City Hunter (film)

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City Hunter
James Wong
Production
companies

Paragon Films
Golden Way Films
Distributed byGolden Harvest
Gala Film Distribution
Release date
  • 14 January 1993 (1993-01-14)
Running time
105 minutes
Country
Cantonese
Box officeUS$14.6 million

City Hunter (Chinese: 城市獵人; pinyin: Sing si lip yan) is a 1993 Hong Kong action comedy film written and directed by Wong Jing, and starring Jackie Chan, Joey Wong, Kumiko Goto, Chingmy Yau, Gary Daniels, Leon Lai and Richard Norton.[1][2] It is an adaptation of the Japanese manga of the same name by Tsukasa Hojo, first serialized in Weekly Shōnen Jump between 1985 and 1991.

Chan plays Ryo Saeba, a womanizing private investigator hired to retrieve the wayward daughter of a news magnate. In the process, he and his partner/love interest Kaori (Wong) find themselves on a cruise ship taken over by terrorists.

The film was released in Hong Kong by Golden Harvest on Chinese New Year 1993.

Plot

Kaori Makimura
, the younger sister of his late partner Hideyuki, who with his dying words made the womanizing detective swear that he would never seduce her. In spite of this, Kaori has fallen madly in love with Ryo, and is upset when he seemingly spurns her advances.

Saeba and Makimura are hired to locate Kiyoko Imamura, the runaway daughter of the

cruise liner
, the Fuji Maru.

Ryo follows, not knowing that the spurned Kaori has boarded, with her lustful cousin Rocky. Unbeknownst to all of them, the cruise has been targeted by terrorists led by ex-US Special Forces Colonel "Big Mac" MacDonald, who plan to hijack it and hold the wealthy passengers hostage. Undercover police officer Saeko Nogami and her assistant Kasumi Asou are in pursuit.

Staying next door from each other, Kiyoko inadvertently overhears MacDonald's plan. MacDonald discovers her and sends one of his men to kill her, but she knocks him out and escapes. She then bumps into the ship's first officer, who takes her to the boiler room and reveals himself as one of the terrorists. When he attempts to silence Kiyoko, Ryo, who had been staying there since his encounter with Kaori and her cousin at the swimming pool, saves her. When MacDonald's gang arrive, the officer is killed in the shootout while Ryo and Kiyoko escape into the movie theater, where Game of Death is being shown. To beat two towering opponents, Ryo interprets Bruce Lee's techniques from the film.

At the ship's casino, the sailaway party is interrupted when MacDonald kills the captain and terrorizes the partygoers, including Saeko and her sidekick. After robbing them of their valuables, he entices the rich patrons into a sadistic card game. A few opponents are quickly disposed of until Kao Ta, a skilled card gamer who uses his cards as shurikens, joins in. When MacDonald is distracted by seeing Ryo and Kiyoko not far away, Ta and Saeko put an end to his game.

MacDonald's right-hand man Kim kidnaps Kaori and takes her to his room. When Ryo bursts in, both men fight before MacDonald and his men interrupt, capturing Ryo in the process. Kaori escapes, bumping into Kiyoko, Saeko, Kasumi and Kao. They take down a gay terrorist trying to seduce Rocky and prepare to save Ryo.

Ryo is stood before a firing squad. Kiyoko, Saeko, and her sidekick interrupt the planned execution, but are forced to separate by MacDonald's gang. Kiyoko uses her gymnastic skills to defeat one henchman, Saeko saves Ta after he runs out of cards in a fight with several terrorists, and her sidekick falls off a ledge and is left unconscious. Ryo goes into the

electric shock. This causes him to hallucinate and think Kim is Ken from the game. After a failed attempt to defeat him as E. Honda, Ryo defeats him as Chun-Li
.

As a Taiwanese counter terrorism unit, the "Thunderbolts Squad", arrives and take his men out, MacDonald blows up bombs he had set up all over the ship and takes Kaori hostage at the casino. When Ryo and Saeko arrive, he injures both women and starts a long fight with Ryo. However, MacDonald is thrown into the stage and dies when he accidentally steps on his remote, setting off the bombs behind the TV panels.

