Police Story (film)

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Police Story

Japanese DVD cover
Directed by Jackie Chan
Produced by Raymond Chow
Leonard Ho
Written by Edward Tang
Starring Jackie Chan
Brigitte Lin
Maggie Cheung
Charlie Cho
Music by J. Peter Robinson
Cinematography Cheung Yiu-Tsou
Editing by Yiu-Tsou
Distributed by Golden Harvest
Release date(s) Hong Kong

December 14, 1985

Running time 101 min. (Hong Kong)
106 min. (Japan)
99 min. (UK)
90 min. (US)
Country Flag of Hong Kong Hong Kong
Language Cantonese
Followed by Police Story 2
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Police Story (traditional Chinese: 警察故事, Ging chaat goo si; pinyin: Jǐngchá Gùshì) is a 1985 Hong Kong action-comedy film directed by and starring Jackie Chan and written by Edward Tang. It is the first of a series featuring Chan as a Hong Kong police detective named "Kevin" Chan Ka-Kui.

Chan began work on the film after a disappointing experience working with another director on The Protector, which was intended to be his entry into the American film market.

The film contained many large-scale action scenes, including an opening sequence featuring a car chase through a shanty town, Chan stopping a double-decker bus with his service revolver and a climactic ending fight scene in a shopping mall. This final scene earned the film the nickname "Glass Story" by the crew, due to the huge number of panes of sugar glass that were broken. During a stunt in this last sequence, in which Chan slides down a pole from several stories up, the lights near the pole had heated it considerably, resulting in Chan suffering second-degree burns to his hands.

Police Story is considered by fans to be one of Chan's best films. It was a massive hit in Asia and also won Best Film at the 1986 Hong Kong Film Awards.

Contents

[edit] Plot

The Royal Hong Kong Police Force is planning a major undercover sting called "Operation Boar Hunt" to arrest crime lord Chu Tao (Yuen Chor).

Inspector Chan Ka-Kui (or Kevin Chan in some versions) is part of the operation, along with undercover officers stationed in a shanty town. However, the criminals spot the police and the ensuing car chase cuts through the hillside shanty town, vehicles destroying the shacks and causing large explosions.

Ka-Kui persists in his chase, eventually following on foot as the drug lord attempts to escape in a double-decker bus. Ka Kui catches the bus and initially is able to hang on to it using an umbrella, but is thrown off. He then manages to get in front of the bus and bring it to a halt by threatening to shoot the driver with his service revolver.

Ka-Kui is reprimanded by Superintendent Li for letting the operation get out of hand, but is subsequently presented to the media as a model police officer.

His next assignment is to protect Chu Tao's secretary, Selina Fong (Brigitte Lin), who plans to testify in court about Chu Tao's illegal activities. At first, Selina insists that she does not require protection, but after Ka Kui has a fellow policeman break into her apartment and pose as a knife-wielding murderer, she becomes more cooperative. After Ka-Kui and Selina leave her apartment later that evening, they are attacked by some street thugs, whom Ka-Kui is able to defeat with his martial arts skills, though the fight leaves Selina's car a wreck.

When Ka-Kui arrives at his apartment with Selina, who is only wearing lingerie, he is surprised by his girlfriend, May (Maggie Cheung) and her friends, who are throwing a birthday party for him. May, seeing the scantily-clad Selina, misunderstands and becomes angry with Ka-Kui, shoving the birthday cake into his face. Ka-Kui is later able to explain to May that Selina is a witness, but only after much bumbling and further misunderstanding.

Meanwhile, Selina has discovered that the attack by the man with knife at her apartment was a sham, and so she decides to not cooperate with Ka Kui. She sneaks away while Ka-Kui is sleeping and is not present for the crucial court date the following day.

Ka-Kui prepares to make the jump in the shopping mall.
Ka-Kui prepares to make the jump in the shopping mall.

Though Chu Tao is released on bail, he wants revenge against Ka-Kui. Using a corrupt policeman, Inspector Man (Kam Hing Ying), Chu Tao is able to frame Ka-Kui for the murder of Inspector Man. Now a fugitive cop killer, Ka Kui must try to catch Chu Tao and clear his name.

The action comes to a head in a shopping mall, where Chu Tao has an office. After surviving a murder attempt by Chu Tao's men to ensure her silence, Selina goes to the office to download incriminating data from Chu Tao's computer system. Chu Tao notices that the data is being dumped, and he and his men head to the shopping mall to intervene. Ka-Kui, who's monitoring Chu Tao's activities, follows. In the ensuing fight, Ka-Kui defeats all of Chu Tao's henchmen. The briefcase containing the computer data falls to the ground floor of the mall, but Chu Tao retrieves it. Ka-Kui, at the top floor, leaps off a ledge and grabs a pole wrapped in lightbulbs. He rapidly slides down the pole, smashing through the bulbs, crashing through a glass ceiling, and finally reaching the floor, where he violently apprehends Chu Tao but is held back humorously by his two friends Tak and Kim to stop him from delivering one final kick to Chu Tao.

