Sentences with phrase «shanghai noon»

Marcus Homer, a gunslinger that decides to help Viu looks way too much like Owen Wilson from Shanghai Noon.
On his bathtub scene with Jackie Chan in «Shanghai Noon»:»... It has a way of bonding you, I'll tell you that.
And Jackie further milked the familiar formula in outings opposite Owen Wilson in Shanghai Noon and Shanghai Knights.
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2, SHANGHAI NOON and more (Available 5/7 — 6/3) Many Sides of Motherhood Collection: BAD MOMS, BAD GRANDMAS, THE LIGHT BETWEEN OCEANS and more (Available 5/7 — 6/3) Bad Ass Women Collection: GHOST IN THE SHELL, THE STEPFORD WIVES, THE INTERPRETER and more (Available 5/12 — 6/8)
Worldwide it's made more than Jackie Chan «funny» Shanghai Noon and even grossed $ 21 million more than Stephen Chow's stupidly good Kung Fu Hustle.
Although we can't wholly recommend them for family viewing, you may want to check two other Jackie Chan movies we've reviewed: Shanghai Noon and the first Rush Hour.
Why is Shanghai Noon rated PG - 13?
The MPAA rated Shanghai Noon PG - 13 for action violence, some drug humor, language and sensuality.
Typical for a Jackie Chan movie, most of Shanghai Noon exists only to demonstrate Chan's incredible martial arts abilities.
Chan is James Tong (a name used in exactly the same way as «Chon Wang» was in Shanghai Noon), a cabbie - turned - chauffer for suave super-agent Clark Devlin (Jason Isaacs) who, after Mr. Devlin's incapacitation, dons the Bond - surrogate's titular super-tux and suddenly becomes a slow, mugging, not - fighting Jackie Chan.
You can hear Cameron Diaz as the voice of Princess Fiona in Shrek, watch Drew Barrymore recreate a Cinderella role in Ever After and see Lucy Liu as Princess Pei Pei in Shanghai Noon.
Shanghai Noon is rated PG - 13 by the MPAA for action violence, some drug humor, language and sensuality.
Beginning with a voiceover from a mature Danny (Jon Cryer, Two and a Half Men), we're told how he met his two best childhood friends, Stan (Rick Stear, Buffy the Vampire Slayer) and Richie (Rafael Baez, Shanghai Noon).
Shanghai Noon, slapped together by first - time director Tom Dey, repeats the formula of Rush Hour to lesser effect: this time Chan is a Chinese imperial bodyguard sent to the Old West to retrieve a kidnapped princess, and his partner is Owen Wilson (Bottle Rocket), who looks and sounds as if he wandered in from a stoner comedy being shot on the next lot.
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Nicole Armour (alphabetical) Beau travail Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai The Heart of the World (Guy Maddin) The House of Mirth Lost Motion (Janie Geiser) Not Resting (Nicky Hamlin) Shanghai Noon Time Regained Voyages Yi Yi
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That character is Derek Zoolander (Stiller, Meet the Parents), the world's most popular male supermodel, who finds his career may be on the demise and soon to be replaced by the up - and - coming star model, Hansel (Wilson, Shanghai Noon).
Albeit a pedestrian endeavor, with a retread script and standard direction, it must be said that Shanghai Noon definitely delivers on entertainment, as the two stars carry the film with their own special blend of quirky charm that breathes life into tired lungs.
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Owen Wilson and Jackie Chan will reprise their roles from Shanghai Noon and Shanghai Knights for the new sequel Shanghai Dawn.
Since then, Wilson has appeared in some incredible films, including «Shanghai Noon,» «Meet the Parents,» «Zoolander» and «The Royal Tenenbaums.»
While there's no denying the talents of the two stars, I would take a guess that filming Jackie Chan (The Accidental Spy, Shanghai Noon) and Chris Tucker (Jackie Brown, The Fifth Element) interact with people while walking down a busy street for 90 minutes would provide just as many laughs.
Wilson's additional acting credits include «She's Funny That Way,» «No Escape,» «The Internship,» «Free Birds,» «Are You Here,» James L. Brooks» romantic comedy «How Do You Know,» «The Big Year,» «Hall Pass,» «Marmaduke,» «Starsky & Hutch,» «Zoolander,» «Drillbit Taylor,» «The Wendell Baker Story,» «Shanghai Noon,» «Behind Enemy Lines,» «I Spy,» «Shanghai Knights,» «Armageddon,» «The Minus Man» and «The Cable Guy.»
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Tom Dey («Shanghai Noon») produced and directed this innocent family movie that critics will love to hate, and little tikes will just love.
Next on the list is another sequel to a VERY beloved franchise, this time coming from Hollywood — «Shanghai Dawn» is the third movie in the one and only Jackie Chan's «Shanghai» trilogy, which started with «Shanghai Noon» and continued with the excellent «Shanghai Knights».
