IMDb RATING
5.7/10
2.2K
YOUR RATING
Hero Wah goes to study under Master Pride. When he returns to his parents, he learns that they have been murdered by a band of evil Westerners. After impregnating his wife Jade, he ventures ... Read allHero Wah goes to study under Master Pride. When he returns to his parents, he learns that they have been murdered by a band of evil Westerners. After impregnating his wife Jade, he ventures to New York in search of his parents' killers.Hero Wah goes to study under Master Pride. When he returns to his parents, he learns that they have been murdered by a band of evil Westerners. After impregnating his wife Jade, he ventures to New York in search of his parents' killers.
- Awards
- 1 win & 7 nominations total
Ekin Cheng Yee-Kin
- Hero Hua
- (as Ekin Cheng)
Nicholas Tse
- Sword Hua
- (as Nic Tse)
Francis Ng
- Invincible
- (as Chun-yu Ng)
Anthony Chau-Sang Wong
- Pride
- (as Chau-sang Wong)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Well, some believe that this movie is bad, but it isn't. I found rather incredible, comparing to the Storm Riders. It has better special effects, also, the version I saw was dubbed compared to the rather dissapointing subtitles on the american DVD release of the Storm Riders. Sadly, the Strom Riders is the the only movies you can compare this to, but in many aspects this wins out. It's about the same length, with most of the same actors. The shinning points are the action, music, and the story. The story is kind of tragic in a way, but it's perfect, and doesn't leave you crying or smiling, just with you r mouth open at all the jaw dropping scenes. Though I wish it did have a lot more action, there are many fights, and they are all fantastic.
To sum it up, it's a really good film, leading up to the final battle, which is the best fight scene in any live action film I have ever scene, and the fact that it takes place in some what modern America is a plus.
To sum it up, it's a really good film, leading up to the final battle, which is the best fight scene in any live action film I have ever scene, and the fact that it takes place in some what modern America is a plus.
If you reside in the real world, then this movie will strike you as naive, crude, and bigoted. Credit should be given for the attempt to set the movie outside of China, but the snarky Europeans hired to play Americans, a bunch of undersized frenchmen no doubt ;'), and the heavy handed evil Americans routine, departs from realism pretty quickly.
Halfway through, the plot mutates into the martial-arts as magic universe, and though a lot of work is put into CGI effects, there is nothing here for anyone who hasn't been living in a cave for the last decade to write home about.
We also get a dose of infantile romantic complications that would embarrass Aaron Spelling, some really cheesy music, and generally lame melodramatic scenes.
My favorite, an inexplicable fastcut sequence from several angles of Hero standing in a burning building holding Jade as she dies, the music tracks dramatically with the cuts, is he trapped? ...will he die? Nope he just walks out a second later. What the...?
The plot tumbles on with a Ninja vs Chinese subplot, and then for some reason climaxes with a Chinese revolt against the 'Racist men fom the Klu Klux Klan' who run a mine where Chinese workers are oppressed. Someone's been carping their history from 'The Peoples History of the US' it seems.
If I had to classify this movie I'd use Sword and Sorcery with too much dialogue and dialectic.
Halfway through, the plot mutates into the martial-arts as magic universe, and though a lot of work is put into CGI effects, there is nothing here for anyone who hasn't been living in a cave for the last decade to write home about.
We also get a dose of infantile romantic complications that would embarrass Aaron Spelling, some really cheesy music, and generally lame melodramatic scenes.
My favorite, an inexplicable fastcut sequence from several angles of Hero standing in a burning building holding Jade as she dies, the music tracks dramatically with the cuts, is he trapped? ...will he die? Nope he just walks out a second later. What the...?
The plot tumbles on with a Ninja vs Chinese subplot, and then for some reason climaxes with a Chinese revolt against the 'Racist men fom the Klu Klux Klan' who run a mine where Chinese workers are oppressed. Someone's been carping their history from 'The Peoples History of the US' it seems.
If I had to classify this movie I'd use Sword and Sorcery with too much dialogue and dialectic.
Like most of the people I expected a wild action packed special effects loaded movie, well it isn't. But I'm not disappointed like all the others who wrote a comment here. It has more story than the average Hong Kong movie and the acting is also of a high standard. I agree that it could use some more action scenes, but the few action scenes look totally great! I don't know if it is historically correct (I don't think so) but what movies are?
If you want to see a good Hong Kong movie without the cheesy humor most of them have but with great acting and a nice story then give this one a try. It's not for all you kung fu action freaks although I think I'm one myself:)
If you want to see a good Hong Kong movie without the cheesy humor most of them have but with great acting and a nice story then give this one a try. It's not for all you kung fu action freaks although I think I'm one myself:)
I liked this movie quite a bit.The styling and action is great, as well are the effects. The story is also interesting except for the fact that it was never actually finished! So many things are left up in the air by the end of the movie that one can only feel a bit frustrated by it. I enjoyed the movie throughout its running time to the point that I was disgruntled by the incomplete story. I'll still probably buy the DVD though (if I ever find it).
This film is the highly anticipated movie by the same production team that brought us the excellent "StormRiders". Again, based on a long running Hong Kong comic, I had high expectations. The story is based in the early part of the century and is basically about the title role's (played by Ekin Cheng - Wind from the Storm Riders) reconciliation with his son played by another HK canto-pop teen idol. However, it is in the story that the film is horribly let down. This is not helped by the continuous use of the flashback to fill in the gaps - the film loses it's structure. This may be due to the amount of story from the comics that has to be crammed into an hour and a half covering over 20 years. The special effects are again excellent as you would expect, although the statute of liberty finale is slightly overdone. Definitely not in the "StormRiders" class but enough loose ends to suggest a sequel. Still, enjoyable but overall it did not live up to expectations.
Did you know
- TriviaAdapted from the manhua series "Chinese Hero: Tales of the Blood Sword" by Ma Wing Shing.
- Alternate versionsThe original cut of the film was much longer but was cut for worldwide and video/DVD release. Only bootleg copies have the full uncut version. Missing scenes include:
- Sheng realising it's Chinese new year and Sword asking him for money
- Luohan revealing to Hero why he became a monk
- Comander Dragon. All his scenes were cut, he was the owner of Steel Bull Canyon.
- A scene that shows that Invincible and the Ku Klux Klan have teamed forces to destroy both Hero and China town.
- Extended fight scene on top of the statue of liberty between Hero and Invincible.
- Comander Dragon and the KKK attacking china town. They are eventually stopped by the mayer of New York and the police.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Movie Fights in the Rain (2014)
- How long is A Man Called Hero?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 56m(116 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content