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Shanghai Knights

عملمہم جوئیمزاحیہ
سال2003
دورانیہ1h 54m

When a Chinese rebel murders Chon's estranged father and escapes to England, Chon and Roy make their way to London with revenge on their minds.

ٹریلر

کاسٹ

Jackie Chan

Chon Wang

Owen Wilson

Roy O'Bannon

Fann Wong

Chon Lin

Aaron Taylor-Johnson

Charlie

Tom Fisher

Artie Doyle

Aidan Gillen

Rathbone

Donnie Yen

Wu Chow

Oliver Cotton

Jack the Ripper

Alison King

Prostitute

Constantine Gregory

The Mayor

JH

Jonathan Harvey

Fagin #1

RH

Richard Haas

Street Preacher

Anna-Louise Plowman

Debutante

Georgina Chapman

Debutante

John Owens

Server

Richard Bremmer

Master at Arms

Kim Chan

Chon Wang's Father

Gemma Jones

Queen Victoria

آپ کو یہ بھی پسند آ سکتا ہے

تبصرے

10 تبصرے

ama_ghana_1Mar 13, 2026
Jarry ExcondeSep 28, 2025

😯😄👍🤘😎

Jarry ExcondeSep 26, 2025

😎🤘👍😄😯

Jarry ExcondeSep 25, 2025

😯😄👍🤘😎

Ma Ra Mo...May 29, 2023

source: Shanghai Knights

marymohanoeMay 27, 2023
😍Feb 15, 2023

Shanghai Knights is a hilarious movie that any Jackie or Owen fan has to watch. I enjoyed the whole movie from the start to the end. Even though the plot was somewhat predictable, the moves and jokes put up by the duals are worth the ticket price themselves. A++++++

Courtnaé PaulFeb 15, 2023

SHANGHAI KNIGHTS is easily the worst Jackie Chan film that I've ever seen & I am a guy who sat through HALF A LOAF OF KUNG FU. The chemistry between Chan & Owen Wilson is non existant as they seem to be reading their dialogue off of billboards a mile away. The jokes are lame, the fight sequences are faked & unconvincing & its obvious that Jackie is just too old to chop the suey anymore. What is the point of a jackie Chan film when it isn't Jackie doing the fighting or stunts? If you want to have fun with a Jackie Chan flick check out any of his HK flicks from 1989 to 1998 (ie PROJECT A, SUPERCOP, DRUNKEN MASTER 1 & 2, FIRST STRIKE, MR NICE GUY), but avoid his US stinkers like the SHANGHAI & RUSH HOUR flicks & THE TUXEDO. Unfortunatley I think the jig is up for Jackie because if he had to fake his fights in this crap he probobly doesn't have it anymore period.

خود ولا خليFeb 15, 2023

Fresh out after his box-office bomb The Tuxedo, Jackie Chan is back, again playing the role of Chon Wang. In this sequel to Shanghai Noon, Wang and Roy O'Bannon (Owen Wilson) are in different parts of the country: Chon in Nevada, Roy in New York. However, after Chon's father is killed by Lord Rathbone (Aidan Gillen), he must go to London to find Rathbone to avenge the death of the father. Along the way, Chon's sister Lin (Fann Wong) comes in. Guess who is smitten by her? Another reason why Chon has to kill Rathbone is that he has a sacred Seal of the Emperor. That's just thrown in to make the plot make more sense. Mucho fight scenes and hilarity ensues. Chan does better in buddy action comedies like this, instead of straight action. He's noted for using props around him in his fight scenes; this movie is no exception. Chan just takes any old prop he sees and does, what looks like, improv. It's hard to imagine all of these scenes choreographed perfectly; they seem so slipshod (in a good way). All of the fight scenes have Chan's usual charm and wit, you can't help but smile whenever he does seemingly impossible stunts. Many of the characters were one-dimensional. Rathbone doesn't really have any depth, except that everyone likes him. However, in movies like this, you don't really need twists and turns. Lin's beautiful, but what is her background? Someone working for Rathbone has no depth whatsoever and just pops in. And, of course, there's the little pickpocket (Aaron Johnson) whose name is quite funny. He just comes and goes. The opening credits were almost exactly like the ones for Shanghai Noon, with sweeps over Chinese letters. Something I enjoyed was how they incorporated famous figures, though a little bit goes a long way. About halfway through, it takes one of those obligatory buddy turns, where they end up hating each other. However, this time, the roles are reversed from Shanghai Noon and it lasts for about two minutes, which leaves you wondering why it was even put in. They took the cliché light-heartedly. At times, it did get heavy-handed (especially at the beginning), but managed to pull through. The sets were very authentic. Unlike the first, where they could just use cheap facades, they had to create a whole new world, and they did so. You could really believe that the clan was in England. I also liked the transitions in between scenes. They were all `swishes', but as the movie progressed and got more `complex', so did the transitions, from going out on both sides to diagonal. It may seem rather juvenile to put it in, and even more so to mention it, but I thought they were quite cool. I do wish, however, that they had spent more time in the West. If they had had more about the horse from the first one (also, whatever happened to Chon's wife, Falling Leaves?), it would have been better. However, it almost immediately left the West for the East. Like The Tuxedo, Chan allows himself to be pushed around and beaten. Chan is great, as usual. He's a great diversion from the real life. He can make us believe that what is done can be done. Technically, he can, because he does his own stunts. Wilson is in top comedic form here, as usual, also. He's quickly becoming an item in Hollywood, and his name's getting out there. Then again, he did do I Spy. I laughed a lot during Shanghai Knights. Many came from the fight scenes, and others were from Wilson's one-liners. I love how the writers can merge action and comedy seamlessly. I hope for a Shanghai Five, where they go to Hawaii, or some sequel, since this franchise is going somewhere. My rating: 7.5/10 Rated PG-13 for action violence and sexual content.

Jameel AbdulaFeb 15, 2023

The implied promise of a sequel is that it will give you what you got from the first movie, but that promise is often broken. Shanghai Knights is an exception, giving the audience that same mix of goofy dialogue and slapstick martial arts that made the first movie so much fun. This time the duo heads to England, allowing them to make a bunch of incredibly silly jokes about England and Sherlock Holmes and Charlie Chaplin. The movie is essentially one long wink, and if you like that sort of humor your likely to find much of it amusing. At times I thought they pushed the anachronistic dialogue a little too far, as when Owen asks the gorgeous Fann Wong if she works out, but overall it works pretty well. Chan supplies a number of very entertaining fight sequences along with his usual goofy charm and the end result feels like a more actiony version of a Hope/Crosby road movie.