Save the Last Dance (2001) Saving Grace (2000) Saving Silverman (2001) Say It Isn't So (2001) Scary Movie (2000) Scary Movie 2 (2001) The Score (2001) Scream 3 (2000) Screwed (2000) See Spot Run (2001) Serendipity (2001) Sexy Beast (2000) Shadow of the Vampire (2000) Shaft (2000) Shallow Hal (2001) Shanghai Noon (2000) Shower (Xizao)(1999) Shrek (2001) Simpatico (1999) The 6th Day (2000) The Sixth Sense (1999) The Skulls (2000) Slackers (2002) Sleepy Hollow (1999) Small Time Crooks (2000) Smiling Fish and Goat on Fire (1999) Snatch (2000) Snow Day (2000) Snow Falling on Cedars (1999) Someone Like You (2001) The Source (1999) South Park: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut (1999) Space Cowboys (2000) Spy Game (2001) Spy Kids (2001) State and Main (2000) Steal This Movie!
SHANGHAI NOON Jackie Chan returns, looser and goosier than he was in «Rush Hour,» with another crossover English - language action comedy.
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Still, in the eyes of near - sighted Hollywood executives, Chan's star power was proven by the financial success of mediocre chop suey action films like «Rush Hour» and «Shanghai Noon
It is for these reasons that fans of «Shanghai Noon» will undoubtedly like «Shanghai Knights.»
Of course, since his uncle was murdered in «Shanghai Noon,» it leaves me wondering which relative of his is going to die in the third installment of this series, which can then be appropriately called «Shanghai Mourning.»
Synopsis: After taming the wild west in the comedy «Shanghai Noon,» Chon Wang (Jackie Chan) and Roy O'Bannon (Owen Wilson) are back in the saddle, but off the range — this time, they're out to settle a score in civilized London in the sequel, «Shanghai Knights.»
Synopsis: After taming the wild west in the comedy «Shanghai Noon,» Chon Wang (Jackie Chan) and Roy O'Bannon (Owen Wilson) are back in the saddle, but off th... [MORE]
Given the script for Shanghai Noon, they've come up with a middling Old West oater that falls flat at least as often as it finds the funny bone.
It was tough, because while director Tom Dey — he of the execrable Failure to Launch, though to be fair also of the pretty funny Shanghai Noon — has no problem sexualizing his female canine actors in a movie for kids and doesn't think there's anything weird about that, he doesn't realize that he could have done the same for his male human actors without it being weird: just let the camera linger for a moment or two.
Tripp (Matthew McConaughey) is the happy - go - lucky 35 - year - old at the center of «Failure to Launch,» an occasionally very funny but also very sloppy quasi-romantic-comedy from director Tom Dey («Showtime,» «Shanghai Noon»).
But who she is when she's not on the job is a cipher; we only know that Paula shares a pad with Kit, a cute - loopy weirdo who, in the tradition of eccentric romantic - comedy roommates in the person of irresistible comedienne Zooey Deschanel, sashays away with the picture every time director Tom Dey (Shanghai Noon) gives her a chance.
A sequel to «Shanghai Noon,» where the action is set in the Wild West, here 18th century London is the backdrop and paying homage to certain characters such as Sherlock Holmes, Charlie Chaplin, and yes Jack The Ripper, is Chan who gets here to avenge the death of his father, who is murdered.
«Shanghai Noon» was a western comedy that worked, not to mention Jackie Chan and Owen Wilson made a fun duo.

Not exact matches

In the busy streets of Shanghai, there's a place called People's Square where every Sundays and Saturdays from noon to 5 o'clock in the afternoon parents trade - ff information about their children in order to find a suitable match for them.
Coming from cities ranging from Shanghai and Beijing to New York and Los Angeles, over 260 exhibitors greet a flood of VIPs starting on Wednesday at noon; the fair will be open to the public Thursday morning.
Chen Wei's work has been the subject of solo exhibitions worldwide, including 2016 cacooca Art Exhibition: think, Wrong Gallery, Taipei, Taiwan (2016): JNBY Festival No. 1 — Chen Wei; Noon Club, JNBY Headquarters, Hangzhou, China (2016); Chen Wei: In the Waves, Chi K11 Art Museum, Shanghai, China (2015); Chen Wei: The Stars in the Night Sky are Innumerable, Australia China Art Foundation, Sydney, Australia (2014); Tight Rope, Yokohama Creative City Center (YCC), Yokohama, Japan (2011) and The Fabulist's Path, Platform China Contemporary Art Institute, Beijing, China (2008).
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