Dragon Lord (1982) Poster

(1982)

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7/10
A necessity for Chan fans
winner5524 June 2006
This film has to be viewed in the right frame of mind. First, the central father-son relationship makes it pretty clear that the film was intended as a prequel to his Wong Fei Hung film "Drunken Master" (ideas from this film recur in "Drunken Master II), and not "Young Master"; that Chan backed away from this plan and renamed the characters indicates that he himself was not convinced the material was coming together properly; and, indeed, the film conveys a sense of being incomplete; for instance, the romantic relationship around which half the plot turns is left utterly hanging at the end of the film. "Young Master", from the same period, also feels underdone, but at least all its central threads are tied together at the end. This film feels as though Chan wrestled with the plot and characters trying to find his central theme, only to abandon the effort, possibly due to time and budget.

Or perhaps the film is simply over-ambitious. This is an important turning point film in Chan's career, because he commits himself to development of the central character above all other concerns - which is why there's such a lack of kung fu throughout the film. Chan wants to make an historical romantic comedy that just happens to have kung fu in it. But both the historical element and the romantic element come across as little more than plot-twists.

That leaves us with the comedy. Since Chan's concern is character-development, the comedy is largely character driven - as in the conflict between Chan's character and his best friend, an argument over a girl. But there's plenty of slapstick as well. Frankly, I find the comedy amusing enough to forgive the incompleteness of the plot.

This film represents an effort on Chan's part to find a viable formula that he can use and develop over time. It doesn't quite work, and Chan would only find that formula after abandoning the historical elements of his earlier films, with the making of the contemporary action comedy "Police Story". But going back to view this film is still very informative as to how Chan worked his way through the historical genre, and perhaps why he abandoned it.
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6/10
Knockabout comedy featuring incredible fight action
Leofwine_draca4 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Of all the similarly-themed Chan flicks from the period (YOUNG MASTER and the like) I have to say that this one was my favourite. Made the year before he moved into bigger-budget period flicks, this is an inventive, thoroughly enjoyable Chan adventure, mixing together the best aspects of comedy and action whilst following a set, somewhat bizarre formula brought together in his earlier movies. Most of the film features non-stop comic hijinks, as Chan and his buddy Mars court the same girl and fall out over her, whilst there's a serious (if minor) sub-plot involving Chinese antiques being smuggled out of the country. Eventually, the plot less cross each other, resulting in a huge 20 minute fight finale in a barn, incorporating all kinds of major stunt work. Mars himself, usually in lesser roles in Chan's movies, shines in perhaps his best turn as the dim-witted friend who gets pretty fierce. Chan himself plays his typical bumbling happy-go-lucky character and his likability (is that even a word?) pays off in spades.

Perhaps the most original element of the film is the sports action, in which various teams play a game of football with one difference: they use a shuttlecock instead of a ball. Yes, it's as fast, furious and frenetic as it sounds, and makes for excellent entertainment just watching the skills of the players. The comedy is as broad as usual, one laugh involving somebody peeing over Jackie's leg, so you know the kind of harmless, childish tone to expect. The martial arts work is excellent with plenty of loose-limbed bad guys (led by Wong In-sik) who are EXTREMELY hard and solid work from the likes of Michael Chan Wai-man. Chan himself runs up walls, falls from railings, and spins in the air in gravity-defying shenanigans, highlighted in the lengthy final fight which is riveting and in my opinion, in his all-time top five action sequences. Fans will know what to expect and love this fast-moving, fat-free adventure.
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7/10
A Pyramid, A Golden Egg, Poetry, & Antiques.
Guardia16 March 2008
"Dragonlord" sees Chan returning to his role of "Dragon" from "The Young Master". Not much has carried over from the first film though. "Tiger", his older brother, is nowhere to be seen; neither is the Marshall, his daughter or his son played superbly by Yuen Biao in the original film. Dragon does have the same master though - presumably all the other students have moved on to other things. (Dragon's laziness at training is portrayed heavily in this film, so maybe he's still studying!)

Originally titled "Young Master In Love", this film sees Dragon (for the first sixty minutes at least) pursuing a villager girl in various idiotic and slapstick ways. His rival for her affection is his friend (inappropriately named "Cowboy") played comically by the longtime Chan Stunt-team member Mars. We see various scenes where their silly schemes backfire. It is one of these scenes that we (thankfully) find "Dragon" in over his head.

