The Tuxdeo Full Movie

The Tuxdeo Full Movie


Director: Kevin Donovan
Writers: Phil Hay (story), Matt Manfredi (story),
Stars: Jackie Chan, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Jason Isaacs



Movie Review

The Tuxedo opens with a shot of a mountain spring. Jackie Chan and Jennifer Love Hewitt's names appear in a waterfall and trickle away. Then a deer walks into the stream, and the camera shows a close-up of it urinating. Then the camera follows that urine as it flows through the stream, through murky pipes and filters, ultimately ending up in a factory where it's poured into a plastic bottle. It's supposed to be a joke about the source of the trendy bottled waters people drink, but it's an off-putting opening that the movie never quite rises above.
Chan plays Jimmy Tong, a cab driver who wears a "soul patch" on his chin and is a regular customer at Hooters (the restaurant, not co-star Hewitt). He pines for the sales lady at a high falutin' art dealership, but can't muster the nerve to ask her out.
Things start looking up for him when a mysterious woman (Debi Mazar) enters his cab, and puts his driving skills to the test. He passes, and lands a high-paying gig as the chauffeur for Clark Devlin (Jason Isaacs), a suave, sharp-dressed high-roller who can easily seduce women and catch falling glasses of champagne without spilling a drop.

Tong soon learns that he's working for a secret agent, who's also a really nice guy so long as you don't touch his special glass-encased tuxedo. But when Devlin gets put out of commission by a bad guy's bomb on a casual trip for some fast food, he asks Jimmy to take his place, leaving him with the mysterious clue "Walter Strider" before passing out. Jimmy takes him to the hospital, then goes back to Devlin's mansion where he dons the forbidden tuxedo. To his surprise, it turns out to be a high-tech weapon that automatically adjusts to the person wearing it and has a variety of functions from demolition to dancing.
Meanwhile, the CSA headquarters, the secret (and fictional) government agency that Devlin works for, are in a tizzy over bottled water baron Diedrich Banning (Ritchie Coster). Rookie agent Del Blaine (Hewitt) gets assigned to the case after figuring out that the previous agent on the case was killed by extreme dehydration. It turns out Banning has developed a formula to dehydrate the world, thereby essentially making him the ruler as only his water will be able to keep people hydrated.


Del teams up with the veteran Devlin, who she's never met before. Unbeknownst to her, since Devlin is really Jimmy, he's more of a rookie than her. Espionage and tuxedo-related antics ensue.
But who goes to a Jackie Chan movie for the plot? Chan is the Fred Astaire of action, and people line up to see what new jaw-dropping stunts he has in store. That's what makes the premise of The Tuxedo an imperfect fit for the star from the outset. Chan is practically a superhuman already in his physical abilities. He's his own special effect. He doesn't need some CGI super-suit.
Predictably, the result is less Jackie Chan action than his previous Hollywood fare, and more of the wirework and post-production enhanced variety that's more befitting a Jet Li movie. Unlike Jet Li, though, Chan is smart in at least giving his character a good excuse for the super-human stunts in the form of the Tuxedo, even if it's a weak one.


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The Spy Next door Full movie (English)

The Spy Next door Full movie


Director: Brian Levant
Writers: Jonathan Bernstein (screenplay), James Greer (screenplay), 3 more credits »
Stars: Jackie Chan, Amber Valletta, Madeline Carroll 



Review about this movie

Overall I have to say that I really enjoyed this movie.  Was it the best movie ever?  No.  Was it Jackie Chan’s best movie ever?  Certainly not.  But it was a very entertaining movie, full of the the core humor style that Jackie Chan is famous for.  And this is primarily why I liked it – I could see Jackie Chan as a part of this movie, not just the star of the movie.  A quality that I feel has followed him throughout his career.

The first few minutes of this movie start with a title sequence that is a video montage of scenes from many of Jackie Chan’s Spy and Police movies while the song Secret Agent Man plays.  This alone is sure to keep a fan like myself in their seat for the duration.

We learn about Jackie Chan’s character, Bob Ho, right away discovering that he is a man suffering from the same sorts of duality issues as Clark Kent.  By day Bob is a mild-mannered pen salesman, but by night he’s a secret agent on loan to the CIA from Chinese Intelligence.  We discover that as Bob the pen salesman he lives next door to a woman, Gillian (Amber Valletta), who he is dating, and her three children.  In typical American movie fashion, the children hate him.



