild-mannered Kung Fu expert; Michael Wong, from air security, is happy-go-lucky, stuck on himself, constantly talking, and smitten by her; Yamamoto... Tout lireMichelle Yip of the Hong Kong police is a mild-mannered Kung Fu expert; Michael Wong, from air security, is happy-go-lucky, stuck on himself, constantly talking, and smitten by her; Yamamoto is quiet, hard-boiled, leaving the Tokyo police to spend time with his wife and daughter.... Tout lireMichelle Yip of the Hong Kong police is a mild-mannered Kung Fu expert; Michael Wong, from air security, is happy-go-lucky, stuck on himself, constantly talking, and smitten by her; Yamamoto is quiet, hard-boiled, leaving the Tokyo police to spend time with his wife and daughter. They form an alliance when they foil a hijacking on a plane flying a mob prisoner from To... Tout lire
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
- Michelle Yip
- (as Michelle Khan)
- Robin Hood
- (as King Chan)
- Elderly disco patron
- (as Lan Law)
Avis à la une
The last baddy is particularly good, with a silly mocking smile and grin. I loved the scene where he shoots the TV set.
The plot is by turns clever and cliched, and the "music" makes the whole thing feel much more cheesy than it otherwise would. Really, in some of these 80's Hong Kong films the DVD's should have an option of removable soundtracks. Alot of the films such as this would come across much stronger now without a synthesizer in the background banging away. Of course this would remove the campy bad guy forte chord which I know many viewers are endeared to.
Those who enjoy hard-edged action over wit might even prefer this to Yes Madam as the best of Michelle Yeoh's early action films.
Although Miss Yeoh is top-billed, it's much more the three of them, and they are sketches. The point of the movie is in the bloody fight scenes, lovingly shot with very strong color components. The movie revels in its physicality, and Miss Yeoh looks great running. It's a well made movie for what it is, a programmer meant to cash in on a suddenly popular female lead, but everyone does their jobs very well indeed.
It's a bit of an oddity as a film, starting out with a dance number and then becoming surprisingly dark, not to mention jarringly violent. It's that kind of hard-edged martial arts movie where the punches and collisions look genuinely painful, and some of the stunts look remarkably dangerous. There are certain parts that aren't entirely believable (an overuse of sped-up footage at the end, and a mat poorly disguised as pavement early on), but most of the action's done really well.
I think it's a movie that hits the ground running to the point where it runs out of steam a little by the final act. It flounders a bit to get to the final action sequence, but once it gets there, it does work.
Some of the melodramatic elements didn't always work for me either, but the core of what's needed for a Hong Kong action movie to shine is intact here, and so I mostly liked Royal Warriors. Michelle Yeoh is very good, and it's interesting seeing a young Hiroyuki Sanada here too, given both he and Yeoh have seen their popularity reach new heights (at least internationally) during the early 2010s. They're both very good here, too.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBlackie Shou-Liang Ko cameos as a bus driver.
- GaffesToutes les informations contiennent des spoilers
- ConnexionsFeatured in Films of Fury: The Kung Fu Movie Movie (2011)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Royal Warriors?Alimenté par Alexa