अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंAfter busting a drug ring, and later killing the gang leader, a cop begins to suspect a senior colleague of being involved in drug trafficking with Americans. He starts to gather evidence, o... सभी पढ़ेंAfter busting a drug ring, and later killing the gang leader, a cop begins to suspect a senior colleague of being involved in drug trafficking with Americans. He starts to gather evidence, oblivious to the fact the corruption runs deep.After busting a drug ring, and later killing the gang leader, a cop begins to suspect a senior colleague of being involved in drug trafficking with Americans. He starts to gather evidence, oblivious to the fact the corruption runs deep.
- Insp. Shirley Ho Hsueh-Ling
- (as Carol 'Do Do' Cheng)
- Vincent's henchman #1
- (as Stephen Berwick)
- Hung's Accomplice
- (as Hark-On Fung)
- Mechanic
- (as Fu-Wai Lam)
- Policeman at Hsiu's party
- (as Wah-Fan Lam)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Jacky Cheung plays the title role of a cop out to bust some dope dealers, and eventually the very interior of his corrupt department. Carol Do Do Cheng, Donnie Yen, and Simon Yam also star as fellow cops- Carols husband, a fellow cop, being killed by the dope gang, Donnie as a young rookie who finds out his mentor is dirty, and Simon as the two faced, nothing but evil, corrupt supervisor. Its a dark, double crossing tale offset by moments of kung fu and comedy amongst the standard police drama plotline. From the opening shootout that begins the film, you know that you are in for some rough and tumble action, as hundreds of bullets are shot, bodies fall and are hit by cars, the fighting is gritty, and so on. Donnie gets one fight scene (really the only martial arts sequence) with two drug dealing gwailos. Simon Yam is just plain bad with a capitol B. Jacky over-grimaces his way though the drama, and poor Carol gets the stuffing beat out of her a couple of times. The story is well paced, by the great Yuen Woo Ping, and is a competent addition to the Hong Kong cop film library.
There are more than the usual subtitle language errors like- "My gun has no eyes.", "I want you to be limply in jail all your life.", "I am ready for discinplinary and investify.", "They're now fugitive with arms."
With Tiger Cage, it's him doing the kind of movie John Woo is best known for directing. Woo-Ping usually makes action movies with more hand-to-hand combat, but he can do shoot-em-ups, too. Similarly, Woo is best known for the heroic bloodshed films of his, but he also proved himself to be great at more traditional martial arts stuff with the eternally underrated Last Hurrah for Chivalry. John Woo is more well-known than Woo-Ping, and his highs are higher, but I think he's missed a little more often than Woo-Ping seems to have.
Also, to go back to Tiger Cage... well, what can be said? The non-action stuff is serviceable, and that's all it really needs to be. It's about a bunch of young cops taking on criminals and corruption, and it's all very heightened, bombastic, and bloody. The term "heroic bloodshed" is also interesting. These characters are physically impressive, but they do bleed, and sometimes die, more than American heroes from Action movies in that part of the world.
Anyway, Tiger Cage starts at a ridiculously impressive pace that it can't entirely maintain throughout, but the action was just about always very good, and I didn't mind the non-action parts all too much either. It made for a satisfying watch, and if you like Hong Kong action/crime films from around this era, it shouldn't be overlooked.
The movie starts off with an action scene, that could easily have been the climax/highlight of the movie. But it only is here to set the tone and "introduce" us to the characters. We will find out way more about them ... how they relate to each other, but also their morality.
Don't get it twisted though: this does not get too deep into the psyche. If someone is "evil" it is not that we will know their reasoning ... not for all of them that is. We get some explanation and there are some things that try to explain the logic of the character ... but that is not the main selling point here ... that is the action part(s) of it! If you dig that, you will have a grand ol time with this ... and the movie would deserve it too.
What follows is a roller-coaster ride of a film filled with breakneck action and all of the wonderful martial arts choreography that you'd hope from the genre. This one's directed by Yuen Woo-ping and boy, does he know how to direct a proper thriller: there are barely any slow spots, just tons of action and action that drives the plot forward at that. It's one of the most purely entertaining Hong Kong thrillers that I've seen.
Cast-wise, I have to say that most of the leading members give more than impressive performances, not least an incredibly youthful Donnie Yen in what I think might have been only his second leading part. Simon Yam seems experienced and reliable even at this early stage of his career. Jacky Cheung acquits himself well in a role that Jackie himself could have played, and it's always a pleasure to see American bodybuilder Michael Woods on top form as a hulking henchman. TIGER CAGE is a film filled with twists, betrayals, stunts and incredible one-on-one fights, and Hong Kong film fans will be in movie heaven.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाIn this film, Simon Yam plays the character of Inspector Michael Wong. The third film in the series, Tiger Cage III, would feature the actor of the same name, Michael Wong.
- भाव
Insp. Michael Huang: Seeing you two so affectionate really makes us bachelors envious. You'll be happy when you leave us tomorrow, but your colleagues will have no heart to rejoice!
Hsiu: Pfft! Why risk my life? Yesterday the doctor told me I had a bad heart. Can't stand the excitement!
- इसके अलावा अन्य वर्जनIn the UK, the cinema version released in 1989 was cut by 4 minutes and 47 seconds.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in An Apex Predator (2023)
टॉप पसंद
- How long is Tiger Cage?Alexa द्वारा संचालित