High Risk | |
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Hong Kong film poster |
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Traditional | 鼠膽龍威 |
Simplified | 鼠胆龙威 |
Mandarin | Shú Dán Lóng Wěi |
Cantonese | Syu2 Daam2 Lung4 Wai1 |
Directed by | Wong Jing |
Produced by | Wong Jing |
Written by | Wong Jing |
Starring | Jet Li Jacky Cheung Chingmy Yau Billy Chow |
Music by | Jussi Tegelman Richard Yuen |
Cinematography | Lau Moon-tong |
Editing by | Angie Lam |
Distributed by | Upland Films (Hong Kong) Sony Pictures Home Entertainment (U.S. DVD) |
Release date(s) | Hong Kong: July 12, 1995 |
Running time | 101 mins |
Country | Hong Kong |
Language | Cantonese |
Gross revenue | $11,403,790 |
High Risk | |||||||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 鼠膽龍威 | ||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 鼠胆龙威 | ||||||||||
Literal meaning | "Rat's bravery and Dragon's might" | ||||||||||
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High Risk (Chinese: 鼠胆龍威; Cantonese Yale: Shu dam lung wai), (also known in the United States as Meltdown) is a 1995 Hong Kong action film written, produced and directed by Wong Jing, starring Jet Li, Jacky Cheung, Chingmy Yau, Charlie Yeung, Billy Chow, Kelvin Wong and Valerie Chow. Corey Yuen serves as the film's fight choreographer. This is Kelvin Wong's final film appearance, who has retired from acting after his final movie.
The film is a parody of some of Hollywood's most influential action films, such as Die Hard and Speed. It also gained controversy for spoofing Jackie Chan, who was, in turn, offended by the satire.
Meltdown is the title given to this film in the United States by Columbia TriStar Home Video (now known as Sony Pictures Home Entertainment).
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Police officer Kit (Jet Li) leaves his job after his family is killed by a terrorist named The Doctor. Kit becomes a bodyguard for movie star Frankie (Jacky Cheung) who is reported to perform his own stunts. The report is untrue; Frankie is a drunken womanizer incapable of performing the stunts, and Kit performs them for him. Frankie attends a gala event in a high-rise hotel where The Terrorist shows up and takes everyone hostage. Kit has an opportunity to face his family's killer and save Frankie and the rest of the hostages.[1]
The film grossed a modest HK $11,403,790 in Hong Kong, where it was released as 鼠胆龍威 (High Risk, Rat's bravery and Dragon's might), which parodies the title of Die Hard (虎膽龍威 Tiger's bravery and Dragon's might) in Hong Kong.
The movie takes a cinematic swipe at Jackie Chan, with whom director Wong Jing had worked previously on the City Hunter live-action film. Through the character of Frankie Lone, Wong insinuating that Chan was actually a boozing womanizer and a fraud who did not really do his own stunts after all. After the release of High Risk, Chan not only disowned the film, but attacked Wong personally in the press.
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