[edit] Cast and roles

Character Actor/Actress Role
"Kevin" Chan Ka-Kui Jackie Chan Sergeant
Selina Fong Brigitte Lin Chu Tao's Secretary
May Maggie Cheung Kevin's Girlfriend
Chu Tao Chor Yuen Crime Lord
John Ko Charlie Cho Gangster
Danny Chu Fung Hak-On
Inspector Man Kam Hing Ying
Chief Inspector Raymond Li Lam Kwok-Hung
"Uncle" Bill Wong Bill Tung
Kim Mars
Lawyer Cheung Lau Chi-Wing as
Lee Tai Po
Tom Ken Tong
Jacknife Wan Fat
Woo Fung Sha Tau Kok Station Commander
Money Lo television interviewer

[edit] Awards and nominations

  • 1986 Hong Kong Film Awards
    • Won: Best Picture
    • Won: Best Action Choreography
    • Nominated: Best Director (Jackie Chan)
    • Nominated: Best Actor (Jackie Chan)
    • Nominated: Best Actress (Brigitte Lin)
    • Nominated: Best Cinematography (Cheung Yin-Tsou)
    • Nominated: Best Film Editing (Peter Cheung)

[edit] Box office

The film grossed HK $26,626,760 in Hong Kong.

[edit] Sequels

[edit] Police Story 2

Main article: Police Story 2

Police Story 2 (traditional Chinese: 警察故事2), made in 1988, featured many of the same actors reprising their roles from the original. The story picks up with Chan Ka-Kui demoted traffic cop for causing so much damage in his apprehension of Chu. Chu has been released from prison on the pretense that he is terminally ill, and Chu and his clan continue to harass Chan and his girlfriend May as Chan gets reinstated to the detective unit when criminal bombers begin extorting money from businessmen.

[edit] Police Story 3

Main article: Police Story 3

Police Story 3 (traditional Chinese: 警察故事3超級警察, or Supercop) was made in 1992. Michelle Yeoh joins the cast, portraying a police officer from mainland China. The story involves Chan and Yeoh's character going undercover to try to break up a drug smuggling ring. The action moves from China to Kuala Lumpur, where Chan's girlfriend May is kidnapped. The film marks the last appearance of Maggie Cheung as May. Michelle Yeoh reprises her role in the spin-off, called Project S. Dimension Films released Police Story 3 in the US in 1996 under the name of Supercop with some edits to the film, the complete replacement of all music and sound effects, and English dubbing.

[edit] Police Story 4: First Strike

Police Story 4 (traditional Chinese: 簡單任務), made in 1996, is the only film in the Police Story series made partially in English. The action shifts away from Hong Kong and Asia, with a globe trekking espionage plot, lending the film the air of a James Bond adventure. The New Line Cinema release in the US contained various alterations. Filmed on location in Ukraine and Australia, the film also marks the last appearance of Bill Tung, who plays Chan's superior in the series.

[edit] New Police Story

Main article: New Police Story

New Police Story (traditional Chinese: 新警察故事) is a reboot of the Police Story series. Chan portrays a disgraced detective named Wing, and acts alongside such younger Hong Kong actors as Nicholas Tse, Charlene Choi and Daniel Wu. The story features a more dramatic focus, taking a darker and more serious tone.

[edit] DVD releases

In late 2004, Hong Kong's Intercontinental Video Limited released the remastered anamorphic widescreen Police Story Trilogy boxset in Region 0 NTSC format (playable in North America), featuring optional English subtitles and a choice of Chinese-language soundtracks. It should be noted that the original mono tracks, like on may other IVL DVDs, are out of sync. On December 19, 2006 Weinstein Company released Region 1 NTSC DVD (under their Dragon Dynasty label) with special features and deleted scenes (January 23, 2007 in Canada).

[edit] Influence

  • The shanty town chase inspired a similar sequence in Bad Boys II. There's also a similar scene in the 2004 Thai film, Born to Fight.
  • Jackie Chan fan Brandon Lee paid homage in his film Rapid Fire (1992 film) by filming a similar sequence from the mall fight scene, in which Jackie's character rams a bad guy with a motorcycle through multiple layers of glass.
  • The scene where Chan stopped a bus in Police Story, inspired a similar scene in the Sylvester Stallone and Kurt Russell movie Tango & Cash.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links