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Skinny Tiger, Fatty Dragon

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Skinny Tiger, Fatty Dragon
UK DVD cover
Directed byLau Kar-wing
Written byChang Kwok-tse
Produced byWellington Fung
Andrew Yau
StarringSammo Hung
Karl Maka
Carrie Ng
Wanda Yung
CinematographyGray Ho
Edited byWong Ming-lam
Music byRichard Lo
Production
companies
Cinema Capital Entertainment
Cinema City & Films Co.
Distributed byGolden Princess Amusement
Release date
  • 28 June 1990 (1990-06-28)
Running time
105 minutes
CountryHong Kong
LanguageCantonese
Box officeHK$10,270,954

Skinny Tiger, Fatty Dragon is a 1990 Hong Kong action film directed by Lau Kar-wing, who also co-stars in the film. The film stars Sammo Hung and Karl Maka. The trio had worked together in the late 1970s, making two films for Lau and Hung's short-lived Gar Bo Motion Picture Company. Whilst Lau continued to appear in Hung's films for Golden Harvest throughout the 1980s, Maka had gone on to co-run Cinema City. Skinny Tiger, Fatty Dragon was therefore something of a reunion for the three actors.

Plot

Fatty and Baldy are a pair of detectives dealing with a crime syndicate of triad gangsters. After a jewelry robbery, they later find Lai (Carrie Ng), a woman who is associated with the gangsters, but end up getting themselves into trouble for going into the women's changing room.

The gang leader, Wing (Lau Kar-wing), learns that one of his henchman, Johnny (Tai Bo), has leaked his secrets so he is stabbed by Wing himself.

During their investigation of the Lai's house, things go very wrong for Fatty and Baldy, and they end up imitating robbers in order to escape from the gang. They steal her car and are briefly chase by the gangsters, trashing it along the way. Later that night, Lai calls Fatty and arranges a meeting at an abandoned warehouse. At the location, another fight ensues, followed by a chase of Lai's boss, "Prince" Tak (Lung Ming-yan), and Fatty ends up ruining the English Deputy Commissioner's wedding.

Fatty and Baldy are ordered to leave Hong Kong while things settle down, so they head to Singapore. However, Lai, who has turned against her gang, is then killed by a pair of transsexual assassins. When Fatty is about to have dinner with Baldy and his girlfriend (Wanda Yung), he inadvertently ruins their relationship. So the pair have dinner outside, leading to another confrontation. Baldy deals with two English henchmen, whilst Fatty is fighting the transsexual assassins.

In the aftermath of the event, Fatty's father and Baldy's girlfriend are hospitalised. Realising they will never have peace until Wing is stopped, they apprehend Tak's brother at an abandoned warehouse full of gas cylinders. The plan goes sour, leading to a final confrontation with the gangsters. The two English henchmen try to take down Baldy while Fatty uses nunchaku. In the midst of the finale, Fatty temporarily knocks Tak down and tries to take Tak's brother out. At the final moment, Tak fires his gun, he hits the gas cylinders and Baldy and Fatty escape, killing everyone in the process. In the end, the police chief stops Fatty and Baldy from knocking each other out after a fight over money.

Cast

  • Sammo Hung as Fatty Dragon
  • Karl Maka as Baldy Mak Sui-fu
  • Carrie Ng as Lai
  • Wanda Yung as Tall Girl
  • Lung Ming-yan as "Prince" Tak / Ted
  • Bowie Wu as Officer Wu
  • Ni Kuang as Dragon's father
  • Lau Kar-wing as Wing
  • Tai Bo as Johnny
  • Yip Seung-wa as Tak's brother
  • Sin Ho-ying as Ho / Howard
  • Ridley Tsui as Pak
  • Ng Ching-ching as Jing-jing
  • Cutie Mui as Tall Girl's neighbour
  • Mark Houghton as English gang member
  • Wan Seung-lam as gang member
  • Gabriel Wong as burglar
  • Hung Yan-yan as robber
  • Jackson Ng as robber
  • Kong Long as robber
  • Lo Hung as man at wedding party
  • Patrick Gamble as Lai's lawyer
  • Yeung Yau-cheung as waiter
  • Ng Kwok-kin as policeman
  • Garry Chan as suspect at police station
  • Wilson Yip as man on the Street
  • Strawberry Yeung as karaoke singer
  • Chang Seng-kwong as thug
  • Max Gusinsky as English gang member

Production

Working title

This film was previously titled Tiger on the Beat 3. There was worry that Phillip Ko, worked on the earlier two Tiger on the Beat films starring Conan Lee, will make a film with that title so Cinema City announced the title first causing their rival company to come up with another name. Once the rival company has their title resolved, Cinema City retitled this movie again to Skinny Tiger, Fatty Dragon. [1]

Bruce Lee references

Sammo Hung doing a Bruce Lee impersonation happen in two early films prior to this. Enter the Fat Dragon and Millionaire's Express with Cynthia Rothrock in a brief fight together. This is the final film in which he relates the early Lee references into the 90's.

