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Kung Fu Hustle
Kung Fu Hustle — So many gangsters… so little time.
2004 7.5 68.0K R views saved
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Kung Fu Hustle

2004 7.5 68.0K R views saved
Kung Fu Hustle

It's the 1940s, and the notorious Axe Gang terrorizes Shanghai. Small-time criminals Sing and Bone hope to join, but they only manage to make lots of very dangerous enemies. Fortunately for them, kung fu masters and hidden strength can be found in unlikely places. Now they just have to take on the entire Axe Gang.

Countries: HK
Languages: Cantonese
Content Rating: R
Runtime: 1hrs 39min
Status: Released
Release date: 2004-02-10
Release format: Streaming — Jun 02, 2005
Comments
@greenfrog221 1 year ago

This is one of my favorite movies. The action and comedy is pretty much relentless. Someone mentioned that it slows down a bit at the end and I do agree with that, but I still like the ending overall. I'll always keep this movie in my collection, it holds up well to re-watches.

1
@greenfrog221 1 year ago

This is one of my favorite movies. The action and comedy is pretty much relentless. Someone mentioned that it slows down a bit at the end and I do agree with that, but I still like the ending overall. I'll always keep this movie in my collection, it holds up well to re-watches.

1
ZmirBurger
@zmirburger 3 years ago

His best movie hands down.

It was his first movie i ever saw, and ive been binging his stuff eversince.
If you want to see what Stephen Chow is all about, start with this movie!

1
Muhammad Salman
@salman7236 1 year ago

Looney Tunes ahh movie 😭😭

0
Sunny Senpai
@sunny-senpai 8 years ago

I nearly died at that cigarette scene xD

11
rickay
@rickay 4 years ago

Loved it , funny lots of action

5
Siggi
@siggi963 7 months ago

An excellent martial arts crime comedy. Great entertainment.

0
thantez
@thantez 2 years ago

After see this movie: now I know rings of power's action scenes are adopted from where!

0
@drqshadow 5 years ago

Wacky, cartoonish martial arts action with a big CGI budget and rampant imagination, similar in tone to Stephen Chow's preceding work, Shaolin Soccer. It's very much a case of style over substance, as the plot only serves to move us from one outrageous set piece spectacle to the next, and makes no bones about it. That's Chow's style, with far more focus on effects-laden fighting techniques than inscrutable storytelling, and it works for him. We're treated to dozens of unique forms, from countless unexpected sources, as nearly every denizen of a dusty, lower-class slum turns out to be a kung fu master of some sort. Most memorable, of course, is the chain-smoking old landlady, who batters every comer and effortlessly steals each scene without even pausing to pull the curlers from her hair.

It's indulgent and silly, watery and childish, but it's also richly entertaining and singularly stylish. Great background party-viewing material.

3
@kouma 10 years ago

Has a really strong start but unfortunately drops off towards the end.

1
Amarantha
@amarantha 2 months ago

I found the first half meh but the second half made up for it.

0
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