AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,7/10
3,3 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThree cops team up to bring down a criminal gang of seven, who have their own hidden agenda.Three cops team up to bring down a criminal gang of seven, who have their own hidden agenda.Three cops team up to bring down a criminal gang of seven, who have their own hidden agenda.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória e 5 indicações no total
Jaycee Cho-Ming Chan
- Officer Wai King Ho
- (as Jaycee Chan)
Shawn Yue
- Inspector Carson Fong Yik Wei
- (as Shawn Yue Man Lok)
Sam Lee
- Ho Wing Keung
- (as Sam Li)
Wai-Kwong Lo
- Wong Kam Ming
- (as Ken Low)
Ka-Wah Lam
- Senior Superintendent Cheung Man Yiu
- (as Lam Ka Wah)
Tak-Bun Wong
- Sam Mok
- (as Kenny Wong)
Mark Ho-nam Cheng
- Senior Superintendent Mark Law Pui Keung
- (as Mark Cheng Ho-nam)
Avaliações em destaque
The action is great, and all the fight scenes are great. The only issue is that in the middle, the movie trails off and sort of becomes a "buddy cop comedy" thing for a while, which takes the movie down and just adds unneeded minutes to this film.
It is too long and needed some more editing to trim it down to a good 90 minutes. Overall the action is really good even if they are pushing Jackie Chan's kid a little too hard in this movie. They also give him a very very cheesy melodramatic scene towards the end which is kinda cringy. None of it worked and his career kinda went downhill and it is pretty much dead at this point.
Anyways, 7/10.
It is too long and needed some more editing to trim it down to a good 90 minutes. Overall the action is really good even if they are pushing Jackie Chan's kid a little too hard in this movie. They also give him a very very cheesy melodramatic scene towards the end which is kinda cringy. None of it worked and his career kinda went downhill and it is pretty much dead at this point.
Anyways, 7/10.
What can I say that the other rightly so positive reviewers haven't said? Not a lot really.
This was such an enjoyable film. It was reminiscent of the days of old for an Hong Kong action flick....crazy stunts with a second replay (like the old Jackie Chan flicks), plenty of excellent martial arts, explosions and gun play. I felt as if I was watching an early 80/90's film.
What impressed even more was that there was a very strong story to this film. Everything blended nicely. The main leads has good character development and were very likable. The bad guys.....they were bad!! No messing about, no morals...just downright bad.
With some of the so called action movie tosh that America churns out today, the west should start looking to Hong Kong and Korea to take a leaf out of their book to see how things are done (Flashpoint was also very good).
Watch this and you won't be disappointed.
This was such an enjoyable film. It was reminiscent of the days of old for an Hong Kong action flick....crazy stunts with a second replay (like the old Jackie Chan flicks), plenty of excellent martial arts, explosions and gun play. I felt as if I was watching an early 80/90's film.
What impressed even more was that there was a very strong story to this film. Everything blended nicely. The main leads has good character development and were very likable. The bad guys.....they were bad!! No messing about, no morals...just downright bad.
With some of the so called action movie tosh that America churns out today, the west should start looking to Hong Kong and Korea to take a leaf out of their book to see how things are done (Flashpoint was also very good).
Watch this and you won't be disappointed.
Director Benny Chang's fast paced crime thriller follows three Hong Kong cops relentlessly pursuing a ruthless gang of highly skilled crooks and murderers.
More entertaining and absorbing than you might expect, it's not often that action films which are over two hours long can hold the audience's attention for the duration, but in this case the film rarely retreats from the explosive opening scene. Perhaps it dwells for too long on the inherent good nature of the police officers, and there are no strong female characters worth noting. However, if it's violence, explosions and a possibly interpretive subtext you're after, this is a film you are more than likely going to enjoy.
Guns, martial arts, explosions, stunts and a pinch of philosophy: Invisible Target is a film almost as thought provoking as it is entertaining. IT
More entertaining and absorbing than you might expect, it's not often that action films which are over two hours long can hold the audience's attention for the duration, but in this case the film rarely retreats from the explosive opening scene. Perhaps it dwells for too long on the inherent good nature of the police officers, and there are no strong female characters worth noting. However, if it's violence, explosions and a possibly interpretive subtext you're after, this is a film you are more than likely going to enjoy.
