Dragons Forever
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Dragons Forever | |
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Dragons Forever DVD cover |
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Directed by | Sammo Hung Corey Yuen |
Produced by | Raymond Chow Leonard Ho Barney Wu |
Written by | Gordon Chan Leung Yiu Ming Szeto Chuek Hon |
Starring | Jackie Chan Sammo Hung Yuen Biao |
Editing by | Peter Cheung Joseph Chiang |
Release date(s) | 1988 |
Running time | 89 min. |
Country | Hong Kong |
Language | Cantonese |
All Movie Guide profile | |
IMDb profile |
Dragons Forever (Fei lung maang jeung) is a 1988 action movie made in Hong Kong. It features Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao. The three actors, known colloquially as the Three Brothers, had attended the famous Peking Opera School together, and became members of the Seven Little Fortunes. This is the last film to date that all three have appeared in together. It was directed by Sammo Hung and another former member of the Seven Little Fortunes, Corey Yuen (aka Yuen Kwai). Yet another classmate, Yuen Wah, plays the film's main villain, while legendary kickboxer Benny Urquidez plays his right hand man.
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[edit] Box Office
Dragons Forever grossed HK $33,578,920 in its Hong Kong theatrical run. Whilst the domestic gross wasn't poor, to Golden Harvest it was comparatively weak for a Chinese New Year release, considering it featured the three biggest stars of Hong Kong action cinema. Box office returns in other parts of Asia were also lower than expected.
On the Hong Kong Legends DVD release of Dragons Forever, Hong Kong cinema expert Bey Logan offers his opinion of why the film underperformed both in the domestic and Japanese markets. The primary reason cited is that the actors played roles against type. Rather than Chan playing his usual happy-go-lucky everyman character, he plays a slick lawyer who chases (and is evidently successful with) women. Similarly, rather than playing the underdog, Biao plays an eccentric, possibly mentally disturbed character. Logan explains that in general, the cinema going public in Hong Kong are not as open to this departure of role as perhaps the public in the West would be.
Additional reasons cited include the occasional use of coarse language in the film, and the scenes of narcotics production, particularly Hung's character being injected with drugs against his will. The fact that Chan's character has a relationship with a woman may also have had an effect, particularly in the Japanese market, as many female viewers couldn't accept that their idol wasn't single. On learning that Chan was in a relationship in real life, one Japanese fan had committed suicide and another poisoned herself in the offices of Golden Harvest.[1]
[edit] Versions
Two scenes with Timothy Tung Tak-Biao (Yuen Biao) visiting a psychiatrist (played by Lucky Stars veteran, Stanley Fung) were cut from the domestic Hong Kong print, and the Japanese print of the film. These scenes appeared as extras on the international DVD of the film, entitled "Couch Potato" and "Mr Kinetic". In the latter, the psychiatrist was in the process of being robbed. So that Timothy wouldn't realise a robbery was taking place, one of the robbers, posing as the psychiatrist, gave him advice over the intercom. His advice was to "kill the witnesses", which explains why Tung attacks Jackie Lung (Chan) and Nancy Lee (Pauline Yeung) in a later scene, wearing a mask and armed with a knife.
Several scenes were slightly trimmed in the US version. The only scene completely omitted shows how Timothy, Jackie and his girlfriend Nancy gain access to the chemical factory. Timothy explains what happened to Luke Wong Fei-Hung (Sammo Hung) and they locate a hidden door, leading to where Luke is held captive and the drugs are made. Jackie's assistant distracts the guard allowing him the opportunity to attack.
[edit] References
- ^ Bey Logan. Dragons Forever, commentary track [DVD]. Hong Kong Legends.
[edit] External links
Dragons Forever at the Internet Movie Database