This film is notorious in that it failed expectations at the box office. That said, I'm sure the expectations were pretty high, and I feel that this film has never had a fair judgment based on it's own merits. But even when I try to do this, I still feel that there is a problem with the film. It seems quite unfocused, sometimes rushed, and I think the action is too sporadic and not as brilliant as Chan's other work from this period.

The thing that really saves the film is the ending sequence. As in "The Young Master", there is a fantastic final reel that it full of incredibly exhausting action - you really feel every blow. And again, Chan goes up against the same rival from "The Young Master" (is it the same character?), and the timing and energy here is brilliant. Chan's style of using every last bit of his environment to help defeat his opponent - not just relying on pure physical ability - is as apparent here as anywhere else. The barn they fight in is full of clever little prop gags and improvisations. This is an absolute highlight of the film and one of Chan's incredible career.

It's not necessary to see the prequel before seeing "Dragonlord", in fact, it might even raise more questions than what it hopes to answer. But it must be said that the original film is the superior film, and "Dragonlord", with it's focus on girl-chasing and team-sports does seem baffling. Luckily, the few fight scenes it offers (plus a fantastic shuttle-cock scene) push it over the line as a must-see film in this genre.
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Chan at his prime
zedthedestroyer16 July 2001
`Dragon Lord' is more of a comedy than a martial arts movie. There are a few action sequences in the movie - a strange ball tournament at the beginning, a scuffle between Jackie and his friend over a girl, an interesting shuttlecock game in the middle of the movie - but there are really only two fight sequences in the movie, both near the end. Despite this, the movie's great. It's never dull. There are some funny moments, and the final fight scene between Jackie and the baddie is awesome. Definitely worth seeing over `Shanghai Noon' or `Rush Hour'.
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6/10
Modestly fun comedic actioner for Jackie Chan completists
Bloodwank6 August 2011
Dragon Lord was something of a pivotal film for Jackie Chan in that it saw him decisively making the move away from old school style kung fu cinema to his own distinctive brand of goofy comedy and situational fighting. Its a shame then that it isn't great (this was apparently reflected in the cold initial box office response), though its charms are enough to make it a mostly good watch even though when all is weighed up it doesn't amount to much. It's a sequel of sorts to The Young Master, following his Dragon Ma character as he slacks off, hangs out with his buddy (a likable turn from Mars) and tries to pick up various local girls, eventually getting mixed up in the plans of nefarious individuals to smuggle Chinese relics out of the country. The juvenile nature of things takes a bit of getting used to, Chan being in his late twenties at the time yet paying essentially a teenager, but his gusto and innate likability carries things well enough. It helps that one or two scenes are actually pretty amusing in a silly sort of way, like Dragon trying to cheat his way through an exam of sorts by his dad. Although there's a downright criminal lack of actual threat to near the hour mark the film doesn't completely lack action, boasting a couple of quality sporting scenes, one somewhat modelled on rugby but considerably more chaotic and the other like football but with a shuttlecock (which apparently required a record number of takes to get right). When things warm up the results are pretty cool and the climatic fight is an absolute doozy, Wong In-Sik reprising his villainy from The Young Master in a great extended bout with Chan making good use of the barn setting and plentiful trading of crunching blows, its right up there with the finales of any of Chan's bona fide classics. Its just a shame that the film as a whole is so unfocused and generally inconsequential (with little hint of anything serious until close to the halfway mark), its an easy watch but mostly forgettable until the last twenty minutes or so, I liked it well enough as I'm kind of a geek for this kind of thing but it really isn't that good. Still a 6/10 as its quite fun, but definitely a completists only film.
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7/10
Filler: The Movie
sn3196 December 2014
I'm torn on this movie because I found that it was enjoyable, containing some of the silly moments and a lot of the great martial arts action we've come to expect of Jackie Chan, but it's also overlong. The greatest fight in this movie is making it to the ninety minute mark, and that begins with an overlong football sequence that goes nowhere and doesn't establish much of anything. Then the story kicks in, Jackie plays Dragon, who lives with his father and winds up losing his best friend over girl troubles, only to regain him later when they discover a plot to smuggle all of China's greatest treasures. Then, the film puts in an overlong shuttlecock match to pad things out before moving toward the finale.