Guns, martial arts, explosions, stunts and a pinch of philosophy: Invisible Target is a film almost as thought provoking as it is entertaining. IT
Director Benny Chan and staff do a mighty fine job with their cops and robbers story, Invisible Target. Seven orphans who grew up in battle torn countries take on most of the Hong Kong police force. These orphans mean business as they go about their criminal activities. The movie is almost all kinetic action, chases where the actors seem to jump 20 feet down from roof top to roof top, as the HK police try to stop the gang from getting the loot they are after. There are dull sections,especially when Jaycee Chan is describing his bland philosophy of policing, but, hey, the Chinese censors won't allow movies to be released on the mainland unless they put the police in a good light.
In Invisible Target, you don't see any police (aided by goons hired by real estate developers) clubbing farmers whose land was stolen, so a new factory can be built, enriching the local Communist Party boss who gets an ownership share in the factory. In the Shanxi province that would be the brick factories that used kidnapped children and mentally challenged adults as slave labor. But dealing with life's grim reality in one of the world's great bastions of robber baron capitalism would be too dull for most viewers, besides getting the HK filmmaker in big trouble with the People's Public Security Bureau if he or she ever set foot in mainland China.
So Benny Chan and company go the crime drama route, with shootings, car chases and a great explosion sequence at the start that keys in a major plot element. If there is one thing wrong with this movie, it is another scene at the start where Jaycee Chan's cop gives a ticket to a guy for parking illegally, a big mouth who is out with his young son. When Jackie Chan's cop character in Police Story 2 stopped and ticketed a line of trucks (all Nissan trucks, then and now a Chan corporate sponsor), it showed Chan was no nonsense when it came to his job. Jaycee's parking ticket scene is a crummy way to introduce his character, people nowadays don't like cops or anyone else who gives out parking tickets.
Invisible Target is a good way to spend a little over two hours watching a very well made if improbable crime story.
In Invisible Target, you don't see any police (aided by goons hired by real estate developers) clubbing farmers whose land was stolen, so a new factory can be built, enriching the local Communist Party boss who gets an ownership share in the factory. In the Shanxi province that would be the brick factories that used kidnapped children and mentally challenged adults as slave labor. But dealing with life's grim reality in one of the world's great bastions of robber baron capitalism would be too dull for most viewers, besides getting the HK filmmaker in big trouble with the People's Public Security Bureau if he or she ever set foot in mainland China.
So Benny Chan and company go the crime drama route, with shootings, car chases and a great explosion sequence at the start that keys in a major plot element. If there is one thing wrong with this movie, it is another scene at the start where Jaycee Chan's cop gives a ticket to a guy for parking illegally, a big mouth who is out with his young son. When Jackie Chan's cop character in Police Story 2 stopped and ticketed a line of trucks (all Nissan trucks, then and now a Chan corporate sponsor), it showed Chan was no nonsense when it came to his job. Jaycee's parking ticket scene is a crummy way to introduce his character, people nowadays don't like cops or anyone else who gives out parking tickets.
Invisible Target is a good way to spend a little over two hours watching a very well made if improbable crime story.
Three police officers team up to capture a gang of robbers. One (Nicolas Tse) wants revenge for the death of his fiancée in an explosion caused by the bandits after a robbery. Another (Shawn Yue) wants payback for the humiliation caused by these men, who also injured his companions. And the third (Jaycee Chan) wants to discover the connection between the bandits and his missing brother, also a police officer.
I had to make a certain effort to sympathize with them, the script itself is quite captivating, it lacked a hint of humor, these police action dramas are always very serious, except for the tiny scene with the old man who writes the ticket and the old lady, there is little that escapes the brutal realism of the world of drug trafficking, crime, corruption and police persecution, and as such it does not always have a happy ending, despite the sense of justice and hope for equality. Anyway, an interesting film, although almost tiring, but good...
I had to make a certain effort to sympathize with them, the script itself is quite captivating, it lacked a hint of humor, these police action dramas are always very serious, except for the tiny scene with the old man who writes the ticket and the old lady, there is little that escapes the brutal realism of the world of drug trafficking, crime, corruption and police persecution, and as such it does not always have a happy ending, despite the sense of justice and hope for equality. Anyway, an interesting film, although almost tiring, but good...
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesBenny Chan requests that no doubles are to be used for the film's stunt sequences. The actors in the film performed their own stunts.
- Erros de gravaçãoAfter discovering the unconscious man, officer PC 5299 fails to pinch the patient's nostrils closed while giving mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
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- How long is Invisible Target?Fornecido pela Alexa
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- Também conhecido como
- Invisible Target
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Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 6.599.143
- Tempo de duração
- 2 h 9 min(129 min)
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1
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