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Shanghaï Kid II

Titre original : Shanghai Knights
  • 2003
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 54min
NOTE IMDb
6,2/10
116 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
4 971
1 035
Jackie Chan and Owen Wilson in Shanghaï Kid II (2003)
ActionAventureComédieArts martiauxBuddy Comedy

Lorsqu'un rebelle chinois assassine le père de Chon et s'enfuit en Angleterre, Chon et Roy se dirigent vers Londres avec la vengeance en tête.Lorsqu'un rebelle chinois assassine le père de Chon et s'enfuit en Angleterre, Chon et Roy se dirigent vers Londres avec la vengeance en tête.Lorsqu'un rebelle chinois assassine le père de Chon et s'enfuit en Angleterre, Chon et Roy se dirigent vers Londres avec la vengeance en tête.

  • Réalisation
    • David Dobkin
  • Scénario
    • Alfred Gough
    • Miles Millar
  • Casting principal
    • Jackie Chan
    • Owen Wilson
    • Fann Wong
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,2/10
    116 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    4 971
    1 035
    • Réalisation
      • David Dobkin
    • Scénario
      • Alfred Gough
      • Miles Millar
    • Casting principal
      • Jackie Chan
      • Owen Wilson
      • Fann Wong
    • 212avis d'utilisateurs
    • 101avis des critiques
    • 58Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 5 nominations au total

    Photos136

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    Rôles principaux63

    Modifier
    Jackie Chan
    Jackie Chan
    • Chon Wang
    Owen Wilson
    Owen Wilson
    • Roy O'Bannon
    Fann Wong
    Fann Wong
    • Chon Lin
    Aaron Taylor-Johnson
    Aaron Taylor-Johnson
    • Charlie
    • (as Aaron Johnson)
    Tom Fisher
    Tom Fisher
    • Artie Doyle
    Aidan Gillen
    Aidan Gillen
    • Rathbone
    Donnie Yen
    Donnie Yen
    • Wu Chow
    Oliver Cotton
    Oliver Cotton
    • Jack the Ripper
    Alison King
    Alison King
    • Prostitute
    Constantine Gregory
    Constantine Gregory
    • The Mayor
    Jonathan Harvey
    • Fagin #1
    Richard Haas
    • Street Preacher
    Anna-Louise Plowman
    Anna-Louise Plowman
    • Debutante
    • (as Anna Louise Plowman)
    Georgina Chapman
    Georgina Chapman
    • Debutante
    John Owens
    John Owens
    • Server
    Richard Bremmer
    Richard Bremmer
    • Master at Arms
    Kim Chan
    Kim Chan
    • Chon Wang's Father
    • (as Kim S. Chan)
    Gemma Jones
    Gemma Jones
    • Queen Victoria
    • Réalisation
      • David Dobkin
    • Scénario
      • Alfred Gough
      • Miles Millar
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs212

    6,2115.8K
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    Avis à la une

    7lawprof

    Is Jackie Chan Heading for a Lifetime Achievement Oscar?

    Well, a Lifetime Achievement Oscar may be the only category that's open to the aging but impish martial arts virtuoso, Jackie Chan, whose latest series-sequel, "Shanghai Knights" is...excellent, fun, entertaining.

    My kid got into Jackie Chan films a while back and we have a half-shelf of $5.99 videotapes of the young Chan. Poorly shot with howlingly funny dubbing they nonetheless catch a Kung-Fu master at the height of his considerable prowess.

    Hollywood and Jackie's sincere but imperfect effort at learning English led to a series of films that are high budget such as "Rush Hour" with its sequel and "Shanghai Noon," now followed by this film. Each has a sidekick for the irrepresible Chan but "Shanghai Knights " is the first where the faithful companion is a strong character in his own right.

    "Shanghai Knights" begins with the Peking (not Beijing, it's the end of the nineteenth century) murder of Chan's dad and the theft of the Imperial Seal (a device to mark documents, not a pet). Chan is a Nevada sheriff who upon learning of the homicide and theft sets off to New York City to find his pal, played formidably and with evident relish by Owen Wilson.