What tore me was that the football match was needlessly long but the shuttlecock match was actually kind of entertaining. It showed off some of Jackie's athletic prowess and was shot well enough to keep me interested. Filler is filler and good filler is still filler, but I don't think that the match took away from anything.

The final battle between Jackie and the half-blind smuggler is what you're here to see and it is a glorious fight, one of Jackie's best.

I think Dragon Lord is a pretty good film and manages to cover all the Jackie Chan bases while not falling into the "typical" category most Jackie movies tend to. It stands out as a good, entertaining movie.
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7/10
Above Average Jackie Chan Flick, Due To The Fantastic Finale, And Great Humor, However Other Then That It's Nothing That Great
callanvass15 November 2005
Warning: Spoilers
This is an above average Jackie Chan flick, due to the fantastic finale and great humor, however other then that it's nothing special. All the characters are pretty cool, and the film is entertaining throughout, plus Jackie Chan is simply amazing in this!. Jackie and Wai-Man Chan had fantastic chemistry together, and are both very funny!, and i thought the main opponent looked really menacing!, however the dubbing was simply terrible!. The character development is above average for this sort of thing!, and the main fight is simply fantastic!, plus some of the bumps Jackie takes in this one are harsh!. There is a lot of really silly and goofy humor in this, but it amused me, and the ending is hilarious!, plus all the characters are quite likable. It's pretty cheap looking but generally very well made, and while it does not have the amount of fighting you would expect from a Jackie Chan flick, it does enough to keep you watching, plus one of my favorite moments in this film is when Jackie (Dragon) and Wai-Man Chan(Tiger), are playing around with a rifle and it goes off!. This is an above average Jackie Chan flick, due to the fantastic finale, and great humor, however other then that it's nothing great, still it's well worth the watch!. The Direction is good. Jackie Chan does a good job here with solid camera work, fantastic angles and keeping the film at a fast pace for the most part. The Acting is very good!. Jackie Chan is amazing as always, and is amazing here, he is extremely likable, hilarious, as usual does some crazy stunts, had fantastic chemistry with Wai-Man Chan, kicked that ass, and played this wonderful cocky character, he was amazing!, i just wished they would stop dubbing him!. (Jackie Rules!!!!!). Wai-Man Chan is funny as Jackie's best friend, i really liked him, he is also a very good martial artist. Rest of the cast do OK i guess. Overall well worth the watch!. *** out of 5
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7/10
Lovers and Smugglers
Snewahr1125 July 2021
'Dragon Lord' is not Jackie Chan's first directorial effort. It was his third movie already, but somehow it feels the most incomplete one. At first, it was intended to be the sequel to 'The Young Master' but Chan changed the setting as he wasn't able to properly tie this one to the first movie's story.

The film includes exceptional fight scenes and stunts, but the story seems unfocused. At first, too much time is spent to set up the big love story, but somewhere in the middle that fades away and the romantic angle doesn't get coherent conclusion. Also, the ark with the smugglers doesn't get much needed development at the beginning. So the movie feels like two different movies jammed together. But the fight scenes and choreography is amazing. Jackie experimented with a lot of new stuff in the fight scenes, and the experiments payed off - the fight scenes are exceptional. Jackie Chan is such an amazing performer that poorly constructed story doesn't take away much of the enjoyment from the movie. Also, it was nice to see Mars who usually played some thug, robber or henchman, to get more substantial role.

The fans of Jackie Chan and his type of martial arts slapstick comedy will not be disappointed. Don't expect too thoughtful story though.
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10/10
fun, meaning, and nostalgia in silliness
addgarlic25 July 1999
This movie is bufoonery! and I loved it! The "dragon lord" (Jacky Chan) and his buddy, "cowboy", totally made the movie fun, meaningful, and just plain silly. The movie is a rare blend of a good vs. evil fight and (somehow) the wonders and fun that is growing up. Long Shao Ye takes the viewer through the daily activities of the young "dragon lord" (so named because he is the son of a wealthy family) and "cowboy", which include implementing clever, elaborate ways to escape studying (with the help of the entire household, including the tutor), competing in rather boyish (and idiotically interesting) ways to gain the affection of a local girl, competing in "soccer" (you will see what i mean) and the list goes on. Somehow they find themselves in the midst of a fight to save the a shipment of valuable antiques and the lives of several people.

