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The Man From Hong Kong - Limited Hardbox -

5 out of 5 stars 2 customer reviews

Estimated delivery 9 - 19 Apr. to Germany - Mainland when you choose Standard Delivery at checkout. Details
Dispatched from and sold by adabola1.
£24.99 Only 1 left in stock. Dispatched from and sold by adabola1.

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Product details

  • Actors: George Lazenby, Wang Yu
  • Format: Import, Limited Collector's Edition, Special Limited Edition, Full length
  • Language: English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00P2Q0A3O
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 115,724 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

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Product Description

English or German language - Hong Kong Inspector Fang Sing Leng travels to Australia to extradite a drug dealer. When the hood is assassinated on his way to court, everyone suspects Jack Wilton, a crime lord who the local police haven't been able to pick up...

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Top Customer Reviews

Ah, Australia in the 70s - where films were cheap but life was cheaper. The Man From Hong Kong (released in the US as The Dragon Flies), George Lazenby's second-finest hour, is a thing of joy - an exploitation movie that does what it says on the label even if Jimmy Wang Yu doesn't exactly burn up the screen as `the tough Hong Kong cop who learned every trick in the book - then threw the book away.' Unlike Lazenby. Where else can you see a film where they set a former James Bond on fire - for real - and he just goes on fighting? Roger, Shir Sean and Pierce would never have done that in a million years. Not only is he `the ruthless czar of international evil' but he's racist with it - "I've never met a Chinese yet that didn't have a yellow streak!" - and even has Frank Thring on the payroll, sneering disdain as only he could at a hero who can only speak English in a badly dubbed American accent ("We like to bounce our customers, not to break them"). Thring at least lasts longer than Sammo Hung, who choreographed the fight scenes and has a supporting role billed as Hung Kam Po before taking an early shower before he can show up the star too much ("A master of kung fu, he used his art for an evil purpose, but he fought well. I will like to meet the man who employed him.").

Wang Yu is never more than adequate - Lazenby still looks like he could beat him in a fair fight, even when on fire - but the film is so much fun and such an intoxicating mixture of car chases, outrageous action movie stunts, gratuitous hang gliding and. in at least one sequence, literally pant-splittingly good fight scenes that it doesn't matter.
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After a drug smuggling operation is thwarted by Australian Drug Enforcement Agency officers, a Detective Inspector from Hong Kong's Special Branch is called in to interrogate the chinese connection, and help break the ring from the Hong Kong end. However it soon transpires that the cartel is being led by an Australian 'Mr Big' (George Lazenby).. And that the Chinese officer, Inspector Fang Sing Leng, is actually a one man army and demolition squad all rolled into one...

I hadn't seen this in ages, and didn't remember it being anywhere near as entertaining as I found it Friday night ~ Ahhh, the great mysteries of ale!
Jimmy Wang Yu plays 'Inspector Fang Sing Leng' (which is presumably Chinese for 'Inspector Dog's~b******s Turbo Cool'), who struts around in his flares and turtle neck, beating the the living daylights out of any bad guy that moves, when he's not putting to tumble every woman he comes across within a 3 mile radius!
Forget the director's inspiration, James Bond, that dude is a total pussy when compared with Wang Yu's boy in this.

The story is basically Lone Wolf McQuade, but with about 10 times more violence. And the only promise it intends for it's viewers is that they are offered up a stream of battered hoodlums and set~pieces, escalating in explosive madcappery, one after the next, while the audience watch on and cheer the hero with greater levels of disbelief.
The fight scenes are gratuitously violent and go on forever, with people getting beaten to a pulp (watch out for Yuen Biao in Wilton's karate school).. While the Aussie cast remain on standby, there to throw in the odd politically incorrect, but nontheless amusing, side comments about Wang Yu's ethnicity, culture or kung fu in general.
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