Kung Fu Hustle | |
---|---|
File:KungFuHustleUSposter.jpg Official United States released poster. | |
Directed by | Stephen Chow |
Written by | Stephen Chow Xin Huo Chan Man Keung Kan-Cheung Tsang |
Produced by | Stephen Chow Po Chu Chui Jeffrey Lau Executive and associates: Bill Borden Wellson Chin Rita Fung David Hung Zhonglei Wang Hai Cheng Zhao |
Starring | Stephen Chow Yuen Wah Yuen Qiu Danny Chan Kwok Kwan Bruce Leung |
Cinematography | Hang-Sang Poon |
Edited by | Angie Lam |
Music by | Stephen Chow Raymond Wong Hang Yi Xian Luo Zong |
Production companies | Columbia Pictures Film Production Asia Star Overseas Beijing Film Studio China Film Group Huayi Brothers |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures Film Production Asia (Hong Kong) Sony Pictures Entertainment (US) Sony Pictures Classics (US) |
Release dates | United States: January 25, 2005 China: December 23, 2004 United Kingdom: June 24, 2005 |
Running time | 95 mins (1 hour 35 mins) |
Countries | China Hong Kong |
Languages | Cantonese Mandarin |
Budget | USD$20,000,000[1] |
Box office | USD$100,914,445[1] |
Kung Fu Hustle (Chinese: 功夫; pinyin: Gōngfu) is a Template:Fy Hong Kong action crime comedy film directed by Stephen Chow, who also directed, produced and starred in the film. The film was also produced by Po Chu Chui and Jeffrey Lau, meanwhile the screenplay was wrote by Xin Huo, Chan Man Keung and Kan-Cheung Tsang. Set in Canton, China in the 1940s, the story revolves in a town ruled by the Axe Gang, Sing (Chow) who desperately wants to become a member. He stumbles into a slum ruled by eccentric landlords who turns out to be the greatest kung-fu masters in disguise. Sing's actions eventually cause the Axe Gang and the slumlords to engage in an explosive kung-fu battle. The film stars Yuen Wah, Yuen Qiu, Danny Chan Kwok Kwan and Bruce Leung in a prominent roles.
After directing commercial success Shaolin Soccer,[2] Columbia Pictures Film Production Asia begun to develop the film since 2002.[3] The film used a lot of visual effects to promote the kung-fu moves much intensive.[4] The cartoon style of the movie accompanied by traditional Chinese music is often cited as its most striking feature.[4][5] Although the film features the return of a number of retired actors from 1970s Hong Kong action cinema, it is in stark contrast to other martial arts films around the same time that have made the biggest impact in the West, such as Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and Hero.[6] [7]
The film released on December 23, Template:Fy in China and released on January 25, Template:Fy in United States. The film received extremely positive reviews with Rotten Tomatoes giving 90% fresh certificate[8] and Metacritic gives 78 out of 100.[9] The film was a commercial success as it grossed USD$17 million in United States and USD$84 million at foreign countries, the gross was USD$101 million.[1] The film was highest-grossing film in the history of Hong Kong[10] and the tenth highest-grossing foreign language film[11] The film was also the highest-grossing foreign language film in the United States in 2005.[12]
Plot
Turmoil grips 1930s Shanghai. Various gangs vie for power, the most feared of which is the Axe Gang, led by the infamous Brother Sum and aptly named after its weapon of choice. With the police powerless to maintain order, people can live peacefully only in poor areas which do not appeal to gangsters. An example is Pig Sty Alley, a tenement home to people of various trades, run by a lecherous landlord and his domineering wife. One day, two troublemakers, Sing (Chow) and Bone, come to the alley impersonating members of the Axe Gang in order to command respect. This fails miserably, and Sing's antics accidentally attract the real gang to the scene. In the massive brawl that ensues, the gangsters are repelled by the martial arts mastery of three tenants: Coolie, Tailor and Donut (the baker).