The movie has its serious moments. But they do not depress, but rather inspire. The playfulness of the boys are not lost in this exchange, but is actually employed against evil. What I really loved about this movie is how it ends. Not the typical confrontation (which in itself was awesome), but well, you'll see. Let me just say it truly captures the spirit of the movie.

silly, witty, meaningful, and nostalgic. great movie.
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6/10
The action is not as memorable as Jackie's other movies.
jordondave-2808514 June 2023
(1982) Dragon Lord (In Chinese with English subtitles) ACTION/ COMEDY

Co-written and directed by Jackie Chan, which I must confess, I was only excited to see action than comedy and story line if there is even one, in which i used the fast forward button while I was playing until I came across what I perceive as an action sequence or action bit. Definitely doesn't stand out amongst his best by far but still interesting to see Chan succumbing to his many prat falls, one in such climbing on a mountain of people which during the outtakes seriously injuring him. Anyways, not the most appealing Chan movie photographically wise as he was still learning the ropes as you say.
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5/10
It tended to drag on for a long, long time...
paul_haakonsen27 December 2012
For a Jackie Chan movie, then "Dragon Lord" was a fairly mediocre experience. There wasn't the usual Jackie Chan magic or personal touch to this movie. The movie tried too hard to mix comedy and serious action, and it just didn't go well together.

The movie was also weighed down by a storyline that was intended to be serious, but trying to incorporate slapstick comedy, and again it was to an extend where it just didn't fully work as intended. And it didn't help the movie one bit that it had a couple of scenes that were taking too long to execute. Especially the last fight scene, it was dragging on for a very long time, and it started to become stale and somewhat of a parody to watch.

So what worked in this movie? Well, the fighting and the action, of course. As to be expected, as this is a Jackie Chan movie after all. As with most of his other movies, the martial arts and action scenes were well executed and brought to the screen.

I am a big fan of Jackie Chan, and must admit that "Dragon Lord" is not amongst the best of his entire movie career. But bear in mind that this movie is from 1982. That being said, then it should be stated that it is not his worst movie either. But it is, of course, a movie that is well deserved a place in the DVD collection of any Jackie Chan fan. Just sad to say, that this isn't really the type of movie that you watch more than once.
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10/10
Great Jackie Chan movie!!!
bbickley13-921-5866421 April 2014
One from early in his career the movie has everything that would make him a Kung Fu super star.

It's a great comedy about a spoiled rich brat trying to send a love note via a kite but ends up stumbling onto a plot to steal China's artifacts.

It's the type of friendly kung fu flick for all the ages that Jackie Chan would become known for. Thought the stunts are small compared to the extreme risk he would take in the future, it was still impressive to see Jackie do the physical stuff not just the kung fu but there were scenes of Jackie and his friends playing sports similar to football but more extreme.

Extremely entertaining!!!
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7/10
A silly but very entertaining Jackie Chan movie
The-Sarkologist6 January 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This movie was originally going to be the sequel to the Young Master and was going to be called the Young Master in Love. What ended up happening is that the movie drifted so far away from the original Young Master, that they decided to make it a separate movie on its own. (Gee, I can quote Des Mangan word for word, almost). Anyway, the movie is set during the colonial times in China and Jackie Chan is a young kid (with a rich father) who is doing what all kids do - chase girls and play sports. What ends up happening is that during his cavorting, Jackie stumbles across a plot to steal ancient treasures from China and he and his friend beat up the nasty bad guy and become heroes.

It is a pretty basic plot, but then who watches Jackie Chan for the plot. We watch it for the fighting and for the comedy. The thing with Jackie Chan comedy is that it can be quite subtle at times. In this movie it is basically him chasing women around and bumbling constantly. Not only that, we see him scheming with the gods and his friends to manipulate this woman into his life. The thing is that in the end she ignored the advice of the gods and decided to go for him anyway.