Ryo and Kaori find Kiyoko and return to her father. He speaks to Ryo privately, seeing him as a future husband to Kiyoko. Listening to their conversation, Kaori leaves in anger, unaware that Ryo has declined the man's offer. However, Ryo finds her and tries to apologize with a rose, but then Saeko drives up and flirts with him. He gives her the rose instead and furious, Kaori smashes him through the air with a big hammer. Ryo wakes up in his recurring dream with beautiful women at the swimming pool.

Cast

Note

The original Cantonese-language version of the film uses the Chinese names for the main characters, but these are translated as their original Japanese counterparts in the English subtitles and dubbing.

For example, Ryo Saeba's name (繪場亮) would properly be transliterated 'Huì Chǎng Liàng' (

Pinyin Romanization
). His Chinese name, 'Mèng Bō' (孟波), directly transliterated into Japanese would be rendered 'Takeshi Nami'.

Production

The idea of adapting City Hunter into a live-action film came after a poll of Japanese Jackie Chan fans showed their enthusiasm for the actor playing Ryo Saeba.

Filming took place mostly aboard a real cruise ship and on-location in

Tokyo, Japan. The massive lounge of the cruise ship was a set constructed at Shaw Brothers Studio.[3]

Jackie Chan suffered multiple injuries during filming, including a broken ankle and a dislocated shoulder.

Mars to save time on reshoots.[3]

According to Norton and Gary Daniels, Wong Jing did not have a set script, but simply wrote dialogue for the actors to ad-lib on the day of filming. Daniels took time off from shooting the Albert Pyun-directed Knights to film City Hunter.

The name of the Street Fighter character was changed from "E. Honda" to "E. Honde". This was because Chan had a contract with the Mitsubishi car company at the time, and Honda is the name of a rival company.[3]

Release

The film was released in Hong Kong by Golden Harvest on Chinese New Year (January 14) 1993, the same day as another Wong Jing film, Fight Back to School III.

Reception

Box office

In Hong Kong, the film grossed HK$30,843,062[5] (US$3,986,952),[6] making it the fourth top-grossing Hong Kong film of 1993.[5] In Japan, the film grossed ¥561 million[7] (US$5.05 million).[8]

In Taiwan, where it released in January 1993, it was the ninth highest-grossing film of the year, with NT$46,360,950[9] (US$1,824,328).[10] In South Korea, the film sold 808,329 tickets and grossed US$3.72 million.[11] Combined, the film grossed a total of approximately US$14,581,280 in East Asia.

Critical response

The DVD release received mixed reviews in the early 2000s, with a 50% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Critics praised the action sequences, but criticised the story and slapstick anime style. IGN concluded that "it fails as an adaptation but succeeds as a fun Jackie Chan flick."[12]

Home media

On 23 April 2001, a DVD was released by

Shout Factory in a double feature single disc with Battle Creek Brawl on both DVD and Blu-ray
.

All currently available versions restore a scene that was removed from both the theatrical release as well as the

AIDS
in Chinese, only to discover that they understood him very well. The scene was removed because the film's distributors were concerned that foreign audiences might be offended by the homophobic nature of the scene.

See also

References

  1. ^ City Hunter at HKMDB
  2. ^ City Hunter at chinesemov.com
  3. ^ a b c City Hunter (film), Audio commentary by Bey Logan, Special Features (DVD featurette) (DVD). Hong Kong Legends, UK. 1992.
  4. ^ Jackie Chan. "Jackie's Aches and Pains: It Only Hurts When I'm Not Laughing". Random House. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  5. ^ a b "1993年全年十大最賣座香港影片如下(首輪)". Hong Kong Box Office Limited (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 9 April 2018. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  6. ^ "Official exchange rate (LCU per US$, period average) - Hong Kong". World Bank. 1993. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  7. ^ "【ジャッキーチェン興行成績】 第12回:日本での興行収入". KungFu Tube (in Japanese). 2012. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  8. ^ "Official exchange rate (LCU per US$, period average) - Japan". World Bank. 1993. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  9. ^ "1993 Taiwan Box Office". National Chengchi University. Archived from the original on 21 April 2001. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  10. ^ "Historical exchange rates (TWD)". fxtop.com. January 1993. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  11. ^ "【ジャッキーチェン興行成績】 第10回:韓国での興行収入". KungFu Tube (in Japanese). 5 September 2010. Retrieved 7 December 2018.
  12. ^ City Hunter at Rotten Tomatoes

External links