After the fight, Sing and Bone are apprehended by Brother Sum for starting the whole mess and getting the Axe Gang humiliated publicly. The two narrowly escape death when Sing impresses Sum with his lockpicking skill. Sum tells them that if they kill just one person, they will be accepted into the gang. The next day the duo return to Pig Sty Alley to murder the Landlady, but comically fail due to ineptitude. The two split and narrowly escape the furious Landlady. Sing, badly injured, then finds himself in a traffic control pulpit; apparently "working" off his injuries, he pounds the steel sides and floor with unbelievable force, deforming the solid metal with deep handprints. Fully recovered, he reunites with Bone, but has no memory of his mysterious healing.
Sing and Bone lament their failure on the streets, and Sing describes his childhood. He spent his (meager) life savings to buy a Buddhist Palm manual from a beggar with the intention of "preserving world peace". He practiced his skills, but when he tried to defend a mute girl from bullies trying to steal her lollipop, he is beaten and urinated on. Sing concludes that good guys never win and decides to become a bad person. After telling his story, the duo then steal ice cream from a street vendor, laughing maniacally as they escape from her on a tram.
Angered by his gang's defeat, Brother Sum hires the Harpists, a pair of skilled assassins who fight using a magical guqin. They strike Pig Sty Alley at night as Coolie, Tailor and Donut are getting ready to depart, having been evicted for antagonising the gang. The three are quickly overwhelmed, prompting the Landlord and Landlady, revealed to be kung fu masters, to intervene. Although the killers and the Axe Gang are driven off, the three evictees suffer fatal injuries. The Coolie is decapitated, the Tailor dies from severe stab wounds, and Donut dies from a sustained injury. The Landlord and Landlady evacuate Pig Sty Alley out of concern for their tenants' safety.
The following day, after being humiliated and pummeled by a clerk he had previously antagonised, Sing mugs the female ice cream vendor from the earlier scene. She is revealed to be the mute girl from his childhood whom he had vainly tried to defend. He recognises the old lollipop she offers him as a token of her gratitude, but becomes upset, rebuffing her and berating Bone. Later, while despairing in the gutter, he is picked up by the Axe Gang and joins their ranks. Brother Sum, having earlier witnessed Sing's ability to quickly pick locks, instructs him to sneak into a mental asylum to free a notorious assassin, the Beast, the Ultimate King of Killers (終極殺人王).
Brother Sum is initially skeptical that Sing has freed the right man because of the Beast's flippant attitude and sloppy appearance, but is ultimately convinced when he stops a bullet between his fingertips. Immediately afterward, the Beast approaches the Landlord and Landlady, who have come to Sum's casino. Exchanging introductions, Landlady explains that the good cannot coexist with the bad, moving Sing and changing him for the better. The Beast, Landlord and Landlady then engage in fierce battle and, using a giant funeral bell as a megaphone to amplify the Landlady's Lion's Roar, the couple nearly defeat the more powerful Beast. His desperation move, however, successfully pins them in mutual joint locks. Sing, stimulated by his newfound righteous nature, approaches the Beast and smashes his head with a table leg. The Beast angrily retaliates, pulverising Sing. Fortunately, Sing is spirited away to safety by the Landlord and Landlady when the Beast's back is turned. The Beast casually kills Brother Sum when rebuked and declares himself unavoidable.
Back in the Alley, Sing, wrapped head-to-toe in bandages and treated with Chinese medicine, undergoes metamorphosis. He quickly recovers from his wounds, and his latent potential as a kung fu genius is realised. He engages the Axe Gang and the Beast, dispatching the gangsters with ease. However, the Beast's Toad Technique sends Sing flailing high into the sky, where Sing realises how to wield the Buddhist Palm and dives back downwards with his palm outstretched and body ablaze. He creates a giant hand-shaped crater in the ground and easily subdues the Beast's desperation move. The Beast concedes defeat, and Sing calmly offers to make the Beast his student; weeping in gratitude, he kneels at Sing's feet and calls him "master".
