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Once Upon a Time in China Trilogy (English Subtitles)

Once Upon a Time in China Trilogy (English Subtitles)Actor: Jet Li
Studio: Columbia TriStar / Sony Pictures
Category: DVD

List Price: CDN$ 39.90
Buy New: CDN$ 23.72
as of 7/31/2010 10:17 CDT details
You Save: CDN$ 16.18 (41%)

Qty 3 In Stock


New (9) Used (2) from CDN$ 17.99

Seller: importcds__
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 15 reviews
Sales Rank: 26581

Format: NTSC, Closed-captioned, Subtitled, Anamorphic, Widescreen
Languages: English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Cantonese Chinese (Original Language), Mandarin Chinese (Original Language), Mandarin Chinese (Dubbed)
Rating: R (Restricted)
Region: 1
Discs: 2
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Number Of Items: 2
Running Time: 359 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5 x 0.6

MPN: COLD01612D
ISBN: 1404939121
UPC: 043396016125
EAN: 9781404939127
ASIN: B00008EY6M

Theatrical Release Date: September 1, 1993
Release Date: August 12, 2003
Availability: Usually ships within 1 - 2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

From Amazon.com
Once Upon a Time in China
The first of a popular series (six in all) starring the charismatic and athletically adept Jet Li. Li plays legendary folk hero Wong Fei Hong, a late 19th century southern Chinese healer and kung fu master. The story begins with Western powers (American, British, and French) encroaching on the city of Canton. Wong is asked by the Black Flag army to safeguard the town by creating his own militia of kung fu experts. His assistants include the butcher "Porky" (Kent Cheng), a Chinese-American named Bucktooth So (Jacky Cheung), and his westernized "Auntie" Yee (Rosamund Kwan), a non-blood-related childhood friend for whom he holds a special affection. But the Westerners aren't the only problem in Canton. The Sha Ho gang terrorizes local businesses and has begun dealing with the Americans in exporting Chinese for slave labor and prostitution. A down-on-his-luck kung fu master named Iron Vest Yim (Yan Yee Kwan) has decided he needs to defeat Wong to open a school and Leung Fu (Jackie Chan contemporary Yuen Biao), a traveling opera troupe groupie, just keeps getting in the way. This epic martial-arts film showcases Li's amazing fighting and acrobatic skills and established Tsui Hark as a top-notch action film director. The final fight scene between Wong and Yim entails a dizzying orchestration of kicks and punches while teeter-tottering on ladders. --Shannon Gee

Once Upon a Time in China 2
Actor and martial arts maestro Jet Li and iconoclastic director Tsui Hark revisit historical China and legendary folk hero Wong Fei Hung in the second installment to the wildly popular Once Upon a Time in China film series (or better yet, "serials"). The main players include Li as Wong Fei Hung, Rosamund Kwan as his beloved but Westernized Auntie 13, and their clumsy sidekick Foon (Max Mok). China is in a period of political unrest. Dr. Sun Yat Sen is beginning to gain momentum behind his Nationalist party. A Qing minister (played with intensity by skilled fighter Donnie Yen) firmly carries out his job as police enforcer and a crazed cult called the White Lotus Sect has decided to take matters into their own hands by bullying citizens and destroying everything foreign. Wong and his crew find themselves at odds with the minister and the Sect, who have more in common than they initially let on. It all leads to some high-octane action scenes, including an all-out table-stacking and airborne brawl with the Sect (in which Wong uncharacteristically goes a little berserk himself) and a one-on-one matchup between Li and Yen. Tsui juggles the multilayered plot while Li juggles his opponents in a perfectly serviceable epic that is perhaps not as significant as the first Once Upon a Time in China but is solid kung fu nourishment for fans. --Shannon Gee

