Can I say that I grew up watching Jackie Chan grow up? It is only now that I feel that he has always been a fairy tale. No matter how much I clamor for "let reality come more violently" in the process of a movie, I always look forward to giving a little sweetness at the end. One day, I recommended a friend watch [How to Train Your Dragon]. After reading it, he said, "This is a fairy tale." I seem to have just woken up from a dream.
When I was a child, I watched Jackie Chan's movies over and over again in front of the DVD player. It was thrilling and interesting, and basically, everything a child could expect was satisfied. How happy. Later, until now, I couldn't stand the sound of broken limbs in the fight (some movies will deliberately exaggerate the sound of broken arms), because in Jackie Chan's movies, the bad guys won't be killed, and Jackie Chan won't use vicious moves. You say you are a cult movie. I can only watch it hard or go through those scenes with trepidation.
Jackie Chan is old, but those fights are only seen in his movies, and they are unique. The scientific name seems to be called juggling comedy fighting.
At the end of the movie, it was still the NG shots that showed up. I watched and heard the theme song of [Who Am I]. I was also excited when I listened to the song. When I was a primary school student, my movie idols were Jackie Chan and Jackie Chan. Jet Li, is enlightened education good?
I remember that the archeology girl's foot was dislocated in this episode, and Jackie Chan signaled others to divert her attention and take her back. His whole value is such a scene, which is "kindness to others". It's always been like this in his movies. He has a film called [A Good Guy]. He also has some tragic films, such as [Hongfan District], where he has been forced by foreigners all the time. This may be related to his experience. It's just my guess.
In his movies, the action is designed to be watched carefully. I think these actions are not inferior to the value of the play. I remember the sliding down from the almost vertical outer wall of the building in [Who Am I], and in [Project A sequel]. Bell tower battle, handcuffed to deal with the Axe Gang, these are too many to count. His movie is an adventure story, it's a juggling act. The story follows the action, and the story is made up to show the spectacle and the action. Another person who did this was Charlie Chaplin. Of course, you say Jackie Chan is as humanistic as Chaplin.
Jackie Chan wants to leave something humanistic. [Shinjuku Incident] seems to be such an attempt. I haven't watched it yet, but I will watch it.
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