Some time later, Sing and Bone open a candy store that specialises in lollipops. When the mute ice cream vendor walks by, Sing goes out to meet her. The two see each other as their childhood selves and run happily into the shop. Outside, the same beggar who sold Sing the Buddhist Palm manual offers a selection of martial arts manuals to a boy eating a lollipop.
Cast
- Stephen Chow (周星馳) as Sing, a loser in life whose ambition is to join the Axe Gang. He has attempted many misdeeds, but all of them have failed or backfired.
- Yuen Wah (元華) as the Landlord of the Pig Sty Alley. A lecher and a troublemaker. He is a master of Tai Qi Quan.
- Yuen Qiu (元秋) as the Landlady of the Pig Sty Alley. Selfish and domineering, she is a chain smoker with a loud voice, a side effect of her mastery of a Kung Fu technique known as the Lion's Roar. A skill extract from Jin Yong famous The Heaven Sword and Dragon Saber.[13]
- Danny Chan Kwok Kwan (陳國坤) as Brother Sum, the shady leader of the Axe Gang. The Axe Gang is the most feared gang in Shanghai controlling many casinos, night clubs and restaurants. The gang is notorious for its axe-wielding gangmen.
- Leung Siu Lung (梁小龍) as the Beast, officially the world's top killer, a fact belied by his unkempt appearance. He has killed many in his quest to find a worthy opponent all to no avail. Therefore, he had himself committed to a mental asylum, until Sing freed him to deal with the Landlord and his wife. His final skill he used on Sing; The Toad Stance was another skill extract from Jinyong classic martial arts novel The Legend of the Condor Heroes and The Return of the Condor Heroes.[13]
- Chiu Chi Ling (趙志淩) as the gay Tailor of Pig Sty Alley. This retired Kung Fu master specialises in the art of Hung Gar Iron Fist kung fu (洪家鐵線拳), and fights with iron rings around his arms.
- Dong Zhi Hua (董志華) as Donut, a baker in Pig Sty Alley who is a retired Kung Fu master. He specialises in the Eight Trigram Staff (五郎八卦棍).
- Xing Yu (行宇) as the Coolie, a Kung Fu master specialising in Twelve Kicks of the Tam School (十二路潭腿).
- Lam Chi Chung (林子聰) as Bone, Sing's sidekick.
- Huang Sheng Yi as Fong, Sing's mute love interest. Back in her childhood, she was saved by Sing from a gang of bullies. Ever since then, she has viewed him as her hero. In the present day, she works as an ice-cream vendor.
- Tin Kai Man (田啟文) as the advisor of Brother Sum, the leader of the Axe Gang.
- Gar Hong Hay (賈康熙) and Fung Hak On (馮克安) as the Harpists, two killers hired by the Axe Gang to wipe out the Coolie, Tailor and Donut. Their instrument is the guzheng, or "Chinese harp".
- Lam Suet (林雪) and Liang Hsiao as high ranking members of the Axe Gang.
- Yuen Cheung Yan (袁祥仁) as the Beggar who sold Sing the Buddhist Palm manual.