What we learn is that Bob is ready to retire from being a spy – he wants to settle down.  In fact, he wants to marry Gillian.  During a date between the two, he excuses himself to capture his nemesis Poldark (Magnús Scheving), and once he’s done so, he says his good-byes to his two CIA friends, Colton (Billy Ray Cyrus) & Glaze (George Lopez), and retires from the spy biz.  End of movie.  Roll credits.  Yeah right.

We’re back in suburban life, Bob is apologizing to Gillian for leaving in the middle of their date, and they’re talking about marriage and really bad art.  And the kids begin plotting to break them up.  Gillian gets a phone call, and has to rush off to be with her father who’s in the hospital.  Bob steps up and offers to watch the kids.  All of this happens in the first 15 minutes of the movie.

From there, we are sent travelling through a winding road containing a secret formula, Russian bad guys with bad Russian accents, spy gadgetry, and the “kung-fu” that Jackie Chan is most famous for.  And somehow, we get to a cohesive family unit that finds true love and happiness.  Oh sure, there’s bumps along the way as a pissed off Gillian sticks it to Bob for putting her kids in harms way while he plays his spy games.  Of course, that it all happened is not his fault – the Russians aren’t actually after him, he’s just collateral damage, as are the kids.

The movie is funny, especially the moments with the youngest child.  She and Jackie Chan work well together on the screen, and their bond seemed genuine.  Their interactions are, at times, very slapstick, and there are moments with her and him that are clearly designed for a laugh, and those moments succeed.  The geekiness of the middle child is also funny, but in a different sort of way.  There is no humor in the character of the oldest child – she is the tragedian of the story.

The roles played by Billy Ray Cyrus and George Lopez are small.  Of the two, George Lopez’s role could have been played by anyone – he did almost no acting, and his entire purpose in the movie seemed to be getting hit over the head with large objects and falling unconscious much like a character out of an old Bugs Bunny cartoon might.  Billy Ray Cyrus also didn’t have much screen time, but seeing him in a duster with a gun made me actually like his character.  He looked interesting, and cool – I often feel this way about the characters he plays.

One thing I noticed is that it seems Jackie Chan is finally starting to show his age some.  He’s not quite as young looking as he once was when the camera is in close.  And I’m pretty convinced that in one scene, with a bicycle, he wasn’t doing his own stunts.  This won’t dissuade me from Jackie Chan movies in the future.  In fact, I’m really looking forward to Karate Kid.  It just bears mentioning as Jackie Chan is well known for doing his own stunts.

The movie closes with the standard Jackie Chan style blooper reel, so don’t walk out once the credits start rolling or you might miss them.  They’re not as funny as the ones in some of his older movies, but rather center around his continuing challenges with the English language.

If you have kids you will enjoy taking them to this movie.  It won’t bore you, and it will keep them occupied.  If you are a Jackie Chan fan, you’ll get your fix from this movie.  For everyone else, it will all come down to taste and what you do or don’t like.  I know this, my wife and I enjoyed this movie, and we’ll probably see it again when its released to DVD/Blu-ray.

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[Jackie Chan] The Karate Kid 2010 Full Movie (720p HD)

The karate kid Full Movie

Director: Harald Zwart
Writers: Christopher Murphey (screenplay), Robert Mark Kamen (story)
Stars: Jaden Smith, Jackie Chan, Taraji P. Henson



About this movie
At 7, Jaden Smith appeared in his first movie, The Pursuit of Happyness, playing the son of his real father, Will Smith. At that same age, in 1961, Jackie Chan was enrolled by his father in the China Drama Academy, where Master Yu Yim-yuen pounded martial-arts skills into young boys' bodies and minds. Jackie stayed there for 10 years. So both actors know the discipline of child acting and the wiles of charming an audience. These are on impressive display in the epic-length, dewy-souled remake of The Karate Kid.

At some indefinable moment between its release in 1984 and today, the first Karate Kid — which garnered no awards from critics' groups and no Oscar attention except for the performance by Noriyuki 'Pat' Morita — was promoted into the classic category. At least that's the esteem it's granted in reviews of the new movie. I take this to mean that the original (written by Robert Mark Kamen and directed by John Avildsen) is remembered fondly and, when looked at again for research on this version, held up pretty well as a fable of learning, fighting and coming of age. Displaced from New Jersey to Los Angeles, a boy on the cusp of manhood (Ralph Macchio) is pummeled by bullies until he takes instruction in the Japanese tactics of self-defense from a sullen janitor (Morita), then wins the big tournament and the girl (Elisabeth Shue).