    The duo head for London where an unending series of misadventures brings the heroes, along with Chan's gorgeous and martial arts-skilled sister (Fann Wong) into the path of such diverse characters as little Charlie Chaplin, Her Majesty Queen Victoria, Jack the Ripper and others. Of course all ends well and if the martial arts terpsichore is less breathtakingly complex than its predecessors - well, let's cut Jackie some slack.

    The film is PG-13 but Wilson provides a measured but running dose of raunch aided by a bevy of scantily clad beauties. There's no doubt HE had a terrific time making the movie.

    Director David Dobkin keeps the pace moving and pays humorous tribute to films and stars from the Gilded Age of the cinema. I won't spoil the amusing surprises but listen to the music as the intrepid trio (sister now a full-fledged partner) waft to and fro in a caricature of nineteenth century London. Sad to say most moviegoers won't recognize the well-executed takeoffs of some great moments in film.

    As always, a special Chan treat are the outtakes before the end credits, scenes that prove making these films may not be good for the health of the no-longer-young star or his cast but they all have a blast (literally).

    And here's good news for the many who will enjoy this movie. I don't know if there will be a "Rush Hour III" but last week I couldn't get within 150 feet of the venerable Yonah Schimmel's on the Lower East Side's Houston Street. Chan and crew were filming a sequel to this new release - a flunky stopping pedestrian traffic told me the title would be "Shanghai Knish!" I can't wait.

    7/10.
    6ma-cortes

    Entertaining and funny movie with two sympathetic and charming protagonists

    This second part is a follow-up to ¨Shangai noon¨with the likeable starring(Jackie Chan and Owen Wilson) . When the killers murder Chon's estranged father he flees. He goes London to retrieve a brilliant royal object that Jackie Chan's father guarded in the forbidden city Pekin when he was murdered by some Chinese rebels . Roy also escapes to England, and he and Chon make their way to London with revenge on their minds. And Chon's sister, Lin, has the same idea. They meet Victoria queen (Gemma Jones) and a roguish street boy called Charles Chaplin . They'll confront the villains (Aidan Gillen and Donnie Yen) which want to overthrow the British and China thrones and nasty Chinese Boxers and even Jack the Ripper (Oliver Cotton). Meanwhile, Owen Wilson falls in love with Chan's sister (Fam Wong).

    Jackie Chan and Owen Wilson give a jolly and perfect couple . It's usual in Chan films create duos , a ¨buddy movie¨ type , as male : Chris Tucker (Rush hour I and II) , as female : Jennifer Love Hewitt (the Tuxedo) and Claire Forlani (The medallion) and here magnificently with Wilson . Here they uncover a worldwide conspiracy to murder the royal family but almost no one will believe them . The choreographic fights are excellent , they are made as musical numbers, there are remembrances to ¨singing in the rain¨dancing as well as Harold Lloyd , Keistone cops and to author Arthur Conan Doyle with his Sherlock Holmes creation . It's an agreeable picture but uneven comedy, works better when Jackie Chan goes into the action . It's a Chan vehicle for the continuous struggles in leaps and bounds .The final confrontation among the starring and the enemies on the Thames river with fireworks background and in the Big clock tower are overwhelming and breathtaking . Cinematography (Adrian Biddle) and music (Randy Edelman) are spectacular and atmospheric. Production set is extraordinary, it's very well designed along London epoch . The picture was rightly directed by David Dobkin. Rating : Nice and bemusing .
    Renaldo Matlin

    Fantastic sequel!