Production
Development
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/45/Pig_Sty_Alley.jpg/220px-Pig_Sty_Alley.jpg)
Kung Fu Hustle is a co-production of the Beijing Film Studio and Hong Kong's Star Overseas.[14] After the success of his 2001 film, Shaolin Soccer, Chow was approached in 2002 by Columbia Pictures Film Production Asia, offering to collaborate with him on a project. Chow accepted the offer, and the project eventually became Kung Fu Hustle.[3] Major inspirations of the film came from the martial arts films Chow watched as a child and his childhood ambition to become a martial artist.[15]
Chow's first priority was to design the main location of the film, the Pig Sty Alley. He grew up in an environment similar to the Alley and the plot included many aspects of his daily life.[16] A 1973 Shaw Brothers Studio film, The House of 72 Tenants was another inspiration for the Pig Sty Alley.[17] Designing of the Alley began in January 2003 and took four months to complete. Many of the props and furniture in the apartments were antiques from all over China.[18]
Choreography
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/e/e6/Buddhist_palm_construction.jpg/220px-Buddhist_palm_construction.jpg)
Kung Fu Hustle was produced with a budget of US$20 million.[19] Filming took place in Shanghai from June 2003 to November 2003.[20] Two-thirds of the time were spent shooting the fighting sequences.[15] The fighting scenes of Kung Fu Hustle were initially choreographed by Sammo Hung. Production suffered a setback when Hung quit after two months due to illness, tough outdoor conditions, interest in another project and arguments with the production crew.[21] Chow immediately contacted Yuen Woo-ping, an action choreographer with experience ranging from Hong Kong action cinema of the 1960s to Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and The Matrix in the early 21st century to replace Hung. Yuen swiftly accepted the offer. In doing so, certain scenes in production under Hung were cancelled.[3] Yuen managed to take seemingly outdated wuxia fighting styles like the Deadly Melody and Buddhist Palm and recreate them on the screen with his own imagination.[22]
Special effects were mainly created with a combination of computer-generated imagery and wire work.[23] Legendary martial arts mentioned in wuxia novels were depicted and exaggerated through CGI, but actual people, rather than digital effects were used to film the final fight between Chow's character and the hundreds of axe-wielding gangsters.[14] A Hong Kong computer graphics company, Centro Digital Pictures Limited was solely responsible for the CGI of Kung Fu Hustle. The company had experience in highly acclaimed films like Shaolin Soccer and Kill Bill. Their team had performed extensive tests on various scenes that could be depicted by CGI before filming started. A group of six people followed the production crew throughout the shooting. Treatment of the preliminary shots began straight afterwards. The CGI crew removed wire effects and applied special effects under high resolution. After a final calibration of colour, data of the processed scenes were sent to the United States for the production of the final version of the film.[20]
Casting
Kung Fu Hustle pays tribute to many famous veterans of Hong Kong action cinema of the 1970s. Yuen Wah, a former student of the China Drama Academy Peking Opera School, plays the Landlord of the Pig Sty Alley. He has appeared in hundreds of Hong Kong films from the 1970s and was a stunt double of Bruce Lee. Yuen Wah considered the film to be the peak of his career. He remarked that despite the comedic nature of the film, the shooting process was a serious matter. With a tight schedule, there was no time for laughs. In spite of the film's success, Yuen Wah worried that nowadays fewer people practice martial arts.[24]
The part of the Landlady was offered to Yuen Qiu, another student of Yu Jim Yuen, sifu of the China Drama Academy. Yuen Qiu was a girl in The Man with the Golden Gun at the age of 18.[25] Having retired from the film industry after her marriage in the 1980s, Kung Fu Hustle was her comeback. She admitted that she never expected to star in the film. When her colleague was on stage during a tryout for Kung Fu Hustle, she stood near her and smoked a cigarette with a sarcastic expression on her face. That pose earned her the part. To fulfill Stephen Chow's image of a "fat lady", Yuen Qiu deliberately gained weight before production by eating midnight snacks on a daily basis.[25]