Once Upon a Time in China 3
Set in the era when China was just beginning to establish relations with Europe, Once upon a Time in China 3 is a mixture of politics, intrigue, broad comedy, and kung fu action. Charismatic Jet Li stars once again as Wong Fei-hung, a legendary Chinese hero who is a doctor, a pacifist, and an amazingly skilled martial artist. Like many Hong Kong films, this movie has a woefully complicated plot: in summary, a kung fu competition not only sparks a bitter rivalry between different martial arts associations, it also becomes the linchpin in an assassination plot. But this leaves out Wong Fei-hung's increasingly romantic relationship with his aunt (played by Rosamund Kwan), the rehabilitation of one of the villain's henchmen, and the introduction of a steam engine to a Chinese factory, among other subplots! Once upon a Time in China 3 is not the strongest in the series--the subtitling is unusually clumsy, the editing is rough, the plot is confusing, and the melodrama is more crudely played than in the other films--but there's still a clear, raw authority to the storytelling that is a hallmark of director-producer Hark Tsui (Peking Opera Blues, Green Snake). Though it seems to have been made in a rush, Once upon a Time in China 3 will still reward devotees of Hong Kong films, and the frequent and wild fight scenes will appeal to action fans. --Bret Fetzer


Customer Reviews:
5 out of 5 stars Loved it!   October 28, 2009
Northern Reader (Northern Ontario)
I really enjoy Jet Li in his earlier years of Martial Arts Film. Once Upon a Time in China, was one of the best Martial Arts films I have ever seen. The story line is compelling and I often found a bit to hard on my heart. The fights scenes are very well done, having serious fights set along side a fight to showcase the comedy that Martial Arts can provide. A great film.

Having the other two movies is a great offer as well, I still havn't made my way to watching them but Hey why not!



2 out of 5 stars over-rated   July 8, 2004
Christopher Zimmerman (Shanghai, China)
the first movie is very good but the second and third put me to sleep. Everyone said these movies were so great. I just can't see why. Unless you need to collect every Jet Li movie I would pass on this set. I think the first movie is worth buying singly though. It is very complex and unique. It will put you in a different dimension while watching it. But the 2nd and 3rd are so boring that I couldn't stay awake no matter how hard I tried. If you don't buy this set you will be missing nothing. However, try to pick up the first movie, it is very decent.


5 out of 5 stars Jet at his best   June 6, 2004
Taddese Zicke (Florida, USA)
I don't need to review this, this is a classic. You must watch parts 1-3, and then get Once Upon a Time in China and America. For some strange reason, he abruptly left the series after part 3, and made The Last Hero in China, a spoof of his previous work.


1 out of 5 stars Typically Terrible   May 29, 2004
Kevin Harris (Ferndale, WA United States)
Jet Li is a fine martial arts stylist and an adequate actor but this film is typical of the slap-dash, juvenile style of film making practised by the Asian film industry.
Everyone character in it is based on some firmly held, narrow-minded perception of the world. Noble peasants, corrupt officials, Pure-hearted heros. The evil white guys are especially grotesque: Big Noses! Facial Hair!
Bad table manners!
Sure, Western films have been guilty of awful anti-oriental bias but there's no way a movie about the "Yellow Peril" could be released today without riots breaking out. As long as the bad guys are white, racism is OK.

The praise for this racist, silly, poorly made film is mystifying. It comes from people who are evidently easily mezmerized by frenetic visual activity being passed before their eyes. They can sit still for this far longer than the rest of us who can find more important things to do with our time like fold socks, do our homework or almost ANYTHING other than watching this film!



5 out of 5 stars crazy kungfu lover   February 4, 2004
Where I loved the first film in the trilogy, i thought the second two lacked. Im giving it five stars simply becuase of the great price for all three, and would probably buy it over just the first one alone due to the small difference in price, but i still think the second two movies in the trilogy lack in cinemetography, and coreography(my spelling sucks, sorry).
I prefer more realistic fight scenes and minimal use of wirework, and while the first one does have some of this it is overused the second film and then even more in the third.
still exelent movie though, dont get me wrong, but the only one i care to watch on a regular basis is the first of the three.


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Once Upon a Time in China Trilogy (English Subtitles)