Do I really need to say more about this movie? No, I thought not.
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5/10
Kuhumperwhumpf!
Ali_John_Catterall20 September 2009
Work-shy student Dragon (Chan) and his madcap pal Cowboy (Mars) spend their days getting up to mischief, frustrating the elders, chasing girls, and competing in the village sport - in which contestants scramble to the top of a tall wooden pyramid, the "bun tower", to retrieve a golden ball, rugby-fashion. When Dragon overhears a fiendish plot by smugglers to sell China's national treasures overseas, the pair leap into action. Also, Cowboy's wealthy father is kidnapped by the villainous and lethal Big Boss (In-Sik), and the scene is set for a furious martial arts showdown.

An attempt to claw back some native credibility after his first US outing The Big Brawl (1980) flopped Stateside, Dragon Lord saw Chan returning to Taiwan to work on a sequel to his directorial debut Young Master (also 1980). It would be ultimately abandoned - along with months of wasted footage - for a confused, if enjoyable affair, with no real script.

Accordingly, Dragon Lord also crashed and burned at Hong Kong theatres, much to the director's chagrin, who'd attempted to "make a new kind of action picture". As Chan told 'Combat' magazine years later: "I got rid of the kung fu and tried to put in sports, but I found that the audience didn't want that." But if Dragon Lord almost shot down Chan's rising star there and then, it did set a template for successive hits; tightly-choreographed acrobatics taking precedence over traditional Shaolin combat-styles; outtakes featuring aborted stunts over the credits; a winning goofy charm.

Stand-out sequences include a Badminton-like game played with shuttlecocks (but no bats), and the climactic fight between Mars, Chan and real-life Taekwondo master In-Sik, which is both simultaneously deadly and near-clownish (if this film had an overall sound it would be "Boiinngg!", or possibly "Kuhumperwhumpf!").
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The last of Jackie Chan's old school kung fu movies
ebiros211 November 2011
An old school kung ku comedy starring Jackie Chan. He's also the director of this movie.

This is bit like continuation of the Young Master. Jackie Chan reprises his role as the Dragon. The actor who portrayed the teacher in Young Master returns as Dragon's father. Although the production is more polished, the story isn't compelling as the Young Master. The format is old school kung fu movie where things happen in earlier days of China. Actions are also old school although there's more comedic elements in this movie than other kung fu movies.

Some clues to the future Jackie Chan movies are seen in this movie, such as using the 2nd floor balcony to stage a dramatic fight sequence.

This is the last old school kung fu movie Jackie Chan starred in. With the success of Project A, his movies starts to take different direction in the future.
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8/10
Take another one
kosmasp23 August 2020
Apparently this made it into the Guiness book of world records, for most takes done for one ... single take. Amazing but also understandable if you watch it. There are so many crazy scenes in here. And as one of the main actors say, many things where not even made secure for the performers. Like no padding on the floor ... not to mention no script at all, but actors being advised what to do, when they arrived on set. Now that makes a lot of "sense", considering how all over the place the movie is.