Leung Siu Lung, who plays the Beast, is Stephen Chow's childhood martial arts hero.[16] Leung Siu Lung was a famous action film director and actor in the 1970s and 1980s, known as the "Third Dragon" after Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan. Having lost the Taiwanese film market in the late 1980s following a visit to China, he switched to doing business. Kung Fu Hustle was his return to the film industry after a 15-year hiatus. He regards Chow as a flexible director with high standards, and was particularly impressed by the first scene involving the Beast, which had to be reshot 28 times.[26]
Besides famous martial artists, Kung Fu Hustle features legends of Chinese cinema. Two famous Chinese directors appear in the film: Zhang Yibai, who plays Inspector Chan at the beginning of the film and Feng Xiaogang, who plays the boss of the Crocodile Gang.[27]
Huang Shengyi made her debut to the film industry and played Fong, a mute ice-cream vendor. Having been asked whether she wanted to have any dialogue in the film, she decided not to speak so as to stand out only with her body gestures. She stated that it was an honour to work with experienced actors and directors and a great learning opportunity for future roles.[28]
Music
The majority of the film's original score was composed by Raymond Wong and performed by the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra.[5] The score imitates traditional Chinese music in 1940s swordplay films.[29] One of Wong's works, Nothing Ventured, Nothing Gained provides a stark contrast between the villainous Axe Gang and the peaceful neighbourhood of the Pig Sty Alley, depicted by a Chinese folk song, Fisherman’s Song of the East China Sea.[27] Along with Wong's compositions and various traditional Chinese songs, classical compositions are featured in the score, including excerpts from Zigeunerweisen by Pablo de Sarasate and Sabre Dance by Aram Khachaturian.[30] A song is sung in the background by Huang Shengyi at the end of the film. The song, "Zhi Yao Wei Ni Huo Yi Tian" (只要為你活一天) was written by Liu Jie Cheng in the 1970s. It tells of a girl's memories of a loved one, and her desire to live for him again.[31] Kung Fu Hustle was nominated for the Best Original Film Score in the 24th Hong Kong Film Awards.[32]
Asian and American versions of the soundtrack have been released. The Asian version of the soundtrack was released on 17 December 2004 by Sony Music Entertainment and has 33 tracks.[33] The American version of the soundtrack was released on 29 March 2005 by Varèse Sarabande and has 19 tracks.[34]
Parodies and references
Kung Fu Hustle makes references to a wide range of films, animated cartoons and other sources, drawing on ideas from Wuxia novels. The housing arrangement of the Pig Sty Alley is similar to that of a 1973 Hong Kong film, The House of 72 Tenants (七十二家房客). When Sing arrives at Pig Sty Alley, he shows fancy footwork with a football, then says, "You're still playing football?". This refers to his previous movie, "Shaolin Soccer". During the altercation between Sing and the hairdresser, the hairdresser states, "Even if you kill me, there will be thousands more of me!". This is a parody of a saying by Lu Hao-tung, a Chinese revolutionary in the late Qing Dynasty.[35] The scene where Sing is chased by the Landlady as he flees from the Alley is a homage to Wile E. Coyote and Road Runner, characters in Looney Tunes cartoons, down to the pursuer's (the Landlady's) ill fate. As Sing arrives at the door to the Beast's cell in the mental asylum, he hallucinates a large wave of blood rushing from the cell door, similar to a scene in The Shining.[36]
A major element of the plot is based on the 1982 martial arts film Ru Lai Shen Zhang (如來神掌). Sing studied the same Buddhist Palm Kung Fu style from a young age and realised it at the end of the film. In reality, it does not leave palm-shaped craters and holes on impact. Instead, the user delivers powerful punches using his palm. The Chinese name of the Beast, the Evil God of the Fiery Cloud (火雲邪神) and the fight with the Landlady and her husband are also references to the film, where a mortally wounded master strikes the patterns of his art's final techniques into a bell so that his apprentice can learn from it.[37] There are direct references to some characters from Jin Yong's wuxia novels. For example, the landlord and landlady referred to themselves as Yang Guo (楊過) and Xiao Long Nü (小龍女) from Jinyong's The Return of the Condor Heroes when they met the Beast.[38]