The new Karate Kid, directed by Harald Zwart from a script by Christopher Murphey, changes the scene from L.A. to Beijing, where Dre (Smith) has been brought from Detroit by his mother (Taraji P. Henson) after her husband has died and her company has transferred her. Other than that, the remake treats its source with the same reverence that critics' memories have afforded the original: sticking to the story, reprising many favorite scenes and, most goofily, using the same title. (Since the movie now takes place in China, with Jackie teaching Jaden the martial-arts techniques he learned in his own Beijing school, why isn't this called The Kung Fu Kid? Even the crackling alliteration would be retained.)
The Beijing location allows Zwart (a Netherlands native whose flimsy résumé includes Agent Cody Banks and The Pink Panther 2) to extend the movie to nearly two-and-a-half hours with tourist trips to the Forbidden City and the Great Wall. To his credit, Zwart gives less attention to the city's exotic aspects than to its grimy, bustling, working-class milieu; this might be Detroit with dumplings. Yet it's a familiarity Dre doesn't notice, so miserable is he, estranged in language, bereft of friends. When the lonely, undersized boy wanders into a local park and attracts the attention of pretty schoolmate Meiying (the severely dimpled Han Wenwen, who could be Laura Linney's Asian daughter), some bullies, also from his new school, push Dre around; none of the elders in the park intervenes. Dre realizes he must learn how to defend himself. He needs a teacher, and a father figure.
But who will help him? In desperation he turns to Mr. Han (Chan), the janitor in Dre's new apartment building. At first Han is dismissive; but when the bully boys attack Dre in his presence, he pulls some cool moves to scare them away. The punks, led by sadist-in-chief Cheng (Wang Zhenwei), are students of the fearsome martial-arts teacher Master Li (longtime Jackie colleague Yu Rongguang), whose unforgiving mantra is "No weakness! No pain! No mercy!" The message is clear: bad teachers make bad children. Mr. Han, of course, will be this good boy's excellent teacher, with a relentless patience and enough aphorisms — "Everything is kung fu"; "There is only one person you need to control" — to stock a banquet full of fortune cookies. And yes, there's a tournament, and, yes, Cheng will be Dre's ultimate opponent.
A child actor needs three faces: sweet, sad, sassy. Smith has them all, plus a fey beauty and a poise that's almost disturbing in its utter command of the screen. Ten or 11 when the film was shot, but looking even younger — not to mention being apparently the only black kid in his school or in China — he is the perfect minnow-out-of-water against the bully sharks. With Will Smith currently out of the movie-star business (he's made no pictures since Seven Pounds in 2008, and has nothing slated until a Men in Black threequel in 2012), Jaden may have to carry the burden of family celebrity, even as he carries his new film. Expertly.
For Chan and his worldwide fan base, The Karate Kid is a homecoming of sorts. His starmaking role was in Yuen Wo-ping's 1978 Drunken Master, where he played the rebellious student and Yuen Siu-tien (the director's father) his implacable teacher. Thus began Jackie's eminence as Asia's all-time top star, one who stretched his talents through a series of enthralling, literally death-defying stunts — and accomplished it all with an underdog hero's smile.
At 56, his battered body not nearly as spry as in his youth, Chan has wisely decided that less is more. Here, as in his new Chinese-language war movie Little Big Soldier, he relies more on inward acting and stubborn charm than on action choreography. His Han is a broken man, nursing a grudge against himself, and needing a child to teach him that his life still has value, if he can only pass along what he has learned and endured. In a sense, that is Jackie's mission here. The Karate Kid has some nifty martial maneuvers, but at its heart is the bond forged by two child actors, raised in dramatically different circumstances half a world and nearly a half-century apart. Their connection is strong, sweet and worth applauding.




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Shanghai Knights Full Movie



Shanghai Knights is a 2003 action-comedy film. It is the sequel to Shanghai Noon. It was directed by David Dobkin and written by Alfred Gough and Miles Millar. The major actors are Jackie Chan (Called Chon Wang in the movie) and Owen Wilson (Called Roy O'Bannon in the movie)

What is the movie talks about:
In the 1880's, Chon Wang's father and keeper of the Imperial Seal has been murdered by Parliament and royal family member Rathbone, (who steals the Imperial Seal) with Chon Wang's sister, Chon Lin, witnessing the murder. Chon Lin follows Rathbone to London to kill him, while sending Chon a letter telling him of the murder. Chon then travels to New York for Roy O'Bannon. Together they travel to England and meet up with Chon Lin to kill Rathbone and get the Imperial Seal back.




