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Railroad Tigers

Original title: Tie dao fei hu
  • 2016
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 4m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
5.2K
YOUR RATING
Jackie Chan, Wing-Lun Ng, Kai Wang, Ping Sang, Talu Wang, and Zitao Huang in Railroad Tigers (2016)
A railroad worker in China in 1941 leads a team of freedom fighters against the Japanese in order to get food for the poor.
Play trailer1:16
2 Videos
99+ Photos
ActionAdventureComedyFamilyWar

A railroad worker in China in 1941 leads a team of freedom fighters against the Japanese in order to get food for the poor.A railroad worker in China in 1941 leads a team of freedom fighters against the Japanese in order to get food for the poor.A railroad worker in China in 1941 leads a team of freedom fighters against the Japanese in order to get food for the poor.

  • Director
    • Sheng Ding
  • Writers
    • Sheng Ding
    • Keke He
    • Alex Jia
  • Stars
    • Jackie Chan
    • Jaycee Cho-Ming Chan
    • Zitao Huang
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    5.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sheng Ding
    • Writers
      • Sheng Ding
      • Keke He
      • Alex Jia
    • Stars
      • Jackie Chan
      • Jaycee Cho-Ming Chan
      • Zitao Huang
    • 27User reviews
    • 48Critic reviews
    • 47Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos2

    Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 1:16
    Theatrical Trailer
    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 1:05
    Teaser Trailer
    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 1:05
    Teaser Trailer

    Photos366

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    + 360
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    Top cast46

    Edit
    Jackie Chan
    Jackie Chan
    • Ma Yuan
    Jaycee Cho-Ming Chan
    Jaycee Cho-Ming Chan
    • Rui Ge
    • (as Jaycee Chan)
    Zitao Huang
    Zitao Huang
    • Dahai
    Kai Wang
    Kai Wang
    • Fan Chuan
    Fan Xu
    Fan Xu
    • Auntie Qin
    Hiroyuki Ikeuchi
    Hiroyuki Ikeuchi
    • Yamaguchi
    Ping Sang
    Ping Sang
    • Dakui
    • (as Sang Ping)
    Wing-Lun Ng
    • Xiaohu
    • (as Wing Lun Ng)
    Talu Wang
    Talu Wang
    • Daguo
    • (as Wang Ta Lu)
    Zoe Zhang
    • Yuko
    • (as Lanxin Zhang)
    Wei Na
    • Huang Yifeng
    Yunwei He
    • Feng Banxian
    Asano Nagahide
    Asano Nagahide
    • Sakamoto
    Kôji Yano
    Kôji Yano
    • Sasaki
    • (as Koji Yano)
    Yishang Zhang
    Yishang Zhang
    • Xing'er
    Teiyu Takagi
    • Kameda
    Hailong Liu
    • Erpang
    • (as Liu Hailong)
    Di Liu
    • Sanlaizi
    • Director
      • Sheng Ding
    • Writers
      • Sheng Ding
      • Keke He
      • Alex Jia
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    5.85.1K
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    Featured reviews

    7hakra1

    Jackie Chan is back

    Finally a nice Jackie Chan movie, that reminds on the old days and let forget the so many bad movies he has done in the last decade. This one is funny, full of action, with a good cast including a cameo of andy lau. Even more enjoyfull speaking chinese and some japanese, so I recommand to watch in original, because much more fun. Also great to see jackie acting together with his son. Could be about 15 minutes shortes, but still nice jackie-movie.
    7drali-87181

    Not the best chan but not so bad

    I watched this movie with very low expectation. It was not hollywood big budget movie and not so much dramatization. It was a simple story about few freedom fighters but showed in a very lighter way (Jackie Chan way). Not much stunts and action sequences by the legend Jackie Chan but his presence is still enough. If you had high expectations and think there would have been something new then don't watch it but if you just watch it as a Jackie Chan fan or chinese movie fan , you won't be disappointed. My recommendation is one time watchable with few laughters and few surprises.
    8blinkable

    Watch it with a light heart

    One is never too late for a Jackie Chan's movie, especially a comedy action movie of his. First of all, the way the story plot being presented is very straight forward like, literally doing a presentation with sub-titles of what to expect in the scenes as we go along. It's clean cut in such a way and you won't feel any interruptions. And with the theme on, 'let's do something big in this lifetime' coming out from average railroad workers, you know you are going to be in for rides filled with laughters. The bgm matched well with the scenes and helped to raise the dramatic-ness from the comedic aspects.

