Watch unlimited films online for $6.99.
Try MUBI for FREE.
 

Twin Dragons

Shuang long hui

Hong Kong

1992

100 Min
Color
2.35:1
Cantonese
  • Currently 2.4/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

   |   

DIR Tsui Hark, Ringo Lam

EXEC Ng See-Yuen

PROD Teddy Robin Kwan

SCR Barry Wong, Tsui Hark, Tung Cho 'Joe' Cheung, Yik Wong

DP Arthur Wong, Wing-Hung Wong

CAST Jackie Chan, Maggie Cheung, Teddy Robin, Anthony Chan, Philip Chan, Sylvia Chang, Nina Li Chi

ED Marco Mak

MUSIC Lowell Lo, Barrington Pheloung

Synopsis

A double dose of Jackie Chan means twice the action! In this high-impact action-comedy, Chan plays a pair of long-lost twins: John was raised in the United States and is a famous classical musician, while Boomer is a rowdy mechanic who likes to race cars. When the brothers meet unexpectedly in Hong Kong, it’s time for some serious mistaken-identity pickles as John becomes a mobster’s target and Boomer is expected to perform in a concert.

Director

Original

Tsui Hark

A pivotal figure in the evolution of Hong Kong cinema, action virtuoso Tsui Hark was one of the most popular and influential filmmakers ever to emerge from the Pacific Rim motion-picture community. Famed for his work’s rapid-fire pacing, gymnastic camerawork, and visceral intensity, Hark also won acclaim for his rapier wit and impressive stylistic range, moving easily from the martial arts to gangster dramas to even romance. In addition to reviving the moribund swordfighting and kung-fu genres in the early ‘90s, he was also instrumental in bringing the special effects wizardry of Western filmmaking to the East, eventually following the lead of longtime friend and associate John Woo to Hollywood.
Born Xu Wen Guang in Vietnam in 1951, Hark made his first 8 mm amateur film at the age of 13. After relocating to Hong Kong in 1966, he later attended the University of Texas, graduating in 1969. The following year he directed a documentary, From Spikes to Spindles. After relocating to New… read more

Original

Ringo Lam

One of Hong Kong’s most respected film-makers, Ringo Lam was born in 1955. He began his career in 1973 when he entered TVB’s (the television division of the Shaw Bros. studio) Actor’s Training Programme. One of Lam’s classmates was a young actor named Chow Yun-Fat. The two quickly became friends and went out drinking a lot, often getting into trouble with local hoods. One of these incidents, where Chow and Lam were almost forced to drink their own urine, made its way into two John Woo-directed films, A Better Tomorrow (1987) and more graphically in 1990’s Bullet in the Head. (For those that do not know, John Woo is also a good friend of Chow, so he heard the urine story and wanted to use it in ABT. BITH was originally meant to be a prequel to ABT, so Woo showed the story in more detail in that film).

Lam soon realized that acting was not his forte, and became a production assistant for TVB. Shaw Bros. (and TVB) were notoriously cheap and did not allow much (if any) creativity… read more

Wall

Displaying 0 wall posts.

Related Films

Fans

Displaying 4 of 4 fans.

Lists

Displaying 1 of 1 lists.

Reviews

No reviews yet — Write the first

Forum

Displaying 0 discussion topics.