So while this may not be close to the best Jackie Chan has served us, it does include some amazing fight scenes (this is why you're mostly here for I reckon) and some interesting "sports" scenes. One is close to soccer/football, the other is a pyramid thing, that ... I don't even know what this is about, but hey it looks cool and you can almost feel the pain of anyone hitting the floor ... story is paper thin, but it is about protecting history and so forth. It doesn't actually really matter, as said no script was there to be seen. But Jackie Chan and the others are having quite a lot of fun. The comedy is silly when it ensues, but it gets also silly during some of the fight scenes, even if they are quite brutal at times too. So not what some might consider a classic, but any self respecting fan of Jackie Chan and then some, will actually like what they get served here
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4/10
One of Jackie's worst....until the last 20 minutes.
gridoon15 January 2005
Up until the last 20 minutes, I was thinking that this is possibly Jackie Chan's worst movie (excluding his pre-1978 work, which I am not familiar with). The final fight sequence changed all that: it is long and good and intense - indeed, one of the highlights of Chan's career. But to get to it, you have to sit through a lot of "comedy" that might amuse five-year-olds (oh, look! someone threw a tomato at that guy's face) and endless "football" scenes. Not to mention the dubbing (which includes the line "How can I turn it off? It's not a tap" - watch to find out what it refers to). "Dragon Lord" is worth renting for the final fight alone, but the rest of the movie is only for Jackie collectors, and even then only for those who've already seen at least 15 of his other movies. (**)
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9/10
Good choreography makes a big difference
justinpicturesinc2 June 2020
While the movie is only 1hr 40min (although it was 1hr 33min on my copy), it can appear to be a bit of a drag at some points. It still is a very good movie and was able to entertain me for it's duration. Since I watch with Western eyes I probably found it to be a bit slow but I still appreciated all it had to offer. One really great save that makes this movie so good to me is the penominal choreography that this movie displays. The opening egg football scene (if that's an actual game and that name is offensive I do apologise) was a very cool way to open the movie and it was awesome seeing everyone doing the actions on time and incredibly fast. The other game sequence was by far the most impressive because it was like shuttlecock Hackensack so all the moves where done with knees and ankles. The fact of how flawless it was just shows the talent (and the good eye for what the best take was) these men and Jackie had. The final two fights were impressive due to the length of the shots and complexity of the moves. While some can argue it's pretty much typical Jackie stuff it's still impressive to see it's from 1982.
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3/10
Disappointing, but the end fight was impressive! 3/10
leonblackwood31 October 2015
Review: I was really looking forward to watching this movie because it seemed like one of those authentic Kung Fu movies that I used to watch back in the day but it turned out to be quite disappointing. In this movie, Chan plays a talented sportsman with some impressive Kung Fu skills but he can't help getting himself in trouble with friends while they go around the village causing mischief. Chan then meets a girl who he tries to impress by fighting any and everyone but he ends up messing with the wrong guys who are stealing precious artifacts to ship to China. He then gets blamed for stealing some of the artifacts and he ends up fighting for his life, even though he's innocent. Although it was made in the earlier days of Chans career, it's still packed with the silly comedy that I'm really getting fed up with. The end fight, which seemed a bit pointless, was very impressive because Chan is really going nuts but the rest of the film is just about Chan trying to woo a girl. The comedic side of the movie was also pretty poor, along with the acting but like a lot of Chans movies, the action is really worth waiting for. You can tell that the director added the artifact element to try and give the movie some depth but that was also disappointing. At the end of the day, it's worth a watch just for the last fight but the rest of the movie was a waste of time. Disappointing! 

Round-Up: This was the third movie to be directed by Jackie Chan, after the success of the Young Master, so with that in mind it was a big achievement for Chan in the earlier part of his career but I just can't understand why he has to add them silly comedic scenes. That's why Bruce Lee has always been called the master because his fighting was unique and his films were all decent. I'm struggling with Jackie Chan because he has only made a handful of movies that were great. Maybe the best is yet to come! I still have quite a few movies to get through during this Jackie Chan so I'm hoping that it will pick up soon.

I recommend this movie to people who are into their action/comedy/sport/martial arts movies starring Jackie Chan, Mars, Wai-Man Chan and Lei Suet. 3/10
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10/10
Dragon Lord is not just another *loud yawn* action
AndreiPavlov10 October 2006
Warning: Spoilers
The movie is great: funny, crazy, violent (though with minimum gore), and all the way energetic to the core. Enjoyed every single bit of it. No computer effects, no extensive use of wires - just a solid good old kung fu flick that shows how physically apt a man can be. The final brawl deserves praise. And the "Chinese football" play at the beginning of the movie is completely nuts with dozens of actors doing insane dangerous tricks. And it is just a little Hong Kong cinema made for fun, not pretending to be "Star Wars".

Having a DVD with English soundtrack is not a problem with this movie. It does not spoil the atmosphere to me.

Can't help mentioning a very neat theatrical play. Some of you, suppose, won't like it. As to me - it's amazing. Have a look at the Dragon's friend who is talking in a brave manner to the criminals and all of a sudden gets a fist punch in his left side of the head. His face expression changes into something whimsical and he comes up to Dragon with a baby expression. And take a look at the menacing size of his mouth - it's nearly from one ear to the other long when he makes grimaces.

This movie deserves a higher rating and a thousand comments from people all over the world. If you want to see Jackie Chan in full blossom and flourish - do not miss this little known treasure.

A total 10 out of 10 - a legendary movie in its genre and a good piece of family entertainment with substance (do not rob your own country) and style (just have a look at the final battle). Thank you for attention.
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Terribly weak for the majority but finishes with an excellent final twenty minutes
bob the moo19 December 2008
His father wishes that Young Dragon would be a great student and attend to his classes, but Dragon himself is full of youth and is just as interested in fighting and chasing girls. Full of arrogance and confident in his own knowledge, Dragon continues down this path until he finds that he has stumbled onto a plot to steal Chinese artefacts.