You can always save this movie to playlist to watch later or click the full screen icon to view full screen video.  For more information about his movie, please visit IMDB http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0300471/
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Drunken Master 2 Full Movie (English Language)

Drunken Master 2 Full Movie


Drunken Master II (Chinese: 醉拳二; Cantonese Yale: Jui Kuen II) is a 1994 Hong Kong kung fu action film directed by Lau Kar-Leung and Jackie Chan, who stars as Chinese folk hero, Wong Fei Hung. It was Chan's first traditional style martial arts film since The Young Master (1980) and Dragon Lord (1981). The film was released in North America as The Legend of Drunken Master in 2000.The film is a follow-up to Chan's 1978 film Drunken Master, directed by Yuen Woo-ping, but not a direct storyline sequel. Another film, Drunken Master 3 (1994, directed by Lau Kar-Leung) features little in common with either this or its predecessor, and is not considered a sequel. In 2005, Drunken Master II







Storyline 

Returning home with his father after a shopping expedition, Wong Fei-Hong is unwittingly caught up in the battle between foreigners who wish to export ancient Chinese artifacts and loyalists who don't want the pieces to leave the country. Fei-Hong has learned a style of fighting called "Drunken Boxing", which makes him a dangerous person to cross. Unfortunately, his father is opposed to his engaging in any kind of fighting, let alone drunken boxing. Consequently, Fei-Hong not only has to fight against the foreigners, but he must overcome his father's antagonism as well.

This is the comment from IMDB:
Well, Jackie Chan has had an interesting career. On one hand, he's made some classics like Project A and Dragons Forever. On the other hand, he's made some less-than-spectacular movies like Crime Story and First Strike. This movie is easily his best film ever...and also one the best martial arts movies ever made. He revisits the role that made him famous: Wong Fei Hung, the drunken master. The plot deals with smugglers trying to steal China's treasures, but in the end it isn't important. The fights are what matters, and Chan fights like a son of a gun. There are some excellent traditional fight scenes like him fighting Lau Kar Leung and one w/ a Choy li fut stylist. There's a memorable fight against an Ax Gang (Ax army is more like it). The finale, where he takes on the smugglers led by a super kicking Thai boxer, is probably the greatest fight scene choreographed. This movie doesn't cease to entertain. A must see for any fans of action, martial arts, HK movies, or just Jackie Chan himself.
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Why I like Jackie Chan

My name is David and I live in Hong Kong. I am a huge Jackie Chan fans. I used to watch Jackie Chan's movies when I was 7. I remember the first movie I watched about him was drunken master. The movie starts with a fight and ends with one,so the action crowd won't be disappointed! Plus it contains the funniest scenes when Jackie Chan has ever put on film,such as the taunting of his idiotic teacher and the horror of realizing the woman who he picks a fight with is his auntie!After I watched this movie, I was so fascinated about Kung Fu. 





The other reason I like Jackie Chan because he is hilarious comedian, and his movie is funny. 


If you are also a fans of Jackie Chan, I recommand you check out these website. 
The offical Jackie Chan Website: http://www.jackiechan.com/
Jackie Chan Facebook (Not offical) : http://www.facebook.com/Jackiechan09
Why Kids like Jackie Chan: http://www.jackiechankids.com/files/Love_Jackie.htm
My blog: www.ilikejackiechan.com

Below are the Jackie Chan information from wikipedia: 
「Jackie Chan, SBS, MBE[1] (born Chan Kong-sang, 陳港生; 7 April 1954)[2] is a Hong Kong actor,action choreographer, comedian, director, producer, martial artist, screenwriter, entrepreneur, singer, and stunt performer. In his movies, he is known for his acrobatic fighting style, comic timing, use of improvised weapons, and innovative stunts. He is one of the few actors to have performed all of his film stunts. Jackie Chan has been acting since the 1960s and has appeared in over 150 films.

Chan has received stars on the Hong Kong Avenue of Stars and the Hollywood Walk of Fame. As acultural icon, Chan has been referenced in various pop songs, cartoons, and video games. Anoperatically trained vocalist, Chan is also a Cantopop and Mandopop star, having released a number of albums and sung many of the theme songs for the films in which he has starred. 」
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