Film Details: The Bodyguard From Beijing [World Video] DVD | Dir.: Corey Yuen Kwai | Cast: Jet Li Lian-Jie, Christy Chung Lai-Tai, Kent Cheng Jak-Si, Ngai Sing (Collin Chou), Joey Leung Wing-Chung, Ng Wai-Kwok, William Chu Wai-Lim, Wong Kam-Kong, Chun Kwai-Bo, Corey Yuen Kwai, Kong Miu-Deng, Chan Sek, Huang Kai-Sen, Michael Lam Gong, Fong Yue, Gary Mak Wing-Lun, Wong Wa-Wo, Adam Chan Chung-Tai
Although the characters and plot are paper thin, this film redeems itself in its creative action sequences. Jet Li's lightning fast precision moves are impressive as always, and the fight choreography is fresh and enjoyable.
Li plays a hard-hitting and highly trained bodyguard hired by a businessman to protect his girlfriend after she witnesses a murder. While becoming targeted for retribution himself, Li and the girlfriend begin to develop feelings for one another.
Overview:
Hong Kong martial arts master Jet Li plays a bodyguard from the Beijing secret police, sent to Hong Kong to protect a beautiful young witness to a mob killing, played by Christy Chung. Li turns her home into a high-security prison, complete with video cameras surveying every room, even her bedroom. Furious, Chung resists his efforts to protect her--until the threat to her life is made abundantly clear in a spectacular shopping mall shootout. As is natural under such circumstances, romance begins to bloom, much to the dismay of Chung's lawyer boyfriend, who hired Li in the first place. Made in the last few years before the British province of Hong Kong was returned to the rule of mainland China, The Bodyguard from Beijing makes many (possibly anxious) jokes about the differences between the austere Communist bodyguard and the lackadaisical H.K. police. Li's character is so consistently stone-faced that his usual boyish charm is repressed, and the movie emphasizes gunplay over acrobatic kung fu action, but there are still kicks galore and the usual Hong Kong combination of spectacular violence and outrageous sentimentality--all captured in stylish, glossy cinematography. And how often do you get to see venetian blinds used as an offensive weapon?
II - "May be Inappropriate For Children" (Broad rating may be roughly equal to an MPPA rating of "PG-13" to "R". In the late 1980s this rating splintered in two ratings: IIA and IIB) Films rated Category II may contain mild to strong violence, nudity that is usually not sexually oriented, explicit language and adult situations.
SECURE CREDIT CARD PROCESSING BY VERISIGN.
981 users online right now / 561968 visitors since 11/2/2009 10:31:16 AM All content copyright 2000+ HKFlix.com, not to be used without written permission.