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4c/Kung_fu_hustle_matrix_parody.jpg/225px-Kung_fu_hustle_matrix_parody.jpg)
References to gangster films are also present. The boss of the Axe Gang, Brother Sum (琛哥) is named after Sam Han (韓琛), the triad boss in Infernal Affairs.[39] The Harpists imitate The Blues Brothers, wearing similar hats and sunglasses at all times. When they are flattered by the Axe Gang advisor, one of them answers "Strictly speaking we're just musicians", similar to a line by Elwood Blues.[40] When Donut dies, he says "in great power lies great responsibility", a clear reference to Spider-Man, said by Uncle Ben before his death.[35] Afterwards, with his dying breath, he gets up, grabs the Landlord by the shirt and utters in English, "What are you prepared to do?", a nod to Sean Connery's character Jim Malone in Brian De Palma's 1987 film The Untouchables.[41] The final fight between Sing and the hundreds of gangsters imitates the fight between Neo and hundreds of Agent Smiths in The Matrix Reloaded.[14][35]
The last scene, in which the beggar tries to sell martial arts manuals, refers directly to the greatest skills in Jin Yong's Condor Trilogy (Nine Yang Manual, Divine Finger Skill, and 18 Dragon-Subduing Palms), Thousand Hand Divine Fist, and Smiling, Proud, Wanderer (Nine Swords of Dugu). The scene where the landlady confronts Brother Sum in the back of his car is a homage to Bruce Lee in the film "Way of the Dragon", where he cracks his knuckles and gives a fast upper nod to the bad guy, telling him to back off.
Releases
Kung Fu Hustle had its world premiere at the 2004 Toronto International Film Festival. It was then released in China, Hong Kong and other countries in Asia with significant overseas Chinese populations in December 2004. The film was first shown in the United States at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2005, and then opened in a general release on 22 April 2005 after being shown in Los Angeles and New York for two weeks. The film was released to most of Europe in June 2005.[42] Kung Fu Hustle is rated IIB (not suitable for children and young persons) in Hong Kong, R in the United States for sequences of strong stylised action and violence and is rated to be viewed by people with a minimum age ranging from 13 to 18 in other countries.[43]
The North American DVD release was on 8 August 2005.[42] A Blu-Ray version of the DVD was released on 12 December 2006 by Sony Pictures.
The Portuguese title of the movie is Kungfusão, which sounds like kung fu and Confusão (confusion).[44] In the same way, the Italian and Spanish titles were Kung-fusion and Kung-fusión, puns of "confusion".[45][46] In France, the film is known as Crazy Kung Fu, and the Hungarian title is A Pofonok Földje, meaning The Land of Punches.[47][48]
Reception
The film was well-received generally by critics, earning the high score of 90% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes based on a total of 166 reviews.[8] Hong Kong director and film critic Gabriel Wong praised the film for its black comedy, special effects and nostalgia, citing the return of many retired kung fu actors from the 1970s.[49] Film critic Roger Ebert described the film "like Jackie Chan and Buster Keaton meet Quentin Tarantino and Bugs Bunny" at the Sundance Film Festival.[50] The comment was printed on the promotion posters for Kung Fu Hustle in the United States.[51][52] Other critics described it as a comedic version of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.[53] Positive reviews generally give credit to the elements of mo lei tau comedy present in the film.[54] A number of reviewers viewed it as a computer-enhanced Looney Tunes punch-up.[8][55] Much of the criticism for the film is directed at its lack of character development and a coherent plot. Las Vegas Weekly, for instance, criticised the film for the lack of a central protagonist and character depth.[56] Criticisms are also directed at the film's cartoonish and childish humour.[57] Richard Roeper gave it a negative review, saying he had “never been a fan of that over the top slapstick stuff”.[58]
Box office