  • The tap with the two metal bars is seen in Game of Death with Bruce Lee and Dan Inosanto before the nunchaku fight. Also the use of the nunchaku is used in the finale at an abandoned warehouse full of barrels which goes back to Fist of Fury in which Lee introduces the weapon and Enter the Fat Dragon in which Sammo first used the weapon.
  • Hung holding of one of the henchman's hair is seen in Enter the Dragon in which Jackie Chan tries to attack Bruce but got his neck snapped off camera.
  • The brief fight with Sammo Hung and Mark Houghton is similar to Way of the Dragon with Bruce Lee and Chuck Norris. Then follows up with Lee attacking the guy with the gun while in Nora Miao's apartment.
  • The German shepherd dog is a reference to the The Big Boss. Also is the use of the double knives in the finale of both movies although shot in a different way.
  • During the robbery attack, Hung attacking the man on the ground with the groin attack is similar to Way of the Dragon with Lee and Bob Wall.
  • Hung's kick shot with Ridley Tsui in the abandoned warehouse is similar to Enter the Dragon with Lee's kick to Shih Kien's head.

Proposed villain role

When Bey Logan interviewed Mark Houghton, he initially is tasked to find a black businessman which is supposed to be another tribute to Game of Death. Unfortunately he offended a few of them with one who believes he has no business in being in the film. Houghton thought he would be in trouble for offending a black businessman so he told Lau Kar-wing that he couldn't find any so the director would step in as the main bad guy for this role.

Location

Much of the film was recorded in Singapore, but the rest was filmed in the New Territories and Hong Kong.

Overall look at the film

In an interview on DVD with Lau Kar-wing, Karl Maka, who looked at the film, felt there was lack of balance between comedy and action. Initially there's too much action and not enough comedy. So they decided to retune the story so there's enough balance between the action and the comedy.

[2]

Box office

Skinny Tiger, Fatty Dragon earned HK $10,270,954.00 at the Hong Kong box office.[3]

Reception

Bey Logan pointed out in his review why the film did moderately successful. Firstly, there are certain logic and structure issues which is the negative aspect of the film. A few examples were the car chasing sequence in which he explains that if the heroes just call the police, the bad guys would be arrested, the film would be over and the scene wouldn't be as funny. The other is the Singapore holiday as he explains, after the Chinese wedding catastrophe, the film should be gaining momentum but instead goes down like a holiday expedition. So overall, the pace of the story is let down for that reason.

For western audiences, the character Baldy, played by Karl Maka, is described as being way over the top. The reason is his character definition from his previous films, most prominently the Aces Go Places series. So the things he does like the watermelon bowling could come across as very broad. On the other hand, it's really playing to the less sophisticated Asian audiences at the time, that do like this style of broad humour. Compared to Sammo Hung playing Fatty, his character can be overbearing and hard to enjoy without any qualities that makes us want to enjoy his presence in the film.

The mixed and positive aspect is the action sequences with Sammo Hung. After the Bruceploitation, fans of Bruce Lee would disregard any film that tries to copy Lee's films but never succeeded. However, Hung's style of action in Logan's opinion is regarded the best because of the way he is able to interpret Lee in his own style, while designing the fight sequence that's able to pass off early Bruce Lee references from his films, in a unique fashion.

Also because of his previous work on Enter the Fat Dragon, he's widely regarded as the best Bruce Lee impersonator, simply because of his early appearance in Enter the Dragon and his action choreography and appearance in Game of Death. Also, because of his bulk appearance and the fact he doesn't look like Lee (apart from his pudding bowl haircut), the most important element in his action sequences is he sells power. When Hung fights, it doesn't take more than five hits to knock down a stuntman on camera and that's why his fights works so well. That includes as a rarity, Hung fighting against the Thai "ladyboys" or tranvestites that haven't been seen in any other films since. [2]

References

  1. ^ "Shou hu fei long". 28 June 1990. Retrieved 30 October 2016 – via IMDb.
  2. ^ a b Skinny Tiger, Fatty Dragon, Bey Logan Audio Commentary (DVD featurette) (DVD). Hong Kong Legends, UK. 1990 (film), 2001 (DVD). {{cite AV media}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ "Skinny Tiger and Fatty Dragon (1990)". HKMDb. Retrieved 6 March 2009.