Supercop Movie Review
Supercop Review

"Supercop" Overview

Rating: R
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Stanley TongProducer : Willie Chan,Edward Tang
Screenwiter : Edward Tang,Fibe Ma,Lee Wai Yee
Starring : Jackie Chan,Michelle Yeoh,Maggie Cheung,Kenneth Tsang,Wah Yuen,Bill Tung,Josephine Koo,Kelvin Wong
The Jackie Chan franchise continues to expand in America. Riding on the
success of last year's Rumble in the Bronx, Chan returns to U.S. screens with
the release of Supercop.
Relying on the three pillars of Chandom -- blazingly fast fights, awesome
stunts, and bad dubbing -- Chan once again turns out a crowd pleaser full of
karate chops and busted skulls. Basically a continuation of Chan's Police
Story series, fans of this genre will find themselves in familiar territory.
The plot, as close as I can tell is this: Jackie Chan is a Supercop.
Okay, there's a bit about him infiltrating a Hong Kong heroin cartel and, with
some serious help from his associate (Michelle Yeoh), pretty much kicks
everyone's butt. (How the studio justifies advertising Chan as
"single-handedly" kicking said butt is a mystery to me.)
So on top of a watery James Bond plot are fights so fast you can't tell whose
limbs are whose, Chan's unique brand of humor, and, as I said, lots of really,
really bad dubbing. At some level, one begins to wonder whether this is
intentional or not -- if this is just another aspect of the comedy or if it's
really the best they can do. (About half the Asian characters have British
accents.)
But who cares? You don't see a Jackie Chan movie for the sound quality any
more than you watch a Pauly Shore movie for poignant and witty observations
about life. What you see it for is some huge-ass explosions, Chan and Yeoh
beating the living crap out of everyone in sight, and a helicopter-meets-train
finale that makes Mission: Impossible look like an episode of Sesame Street.
Then again, that plot gets in the way an awful lot, slowing down the film
unbearably at times... but overall, the picture manages to keep moving along.
Special kudos for Ms. Yeoh, who plays, without a doubt, the strongest female
character I've ever seen in film. And, as always, don't forget to stay through
the final credits for Chan's twisted version of bloopers, most of which involve
a painful injury of some sort... in case you hadn't gotten enough of that in
the prior 90 minutes.
Aka Jing cha gu shi III: Chao ji jing cha.
Whatever you do, don't let go.
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Review by Christopher Null
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