Kung Fu Hustle opened in Hong Kong on 23 December 2004, and earned HK$4,990,000 on its opening day. It stayed at the top of the box office for the rest of 2004 and for much of early 2005, eventually grossing HK$60 million. Its box office tally made it the highest-grossing film in Hong Kong history, surpassing the previous record holder, Chow's Shaolin Soccer.[10] The film's opening weekend at United States was USD$269,225, £469,211 at United Kingdom, €16,094 at Netherlands and $260,000 at Philipines. It grossed SGD 1,885,201 at Singapore as total, where the premiere was.[7]
The film began a limited two-week theatrical run in New York City and Los Angeles on 8 April 2005 before being widely released across North America on 22 April. In its first week of limited release in seven cinemas, it grossed US$269,225 (US$38,461 per screen).[59] When it was expanded to a wide release in 2,503 cinemas, the largest number of cinemas ever for a foreign language film, it made a modest US$6,749,572 (US$2,696 per screen), eventually grossing a total of US$17,108,591 in 129 days. In total, Kung Fu Hustle had a worldwide gross of US$101,104,669.[60] While not a blockbuster, Kung Fu Hustle managed to become the highest-grossing foreign language film in North America in 2005, and went on to gain a cult following on DVD.[12]
Awards
Kung Fu Hustle received a large number of award nominations in the Hong Kong Film Awards and Golden Horse Awards of 2005. It was nominated for 16 Hong Kong Film Awards and won 6:
- Best Picture
- Best Supporting Actor (Yuen Wah)
- Best Sound Effects
- Best Visual Effects
- Best Choreography
- Best Film Editing[30]
In the Golden Horse Awards, Kung Fu Hustle received 10 nominations and won 5:
- Best Picture
- Best Director (Stephen Chow)
- Best Supporting Actress (Yuen Qiu)
- Best Visual Effects
- Best make-up and costume design.[61]
Furthermore, the movie was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film,[14] as well as a BAFTA award for Best Film not in the English language.[62]
Other portrayals
An MMO 2D side-scrolling fighter game based on the movie is currently undergoing closed beta testing in Taiwan, and is due for release in 2009. It will be free, aiming to generate profit through in-game micro transactions. Stages of the game will resemble scenes in the movie, such as the alley and highway. Players in the game will not take the form of Stephen Chow's character, Sing, and it is not known whether any major characters will return; however, the Axe Gang is present in early testing releases.[63]
In 2005, Chow asserted that there would be a sequel to Kung Fu Hustle, although he had not settled on a female lead. "There will be a lot of new characters in the movie. We'll need a lot of new actors. It's possible that we'll look for people abroad besides casting locals."[64] Production of Kung Fu Hustle 2 was delayed while Chow filmed the sci-fi adventure CJ7 (formerly known as A Hope). As a result, Kung Fu Hustle 2 is slated for a 2010 release.[64]
See also
References
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- ^ "Shaolin Soccer". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- ^ a b c "Kung Fu Hustle production notes". Sensasian. Retrieved 2007-05-08.
- ^ a b Bloom, Bob. "Review of Kung Fu Hustle". Journal and Courier. Retrieved 2007-05-11.
- ^ a b "About the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra". Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra. Retrieved 2007-05-13.
- ^ Mape, Marty. "Review of Kung Fu Hustle". Movie Habit. Retrieved 2007-05-13.
- ^ a b "Kung Fu Hustle (2004)". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- ^ a b c "Kung Fu Hustle". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
- ^ "Kung Fu Hustle Review". Metacritic. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- ^ a b "Kung Fu grosses HK$60.8 million in 45 days, creating a new box office record for Hong Kong" (in Chinese). Ming Pao. 2005-02-07. Retrieved 2007-05-02.
- ^ "Highest Grossing Foreign Language Films". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- ^ a b Scheidt, Jason. "Do the Hustle". iMedia Connection. Retrieved 2007-05-03.
- ^ a b "综述:绝世功夫之内容篇-一场功夫宴千秋武侠梦" (in Simplified Chinese). SINA. 2004-12-27. Retrieved 2008-01-09.
- ^ a b c d Szeto, Kin-Yan. "The politics of historiography in Stephen Chow's Kung Fu Hustle". Jump Cut. Retrieved 2007-05-05.
- ^ a b Stephen Chow (2005-07-29). Interview with Stephen Chow (Online video). Hong Kong: iFilm.