    To me, the most crucial point of this movie fell on the good chemistry among the quite star-studded casts. They matched each other so well in their rhythms and one can really feel their comrades and brotherhood, which at times really what made their actions/sayings funny. There were many times that I was really laughing my heads off and I knew this movie is such feel-good humor movie worth watching. I like how Jackie Chan was not a one-man show in this movie and helped to bring out the acting skills of others casted in this movie through their interactions. In fact, it was an eye opening for me to see Wang Kai with his supposedly 'cool-I-know-what-I'm-doing-in-war' Fan Chuan character turned out to be a hilarious character with his constant 'rational' thinking. Another hilarious character akin to Fan Chuan was the Japanese Captain played by Ikeuchi Hiroyuki, which I see in the movie as to now wonder why he and Fan Chuan 'battling' it out the most.

    I got to admit that my initial thought before I started to watch this movie was half expecting it to be typical China-produced war era movie, focusing much on patriotism. However, despite this movie having its patriotic moment, it wasn't shove down the audience throat like the usual ones. The feeling of "patriotism" (wanting for the freedom fighters to win despite their average tricks and fighting skills) was somewhat built into me as I watched the progress of how desperate this group of average men, dreaming of doing big things as they kept putting it in the movie, wanted to help the army to blow up the bridge.

    I am not the type who rewatch but if I ever do catch this movie on TV or something, I won't mind rewatching just for the laughters.
    5phanthinga

    Mediocre movie

    A good Jackie Chan movie is about the slapstick action scene and the death defying stunt works and this movie have some of it but the rest is pretty disappointed.Directed by Ding Sheng who you may familiar with movie like:Little Big Solder(his best works yet) and Police Story Lockdown.Railroad Tigers is one again a action war comedy movie staring Jackie Chan as the leader of a bunch of railroad worker fighting again The Japanese in China 1941.With a plot sound very historic and epic the movie we got is a slow pacing movie over 2 hours full of dull character when they make unfunny jokes and bad decision left to right both from the good guys to bad guys.The horrible CGI train robbery to weird movie jump cut scene through out the movie almost make this unwatchable but thank to Jackie Chan movie charm on screen,a couple of good stunt work and a epic shootout scene in the finale saving this this movie from becoming a disaster
    6moviexclusive

    Too much slapstick and too little character work turns this celebration of wartime heroism into a farcical war comedy - and renders Jackie Chan largely inconsequential

    If you've seen 'Little Big Soldier' or 'Police Story 2013', you'll know better than to expect Jackie Chan's third collaboration with Mainland filmmaker Ding Sheng to be a martial arts showcase of the former's acrobatic stunts. And sure enough, despite being billed as 'a Jackie Chan action-comedy blockbuster', 'Railroad Tigers' is really an ensemble piece set against the backdrop of the Japanese invasion of East China in the early 1940s. Based upon true events, Chan plays a humble railroad worker named Ma Yuan who leads a ragtag team from his village to blow up a critical transportation route across the Hanzhuang bridge for the Japanese to send supplies to their troops at the frontlines.

    Once again assuming both writing and directing duties, Ding Sheng keeps the premise appealingly simple. Not content to toil for the invading Japanese in their respective jobs, Ma Yuan and his fellow railroad workers as well as a bunch of other working-class village folk take to robbing them every now and then – indeed, it is in the midst of one such daring midday robbery of a passenger train carrying a group of Japanese soldiers and their pillages that the members of the titular ragtag team are introduced via title cards. An Eighth Route army soldier Daguo (Darren Wang) stumbles into Ma Yuan's humble but cosy village house one night while evading capture by the Japanese, the former recounting how his platoon had tried but failed to detonate the aforementioned bridge. Upon his recovery, Daguo insists on returning to his platoon. Alas, Daguo fails to make it back before being shot by the Japanese, so Ma Yuan decides to assemble the team to complete his assignment – and in so doing, realises their collective hopes of 'doing something big' or '干票大 的'.