    It's an odd thing, this syndrome where people seem to automatically dislike a sequel more than the original. I don't know whether its subconscious or what but the IMDb proves it; Almost everywhere I go, people seem to agree (at least movie lovers) that "Aliens" is even better than "Alien", yet "Aliens" is listed #85 on IMDb's top 250, "Alien" is #61. Then there is another masterpiece: "The Godfather", all though many people seem to agree that however great, "The Godfather Part II" is even better. Not so according to the votes from IMDb-users: "The Godfather" is #1, "Part II" is #4. "Star Wars" is #10, "The Empire Strikes Back" is #15, and the list goes on and on. It's as if the general public goes into sequel-sucks-mode before they see the film and automatically would give it a lower grade no matter what. This also seems to be the case with "Shanghai Knights". Like many of my movie geek friends I thought the first film was great, but "Shanghai Knights" took me by great surprise and turned out to be even better, much more fun, better fights, greater villains, greater scenery, bigger plot, more film references, and I can go on. Still, it gets a 6,4 average while the first one gets a 6,7. Apparently it is one of the laws of physics that all though you personally feel a sequel outdoes the original, the masses would have you believe otherwise (the "Toy Story"-movies being the exception that proves the rule).

    Well, we're all better off without the masses anyway. That's why nature invented things like the plague!

    Now to my review of "Shanghai Knights":

    I rarely laugh out loud to comedies unless it's Monty Python-type comedy filled with unpredictable insane humour, but "Shanghai Knights" had me in stitches several times. I really liked the first film, but the sequel is filled with references to everything you ever found fascinating about Britain and the charming duo of Chan and Wilson this time reaches its peak. But what really gets this film going is fight scenes like you've never seen them before! I am serious, I've watched Jackie Chan-films since I was a little kid and everyone knows he is the Buster Keaton of martial arts, but this time the fights – choreographed by Jackie himself – are so exhilarating to watch, boasting with playfulness to such a degree it leaves you dumbstruck in awe. All though it is apparent they used wires on some of the stunts, the mix of wire- and wireless stunts seem to balance themselves perfectly, giving a show fit for the greatest circus on Earth! It is hard to put to words the sheer delight it is to watch Jackie Chan (now close to 50!) beating up a gang of crooks while at the same time doing an homage to Gene Kelly and "Singin' in the Rain"! It gave me that rare sensation I remember getting the first time I saw Chaplin perform the "dance of the rolls" in the "Gold Rush", Buster Keaton caught in the middle of that hurricane in "Steamboat Bill Jr." or when Donald O'Connor ran up the wall in "Singin' in the Rain". It is a rare cinematic treat, created by and performed to excellence by Jackie Chan, again underlining what a rare and unique screen artist he is and how grateful we should be for him risking his back to give us that joy. People who still think of him as only a martial arts artist should take a hike. He's been a legend in his own right for close to two decades, one of the greatest entertainers of his generation (if not THEE greatest) so I ask you this: when will they give him an Honorary Academy Award!? I am sure Chaplin, Keaton and Gene Kelly would have supported this wholeheartedly, had they been alive today!

    A great deal is also owed to the writing pair of Alfred Gough and Miles Millar (Made Men, Spider-Man 2) who pepper the story with quirky charm – the type Chan & Wilson seem born to play, once in a while serving up hysterical one-liners that should crack up anyone with an IQ over 50 (the best one has to be the subtitle after one of the characters has an encounter with Jack the Ripper).

    Not surprisingly many of the people with an IQ *under* 50 bothered to fill the Goof-section up with all the factual errors in "Shanghai Knights" when it is just the thing you have to expect from a crazy comedy of this kind. For as long as I can remember I've enjoyed British history, I know the first real automobile wasn't invented until 1889, I'm a big fan of the Jack the Ripper-legend who terrorized London in 1888, I love the work of Chaplin who was born in 1889, I know Arthur Conan Doyle was originally a doctor of optometry, but not once did I mind all these things clashing in 1887's London, it is pure fantasy and should be enjoyed as such. Wonderful escapism played to perfection by great talent in front of and behind the camera. The writers didn't intend to re-create history, they just did as Jackie Chan would do in a fight: take every thing available and throw it in to make it more entertaining to the viewer! Then again there are people who have NO relation to any of the above-listed things and not surprisingly they won't find "Shanghai Knights" that entertaining. Which is really sad, for if you love movies you should *really* learn to love history as well, as the two can make a fabulous pair whether it is done in the name of fantasy or fiction.