Everyone has said it before me but I will add my voice to those here that believe, for the vast majority, this is a very poor Jackie Chan film which sort of redeems itself towards the end. This surprised me because I have been watching a few early Chan movies recently and, for all their faults boring is never a word that I have had occasion to use – until now. It is probably because the plot is so weak for the entire film – even by the standards set by martial arts films of the period. For the first two-thirds of the film what we get is light comedy and some sports action involving a game where you chase an egg and also a cross between football and badminton. These are interesting ideas I'm sure but they do not come off in practice, with even the impressive moves in these sequences being lost in a sea of banality. The usual bed of comedy that can normally be relied upon in Chan films is also much weaker than normal, with basic pratfalls and little in the way of witty dialogue.

A lot of this comes from the writing but reaction shots are also weak – not down to the cast being unable to deliver but rather Chan the director not catching them. It is hard to describe but, if you wrote a list of the things that normally work in a Jackie Chan film – pretty much none of those come off here. Fortunately we do have a very strong final twenty minutes and I credit any roundly positive review with only having remembered this part of the film. It is here that finally we get a decent fight scene and it turns out to be a really good one where everything fires on all cylinders. Firstly it is shot really well and I mention that first because of the barn location making it difficult to get a good shot, but here we get good use of angles and long static shots to show that the action was not created in the edit room but on the set. It is also tough and really well choreographed with plenty of impressive and engaging moves all well pulled together. It is literally the reward for making it through the previous 70-odd minutes to get to this sequence.

So Dragon Lord as a total product deserves to be remembered as pretty poor film. The plot is weak, the comedy basic and the total delivery leaves much to be desired. Thanks goodness then for the final fight that does wash the taste out of your mouth by how much fun it all is in a generally excellent final 20 minutes that makes you wonder where this Chan was for the rest of it.
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2/10
Um, this one is garbage
fluffchop14 May 2022
It's a really poor film. There's very little Kung Fu, the plot is even thinner. It hasn't got much going for it in the chick department and it doesn't have traditional Kung Fu movie themes. Not worth watching.
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10/10
All time old favourites!
sthevan29 January 2023
I have to admit that this was my favorite of all the Chan movies from the era with a similar concept (YOUNG MASTER and others). This creative, extremely pleasant Chan adventure, which he made the year before transitioning to more expensive historical films, combines the best elements of comedy and action while adhering to a predetermined, slightly odd structure used in his previous films. As Chan and his friend Mars court the same girl and have an argument over her for the most of the movie, there is also a serious (if minor) sub-plot concerning the smuggling of Chinese antiquities out of the country.
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4/10
Draggin' Along
jacobstaggs4 February 2020
This is Jackie's most juvenile comedy. Everyone acts like little children. The action sucks except for a rooftop spear scene. The movie is pointless but the infantile behavior is slightly intriguing in its weirdness. Also, they gave Jackie a character trait of looking into dangerous objects. Skip this waste of time and celluloid.
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3/10
Goofy and poofy (hair)
HotToastyRag23 August 2022
In this goofy early martial arts comedy, Jackie Chan and his pal Mars are extremely close. They play, study, lie to their fathers, and get into trouble together. They even urinate together - no, I'm not kidding. While "draining the dragon" in a nearby creek (their words, not mine), they see a pretty girl and both want to pursue her. Thus causes the first rift in their long friendship, and they get pretty nasty about trying to sabotage each other.

Even more memorable than their pursuit of the same girl are the lengthy group sports sequences. The film starts off with a relay-capture-the-flag-type of event with hundreds of men trying to transport a pseudo-football to their corner of the field. It's intense! There's also another pseudo-soccer game that makes you tired just to watch the players. This film feels very much like a time capsule of Hong Kong cinema in the 1980s. Poofy hair, silly gimmicks, and an overall feeling of "we made kung fu movies last decade, so let's have a little fun now" to it. This won't be the best movie you'll ever watch, but if you like Jackie Chan, you can check it out - especially since he co-wrote and directed it.
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