Anita Mui/Jackie Chan – Dragons Forever Theme

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Dragons Forever

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dragons Forever

Dragons Forever HK poster.jpgTheatrical release poster

By May be found at the following website: Movieposterdb.com, Fair use, Link

Chinese name
Traditional Chinese飛龍猛將
Simplified Chinese飞龙猛将
Transcriptions
Directed bySammo Hung
Corey Yuen
Screenplay byRoy Szeto
Story byGordon Chan
Leung Yiu-ming
Produced byLeonard Ho
StarringJackie Chan
Sammo Hung
Yuen Biao
Deannie Yip
Pauline Yeung
Crystal Kwok
CinematographyJimmy Leung
Joseph Cheung
Edited byJoseph Chiang
Peter Cheung
Music byJames Wong Jim
Production
companies
Golden Harvest
Paragon Films
Distributed byGolden Harvest
Release date11 February 1988
Running time94 minutes
CountryHong Kong
LanguageCantonese
Box officeUS$11 million (HK/Taiwan/Japan)
179,985 tickets (Seoul)

Dragons Forever (Chinese: 飛龍猛將) is a 1988 Hong Kong martial arts action-comedy film directed by Sammo Hung, who also starred in the film and co-directed by Corey Yuen. The film co-stars Jackie ChanYuen BiaoDeannie YipPauline Yeung, and Crystal Kwok. It is the last film in which Hung, Chan and Biao all appeared in together, as later Chan subsequently focused on his solo film career.

"When We Touch" Theme from "Dragons Forever" (1988) performed by Anita Mui & Jackie Chan

Plot

A fishery is seeking court action against a local chemical factory for polluting the water. The mysterious chemical company hires lawyer Jackie Lung to find information that will discredit the fishery. He employs his arms dealer friend, Wong to woo the fishery owner, Miss Yip, to try to convince her to settle out of court.

Lung also brings in goofy inventor and professional criminal, Tung, to bug her apartment. Unfortunately, Wong and Tung are unaware of each other’s roles and soon come into confrontation, while Lung tries to maintain the peace.

Wong falls for Miss Yip, whilst Lung woos her cousin, Miss Wen, an environmental scientist who is going to testify on Miss Yip’s behalf. The three men inadvertently discover that the chemical company is just a facade for a narcotics empire, ran by Hua Hsien-Wu (Yuen Wah). They soon come up against Hua’s thugs, and ultimately infiltrate the factory for a showdown with Hua himself and his henchman – martial arts master.

Dragons Forever Theme [English Version]

Versions

There are three distinct versions of the film: the Hong Kong theatrical release (94 minutes), the international theatrical release (94 minutes), and the Japanese theatrical release (98 minutes). Two scenes with Timothy Tung Te-Biao (Yuen Biao) visiting a psychiatrist (played by Lucky Stars veteran Stanley Fung) were cut from the domestic Hong Kong print of the film, but remain intact in the international version and the Japanese version. These scenes, titled “Couch Potato” and “Mr Kinetic”, appeared as extras on the Hong Kong Legends DVD of the film. In the latter, the psychiatrist was in the process of being robbed. So that Tung would not realise a robbery was taking place, one of the robbers, posing as the psychiatrist, gave him advice over the intercom – to “kill the witnesses”, which explains why Tung attacks Jackie Lung (Chan) and Nancy Lee (Pauline Yeung) in a later scene, wearing a mask and armed with a knife.

[Trailer] 飛龍猛將 ( Dragons Forever ) – Restored Version

Several scenes were slightly trimmed for the international version. The only scene completely omitted shows how Tung Te-Biao leads Jackie and Nancy into the chemical factory, having informed them about the danger Wong Fei-Hung (Sammo Hung) was in. They locate a hidden door, leading to where Wong is held captive and the drugs are refined. Ling distracts the guard, allowing Jackie the opportunity to attack. This scene is intact in the Hong Kong and Japanese versions.

Dragons Forever – Behind the Scenes (1988)

The Japanese version is the only one that contains all scenes in their complete form, except that it replaces the original end credits crawl of the police arrival at the factory with a different end credits crawl featuring outtakes from the film.

Dragons Forever – Trailer Englisch HD

In 2020 a limited edition Blu-ray containing fully restored transfers of all three versions was released by 88 Films.

Jackie Chan Dragons Forever (1988) Out-Takes & Behind The Scene

Cast

Dragons Forever Theme

Reception

On the Hong Kong Legends DVD release of Dragons Forever, Hong Kong cinema expert Bey Logan offers his opinion on why the film underperformed both in the domestic and Japanese markets. The primary reason cited is that the actors played roles against type. Jackie Chan plays a slick lawyer who chases women, in contrast to the happy-go-lucky everyman characters he usually plays. Similarly, Yuen Biao plays an eccentric and possibly mentally disturbed character, rather than the underdog character fans were used to. For Sammo Hung, rather than the timid character that has been described in earlier films, he instead plays like a rascal. Logan explains that in general, the cinema going public in Hong Kong are not as open to such departures of role as, perhaps, Western audiences would be.

Additional reasons cited include the occasional use of coarse language in the film, and the scenes of narcotics production, particularly Hung’s character being injected with drugs against his will. The fact that Chan’s character has a relationship with a woman may also have had an effect, particularly in the Japanese market, as many female viewers could not accept that their idol was not single. On learning that Chan was in a relationship in real life, one Japanese fan had committed suicide, and another poisoned herself in the offices of Golden Harvest.

Box office

In Hong Kong, Dragons Forever grossed HK$33,578,920 (US$4,301,681) during its theatrical run. In Taiwan, it was the eight highest-grossing film of 1988, earning NT$12,429,555 (US$441,861). In Japan, where it was released as Cyclone Z, the film earned ¥800 million (US$6.24 million) at the box office. This adds up to US$10,983,542 grossed in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Japan.

In South Korea, the film sold 179,985 tickets in the capital city of Seoul.

Awards

Watch the movie (English version)

Jackie Chan "Dragons Forever" (1988) Ultra HD 4K Full Movie – Extended Cut in Classic English Dub

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