    Of course director David Dobkin also deserves special praise for never letting the heart and soul of the film getting lost in all the commotion.

    I didn't mention Owen Wilson in all this, but don't get me wrong, he's great as usual. Wilson and Chris Tucker (Rush Hour) has to be the greatest thing happening to Jackie Chan since he discovered the art of mixing comedy with martial arts. And of course the supporting actors deserves mentioning, especially Aidan Gillen who makes a wonderful sneaky upper-class villain (named Rathbone, not exactly the most inventive referance to Hollywood – legendary actor Basil Rathbone - but still wonderful the same) and Aaron Johnson as a kid who looks and acts like he was just pulled out of "Oliver!" with great conviction (a scene where Wilson tells him of for being a an orphan is both heartbreaking and side-splittingly funny at the same time). Fann Wong also does a great English language-speaking film debut as Jackie Chan's sister.

    To sum it all up; leaving me laughing to the point of exhaustion, "Shanghai Knights" is one of this years most pleasant surprises!
    MLDinTN

    This Sequel Worked

    This movie is actually funny and entertaining. I wasn't expecting much because the past several Jackie Chan films, Rush Hour sequels and the Tuxedo, have sucked. But, the duo of Chan and Wilson really worked. The whole Sherlock Holms gag with the author and the Charlie Chan kid were very funny. IT was also very funny when they are in the hotel in New York City and we find out Roy really works there and isn't rich. This has plenty of Chan stunts with ladders, amazing kicks, and swords. Plus, it was nearly 2 hours, but it didn't feel long. Most "comedies" now days if over 90 minutes really start to feel dull, but that wasn't the case with this film.

    PS: Watching this makes pillow fights look really fun!

    FINAL VERDICT: This is worth renting if you are looking for some laughs and entertaining night.
    7EmperorNortonII

    Fish Out of Water Across the Big Pond

    Jackie Chan and Owen Wilson get together again in "Shanghai Knights," the sequel to "Shanghai Noon." It's difficult to say which I like better, although the two seem a little more at home in "Noon." "Knights" is a movie not to be taken seriously. The soundtrack attests to that, being mostly British invasion rock from the 1960's. And there is a lot of historical fudging, not the least of which is Owen Wilson's dialogue and attitude. He just seems so miscast as a cowboy. What keeps this movie from going wrong is Jackie Chan's amazing moves. Here he shows where he shines as an action-comedy star. And the martial arts styles of Fann Wong and Donnie Yen are no slouch either! So, never mind the anachronisms, just prepare to admire Jackie Chan.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      There are several references to Sherlock Holmes in this movie. One of them is that the "bad guy" is named Lord Rathbone. Basil Rathbone was one of the first actors to play Sherlock Holmes in a movie.
    • Gaffes
      The first commercially available automobile did not appear until 1888, and it looked very different from the cars seen in the movie. The particular Renault automobile owned by Rathbone was made around 1914.
    • Citations

      Prostitute: [trying to woo Roy] I'll give you a discount.

      Roy: That's the most romantic thing a woman has ever said to me.

    • Crédits fous
      Outtakes from the movie run during the ending credits.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: American Wedding/Buffalo Soldiers/Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over/Hotel/Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life/Masked and Anonymous (2003)
    • Bandes originales
      Gangway Charlie
      Written by Leroy Shield

      Performed by the Beau Hunks

      Licensed Courtesy of Basta Music, Holland

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    Production art
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    FAQ19

    • How long is Shanghai Knights?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 9 juillet 2003 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
      • Royaume-Uni
      • République tchèque
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Mandarin
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Shanghaï Kid 2
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Barrandov Studios, Prague, République tchèque
    • Sociétés de production
      • Touchstone Pictures
      • Spyglass Entertainment
      • Birnbaum / Barber Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 50 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 60 476 872 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 19 603 630 $US
      • 9 févr. 2003
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 88 323 487 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 54 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.39 : 1
      • 2.35 : 1

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