Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA funny tale of a pretty pickpocket tangling with jewel heists, wallet snatching, and a drug trafficking ring.A funny tale of a pretty pickpocket tangling with jewel heists, wallet snatching, and a drug trafficking ring.A funny tale of a pretty pickpocket tangling with jewel heists, wallet snatching, and a drug trafficking ring.
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Locke Hua Liu
- Lin Tzu-ching
- (as Liu Lu-Hua)
Chin Chun
- Police chief
- (as Chun Chin)
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The Rat Catcher follows the adventures of single father Lin (Liu, Lu Hua) as he tries to scrape a living in the mean streets of Hong Kong and keep his children in their New Territories nursery. In doing so, he continually comes into contact with bumbling traffic cop Brother Neoi and sassy pickpocket Anna ("Tanny" Tien Ni). The former finds that arresting Lin (with his acquiescence) gets him rapidly promoted, and the latter finds the man to be a soft touch and rips him off at every opportunity, even as she scams shop owners, tourists and just about everyone else. Still, Lin and Anna have more than a little in common and they strike up a partnership in petty crime. They soon find that their obligations to Brother Neoi, and each other, run deeper than they thought.
This is a nice film, but nothing more. Many scenes feel like filler and it's often contrived and predictable. However, like many of the Shaw Bros films, it captures an interesting moment in Hong Kong's past - the chase through Central is like stepping into the past (and it looks like it was shot guerrilla-style!); the costumes and hairstyles are straight out of a 1970s clothing catalogue; and there are elements of the kind of screwball cop comedies and rom-coms that were so characteristic of 70s and 80s Hong Kong movies.
Still, there's no denying that this is a B picture, and probably only for fans of the lovely Tanny (Tien Ni) in what is likely one of her better roles. The film has been restored for DVD as part of Celestial Pictures excellent Shaw Bros reissue programme, but only in the Mandarin version.
This is a nice film, but nothing more. Many scenes feel like filler and it's often contrived and predictable. However, like many of the Shaw Bros films, it captures an interesting moment in Hong Kong's past - the chase through Central is like stepping into the past (and it looks like it was shot guerrilla-style!); the costumes and hairstyles are straight out of a 1970s clothing catalogue; and there are elements of the kind of screwball cop comedies and rom-coms that were so characteristic of 70s and 80s Hong Kong movies.
Still, there's no denying that this is a B picture, and probably only for fans of the lovely Tanny (Tien Ni) in what is likely one of her better roles. The film has been restored for DVD as part of Celestial Pictures excellent Shaw Bros reissue programme, but only in the Mandarin version.
I have the video CD release. I am a fan of martial arts movies of the golden age from 1967 to 1984. Shaw Brothers dominated that genre and at times I watch a Shaw Brothers movie regardless of the genre because I have a lot of time on my hands.
The movie starts with our lovely "pickpocketress" at work. In the movies a lovely lady wearing the brightest red hat in Hong Kong would be a pickpocket. In the real world, never.
I watched this movie more for reasons other than the movie itself. Two reasons, the sites and the clothes. Hong Kong, particularly Central in the 1970s, is the setting of so many scenes. I kept pausing the scenes to compare then and now. The clothes of the 1970s are my favorite style. Tanny wore an outfit just like my high school sweetheart wore back then.
Somehow people who have a taste for these movies manage to find them. That particular fan would find this an average one worth a watch and that's all.
The movie starts with our lovely "pickpocketress" at work. In the movies a lovely lady wearing the brightest red hat in Hong Kong would be a pickpocket. In the real world, never.
I watched this movie more for reasons other than the movie itself. Two reasons, the sites and the clothes. Hong Kong, particularly Central in the 1970s, is the setting of so many scenes. I kept pausing the scenes to compare then and now. The clothes of the 1970s are my favorite style. Tanny wore an outfit just like my high school sweetheart wore back then.
Somehow people who have a taste for these movies manage to find them. That particular fan would find this an average one worth a watch and that's all.
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By what name was Zhuo shu ji (1974) officially released in Canada in English?
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