Kung Fu Hustle (2004) China
Kung Fu Hustle Image Cover
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Director:Stephen Chow
Studio:Sony Pictures
Producer:Bill Borden, Connie Wong, David Hung
Writer:Stephen Chow, Xin Huo
Rating:4.5
Rated:R
Date Added:2006-04-29
ASIN:B0009S4IHY
UPC:9781404979970
Price:$19.94
Awards:Nominated for Golden Globe. Another 17 wins & 26 nominations
Genre:Chinese
Release:2005-09-08
IMDb:0373074
Duration:99
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:2.35 : 1
Sound:AC-3
Languages:English, Dolby Digital 5.1, Cantonese, Dolby Digital 5.1, French, Unknown
Subtitles:English, French
Features:Dubbed
Subtitled
Stephen Chow  ...  (Director)
Stephen Chow, Xin Huo  ...  (Writer)
 
Sheng Yi Huang  ...  
Qiu Yuen  ...  Landlady
Wah Yuen  ...  Landlord
Stephen Chow  ...  Sing
Xiaogang Feng  ...  Crocodile Gang Boss (as Feng Xiao Gang)
Zhi Hua Dong  ...  Donut
Kwok-Kwan Chan  ...  Brother Sum (as Danny Chan)
Chi Chung Lam  ...  Bone (Sing's Sidekick) (as Lam Tze Chung)
Siu-Lung Leung  ...  The Beast
Kai Man Tin  ...  Axe Gang Advisor
Kang Xi Jia  ...  Harpist #1
Hak On Fung  ...  Harpist #2
Shengyi Huang  ...  Fong
Suet Lam  ...  Axe Gang Vice General
Cheung-Yan Yuen  ...  Beggar (as Cheng Yan Yuen)
Chi Ling Chiu  ...  Tailor
Hark-On Fung  ...  Harpist #2
Comments: A new comedy unlike anything you have seen before

Summary: Movie-kinetics genius. Kung Fu Hustle takes the gleeful mayhem of Hong Kong action movies, the deadpan physical humor of silent comedies, and the sheer elasticity of Wile E. Coyote cartoons and fuses them into a spectacle that is simple in its joys and mind-boggling in its orchestration. A run-down slum has been poor but peaceful until a bunch of black-suited gangsters called the Axe Gang show up to cause trouble--and discover that, hidden among the humble poor, are three kung fu masters trying to live an ordinary life. But after these martial artists repulse the gang with their flying fists and feet, the gang leader hires a pair of assassins, whose arrival leads to the unveiling of more secrets, until both the screen and the audience are dizzy with hyperbolic fight artistry (choreographed by Yuen Wo Ping, who also choreographed The Matrix). Weaving through this escalating fury is a loudmouthed loser (writer/director/actor Stephen Chow) who suddenly finds himself having to live up to his bragging. Kung Fu Hustle more than lives up to the promise of Chow's previous film, Shaolin Soccer--it's a movie made by an imagination unfettered by the laws of physics. Hugely entertaining. --Bret Fetzer