King of Comedy (1999)
Facts
| Directed by | Stephen Chow |
| Cast | Jackie Chan, Joe Cheng, Man-Fai Cheng, Cecilia Cheung and Stephen Chow |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 1998 |
| DVD Release | January 23, 2001 |
| Running Time | 91 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 601643664941 |
| Buy this item ... | 6 new from $10.95, 4 used from $9.99 |
Website Links
- Movie Review Query Engine - Directory of movie reviews.
- IMDb - Features plot summaries, reviews, cast lists, and theatre schedules.
- Art.com - Search for King of Comedy posters.
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Pringles! |
Stephen Chow plays a struggling actor who will do whatever he has to to get a role in a movie. After getting 2 chances at acting and failing both times he decides to teach acting for free. A prostitute played by Cecilia Cheung comes for acting lessons so she can be more convincing as a college girl for her customers. I didn't really get why Stephen Chow teaches acting for free, but he does help Triads act tougher and learns from the experiences they have doing Triad things. Karen Mok plays an actress and decides out of the blue that she wants Stephen Chow as her new screen partner, even though he screwed up the last 2 times he shot a scene with her. After falling in love with Cecilia Cheung, Chow forgets about her and focuses on Karen Mok. But it only seems like he forgot about Cheung. Even though Chow is about to become a big star, he still loves her. The relationship between these 2 is magical and I wish they had more time on screen together.
One thing I didn't like about this movie is that the story shifts so abruptly. The last sudden change in the story has Stephen Chow becoming an undercover cop. Ng Man Tat shows him that the best actors are actually undercovers. It is a very odd ending.
The comedy is good for the most part, but the story is not done very well. This is not one of Stephen Chow's worst movies, but definitely not one of his best.
2.5/5 August 27, 2007
| Great comedy giving by Stephen Chow! |
Stephen Chow and Lee Lik-Chi work very well together as directors. Over the years with him by his side, Stephen has really fine-tuned his comedy and directing skills, which resulted in him handling the latter duties all by himself on "Shaolin Soccer." I can't swear that this is the truth but the ideal way of working between the two should be that Lee Lik-Chi focuses more on the style of filmmaking while Stephen does his own brand of crazy comedy.
After a strange opening shot by the sea the movie kicks into high gear almost immediately. Stephen's knowledge and great vision of comedy is quickly apparent in the scene where his character, as an extra, manages to screw up a long and demanding John Woo-esque shot (where Karen Mok also makes her first appearance). Big credit has to go to action choreographer Bruce Law though who fires on all cylinders in this scene. I first saw his work on Kirk Wong's Gunmen and it's clear that his contribution to a project can mean a lot.
Throughout "King Of Comedy" I found that, by this point in his career, Stephen had the ability to make any comedy work, no matter how absurd it was. That's not at all easy to do and not something Wong Jing could do in his movies for instance. The visual humor dominates "King Of Comedy" and there's only a few moments where the humor is more dialogue based. The 92 minutes fly by quite fast and the script manages to develop the things it should. Neither director seems to want to distinguish themselves stylistically, which of course is a good thing in a comedy. We do see some effective uses of dissolves to indicate time passing but even within those the directors can't resist to insert more silly humor. I can honestly say that "King Of Comedy" is very good. Stephen Chow breaks new ground for himself and he definitely is Hong Kong's King Of Comedy.
January 9, 2007
| biography of Stephen Chow |
The whole movie seems like his biography as an actor who started small and because of his "professional spirit" or non-stopping pursue achieved his goal of becoming a "real" actor (actually king of comedy) in the end.
A bit of Cinderella kind of flavor. But the plot is great and the pace of story-telling is compelling. Though the ending is a little bit too hasty, it is very moving. September 16, 2005
| A fun, ridiculous romantic comedy |
| not as usual for Stephen Chow movie.... |
As for a technic comment there's no doubt this is a well made movie, the picture is clear (no special effects). June 4, 2003
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