    Though his previous movies seemed to demonstrate his predilection for character-driven storytelling, Ding Sheng is all out for visual spectacle here, structuring his narrative around a series of extended action sequences– the opening train robbery is an ambitious start that also sets a playful tone, followed by a raid on the armoury warehouse at Shaguo station to procure the explosives needed to blow up the bridge, then a heroic attempt to rescue Ma Yuan and his associate Rui (Jaycee Chan) imprisoned by the Japanese in a square metal cell on board another moving train, and last but not least the loudest, longest and undeniably overblown (pardon the pun) setpiece to hijack a Japanese military transport locomotive intended as the very 'bomb' itself. In between are scenes meant to emphasise the camaraderie between the ragtag team of revolutionaries, arguably too short and too sparse for any individual character – except Ma Yuan and Rui – to make much impression.

    That said, 'Railroad Tigers' probably bears the least character work among all of Ding Sheng's movies so far. Ma Yuan's status as leader seems premised solely on his age and paternal instincts, and other than hinting at a slow-burn romance with the village pancake seller Auntie Qin, there is little else that defines him. The same goes for the other railroad workers Rui and Dagui (Ping Sang) as well as the other members of the 'Tigers' – amateur tailor Dahai (Huang Zitao), handywoman Xing'er (Xu Fan) and serial pickpocketer San Laizi (Alan Ng). Because Chan plays Ma Yuan low-key and unassuming, it is former warlord bodyguard Fan Chuan (Wang Kai) who steals his thunder whenever the latter is on screen, putting his sharpshooting skills to good use especially during shootouts with the Japanese. Next to the Tigers, the Japanese are defined by the cocky military police captain Yamaguchi (Hiroyuki Ikeuchi), his stern no-nonsense female colleague Yuko (Zhang Lanxin) and to a lesser extent the bumbling station master Sakamoto (Kôji Yano). With the sheer number of characters, it is not difficult to see why there is little time to develop any of them, such that each becomes known by and large by his or her relation to the unfolding narrative.

    Like we said earlier, the action takes centrestage, interspersed now and then with slapstick gags that do not always hit the mark. Chan's good-natured goofiness is still amusing, but the humour borders on childish at times, and undercuts the build-up of dramatic tension especially during the supposedly tense and dangerous situations. In fact, an extended gag that sees Yamaguchi consume not one but two drugged pancakes prepared by Auntie Qin which causes him fall asleep while the Tigers act to rescue Ma Yuan and Rui as well as turn lecherous against the male deputy station master held for interrogation is downright farcical – besides raising suspicions of the filmmakers' disdain towards the Japanese, it also diminishes the intended display of bravery of the Tigers.

    It doesn't matter that 'Railroad Tigers' contains next to none of Jackie Chan's death-defying stunts; in fact, true fans of the martial arts actor should be happy that his films are not solely defined by how high he jumps or how far he leaps. Oh no, Ding Sheng's latest collaboration with Chan is underwhelming because it seems no more than an excuse for the former to live out his childhood fantasies of trains in a big-budget motion picture, disguising his fancies under a purported celebration of the heroism of a group of ordinary civilians displayed in the anti-Japanese war effort. Ironically, his latest film could have benefited with more of the self-seriousness in 'Police Story 2013' (which was accused of being too sombre), instead of letting the often foolish and even self-indulgent humour to dilute the action and drama. Ding's inspiration is also the Hollywood Westerns of trains and train heists, and on that level alone, 'Railroad Tigers' is certainly watchable; but for a Jackie Chan movie, it is undeniably disappointing, not least because Chan doesn't even get to do much beyond appearing next to his son and/or a whole bunch of other Mainland actors.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Jackie Chan's son Jaycee appeared in this movie (though not as his son). At one point, both are arrested by the Japanese, who note how much they look alike, prompting a comic argument disputing this.
    • Quotes

      Rui Ge: A wise man doesn't join a hopeless fight

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Railroad Tigers?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 23, 2016 (China)
    • Country of origin
      • China
    • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Languages
      • Mandarin
      • Japanese
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Biệt Đội Mãnh Hổ
    • Filming locations
      • Diaobingshan, China
    • Production companies
      • Sparkle Roll Media
      • Shanghai Film Group
      • Beijing Going Zoom Media
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $50,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $218,044
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $116,211
      • Jan 8, 2017
    • Gross worldwide
      • $102,205,175
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 4m(124 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Auro 11.1
      • Dolby Atmos
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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