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- ^ a b Roman, Julian (2005-04-04). "Stephen Chow talks Kung Fu Hustle". MovieWeb. Retrieved 2007-05-14.
- ^ Xu, Gary. "The Gongfu of Kung Fu Hustle". Synoptique. Retrieved 2007-05-05.
- ^ Stephen Chow (2005-07-29). Kung Fu Hustle Production Design (Online video). Hong Kong: iFilm.
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- ^ "Kung Fu Hustle general information". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2007-05-13.
- ^ a b Zu, Blackcat (2004-12-31). "An Interview with the Production Team (Centro Digital Pictures Ltd.)" (in Traditional Chinese). ??. p. 1. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
- ^ Zhu, Rongbin (2003-08-20). "洪金寶走人袁和平救場 《功夫》緊急走馬換將 (Sammo Hung quits and is replaced by Yuen Woo-Ping)" (in Traditional Chinese). Eastern News. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
- ^ Zhang, Wenbo (2004-12-27). "绝世功夫之技术篇--想像力的最高境界" (in Simplified Chinese). The Beijing News. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
- ^ Shieh, Joe. "Kung Fu Hustle Review". KFC Cinema. Retrieved 2007-05-08.
- ^ Zhang, Xiaomin. "从李小龙替身到影帝 元华:担忧中国功夫后继无人 (From a Bruce Lee impersonator to a movie star: Yuen Wah worries that Chinese martial arts may lack a successor)" (in Simplified Chinese). Eastern Sports Daily. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
- ^ a b "元秋:演007时我才十几岁 现在不担心形象 (Yuen Qiu: I was only 18 when I appeared in a Bond Film, I don't worry about my image now)" (in Simplified Chinese). Sina. 2004-12-17. Retrieved 2007-05-16.
- ^ Li, Yijun (2004-12-24). "《功夫》配角都有功夫 (The supporting characters of Kung Fu Hustle know kung fu)" (in Simplified Chinese). Zaobao. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
- ^ a b Kin-Wah, Szeto. "Geopolitical imaginary: Hong Kong, the Mainland and Hollywood". Jump Cut. Retrieved 2007-05-11.
- ^ "《功夫》明星说功夫 梁小龙演反派感觉很陌生 (Kung Fu Hustle actors comment on the film)" (in Simplified Chinese). Sina. 2007-12-15. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
- ^ Pollard, Mark. "Kung Fu Hustle review". Kung Fu Cinema. Retrieved 2007-05-18.
- ^ a b Sung, Mark (2004). "Kung Fu Hustle review". Retrieved 2007-05-12.
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{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ "Soundtrack Details of Kung Fu Hustle". 2004-12-17. Retrieved 2007-05-12.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ "Kung Fu Hustle sountrack information". 2005-03-29. Retrieved 2007-05-12.
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:|first=
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suggested) (help) - ^ Holtreman, Vic (2005-04-19). "Ebert and *cough* Roeper: Anyone Still Watch This Show?". Screen Rant. Retrieved 2008-08-08.
- ^ Strowbridge, C.S. (2005-04-12). "Hustle and Bustle". The Numbers. Retrieved 2007-05-03.
- ^ "Kung Fu Hustle Box Office Data". The Numbers. Retrieved 2007-05-03.
- ^ "周星驰横扫金马奖全靠"功夫" 舒淇喜极而泣 (Thanks to Kung Fu Hustle, Stephen Chow makes a clean sweep of the Golden Horse Awards. Shu qi cries in joy)". Sohu. 2005-11-14. Retrieved 2007-05-02.Template:Zh icon
- ^ "Stephen Chow in Kung Fu Hustle (2004)". Mooviees!. Retrieved 2007-05-14.
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- ^ a b "Stephen Chow Talks "Kung Fu Hustle" Sequel". Rotten Tomatoes. 2005-08-31. Retrieved 2007-06-27. Cite error: The named reference "Gram123" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).