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Kung Fu Chefs (DVD) (2-Disc Edition) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region All

Sammo Hung (Actor) | Vanness Wu (Actor) | Cherrie Ying (Actor) | Fan Siu Wong
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YesAsia Editorial Description

Kung Fu Chefs brings together two Hong Kong Cinema favorites - food and fighting - for a rollicking action comedy. Martial arts legend Sammo Hung leads the cast as the fighting chef, while F4's Vanness Wu, who previously displayed his action talents in Kung Fu Fighter and Star Runner, plays his goateed protege. Directed by Ken Yip, Kung Fu Chefs cooks up an entertaining smorgasbord of gourmet drama, budding romance, and journeyman kung-fu action. The film co-stars former Morning Musume member Kago Ai and Hong Kong actress Cherrie Ying, as well as martial artists Fan Siu Wong (Ip Man) and Bruce Liang, Sammo Hung's son Timmy Hung, and funnyman Lam Tze Chung (Kung Fu Hustle).

After getting ousted from the clan by his vengeful nephew (Fan Siu Wong), disgraced chef Wong (Sammo Hung) happens upon young and arrogant cooking prodigy Lung (Vanness Wu) at the Four Seas restaurant. Four Seas' sassy proprietor (Cherrie Ying) takes Wong on as her new head chef, and Wong takes Lung on as his new disciple, training him in an amusing series of culinary kung-fu spars. With the Top Chef competition coming up, it's now up to Lung to win back his master's honor, even if the other side's not fighting fair.

This 2-Disc Edition comes with a bonus disc containing making of, music video, and trailers.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Kung Fu Chefs (DVD) (2-Disc Edition) (Hong Kong Version) 功夫廚神 (DVD) (雙碟版) (香港版) 功夫厨神 (DVD) (双碟版) (香港版) 功夫廚神 (DVD) (雙碟版) (香港版) Kung Fu Chefs (DVD) (2-Disc Edition) (Hong Kong Version)
Artist Name(s): Sammo Hung (Actor) | Vanness Wu (Actor) | Cherrie Ying (Actor) | Fan Siu Wong | Timmy Hung | Kago Ai | Bruce Liang | Lam Tze Chung 洪金寶 (Actor) | 吳建豪 (Actor) | 應采兒 (Actor) | 樊少皇 | 洪天明 | 加護亞依 | 梁小龍 | 林子聰 洪金宝 (Actor) | 吴建豪 (Actor) | 应采儿 (Actor) | 樊少皇 | 洪天明 | 加护亚依 | 梁小龙 | 林子聪 洪金寶(サモ・ハン・キンポー) (Actor) | 呉建豪 (ヴァネス・ウー) (Actor) | 應采兒 (チェリー・イン) (Actor) | 樊少皇(ファン・シウウォン) | 洪天明(ティミー・ハン) | 加護亜依 | 梁小龍(ブルース・リャン) | 林子聰(ラム・ジーチョン) Sammo Hung (Actor) | Vanness Wu (Actor) | Cherrie Ying (Actor) | Fan Siu Wong | Timmy Hung | Kago Ai | Bruce Liang | Lam Tze Chung
Director: Ken Yip 葉永健 叶永健 イップ・ウィンキン Ken Yip
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Release Date: 2009-10-23
Language: English, Cantonese, Mandarin
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese
Country of Origin: Hong Kong
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Widescreen Anamorphic: Yes
Close Caption: Yes
Sound Information: Dolby Digital 5.1
Disc Format(s): DVD-5, DVD
Region Code: All Region What is it?
Duration: 91 (mins)
Publisher: Kam & Ronson Enterprises Co Ltd
Package Weight: 130 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1021416794

Product Information

* Special Features:
- Making Of
- MTV
- Trailers

Director: Yip Wing Kin

Jo had kept hatred in his heart for a very long time and did what he could to oust his Uncle Wong Bing-Yi (Sammo Hung) from the village and to claim the rights to the "Dragon-Head Cleaver", a symbol of power to the clan. As Wong Bing-Yi was forced out of the village, he encountered Shen Qing (Cherrie Ying) by chance and was determined to help her during the troubled times at her restaurant "Four Seas".

Here, he discovered a young cooking wonder, Lung Kin-Yat (Vanness Wu). To bring "Four Seas" back to the top, Lung ends up representing "Four Seas" to the competition against Chef Tin (Lam Tze Chung), two times "Top Chef" winner and the head chef at "Imperial Palace", the restaurant owned by Jo.

Lung shined by overcoming many obstacles and preparing a dish called "Fresh Water Bak-Choy" just as his master, Wong Bing-Yi had taught him. However, the head judge has been bribed by "Imperial Palace" and he is also the master of Chef Tin. Who will finally win the title of "Top Chef"? Can the "Kung Fu Chef" finally win over the hearts of many?

Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Kung Fu Chefs (DVD) (2-Disc Edition) (Hong Kong Version)"

October 28, 2009

At first glance, Kung Fu Chef looks as cheesy and low-rent as 2007's unimpressive Kung Fu Fighter. The combo of director Yip Wing-Kin and stars Vanness Wu and Fan Siu-Wong couldn't prevent Kung Fu Fighter from being a crappy Kung Fu Hustle clone, and since they all return for Kung Fu Chef, it's understandable if confidence in this latest Kung Fu [insert noun] iteration is not high. But Kung Fu Chef surprises. Thanks to decent fight scenes, fun cooking scenes and the presence of the venerable Sammo Hung, the film surpasses its numerous negatives to deliver something approximating decent, harmless fun. Who knew?

Sammo Hung stars as martial arts chef Wong Ping-Yee, who years ago saved a banquet by using the powerful Dragon Head Knife to butcher a whole pig in less than two minutes flat. However, his evil nephew Master Joe (Fan Siu-Wong) framed him by poisoning the meal, making Yee an outcast from the martial arts/cooking world. Also, the Dragon Head Knife magically grew dull, turning gray and ugly right before everyone's eyes. Maybe it felt sad.

In the present time, Yee crosses paths with hip and talented martial arts chef Ken (Vanness Wu) at a restaurant run by sisters Ching (Cherrie Ying) and Ying (Kago Ai of Japan's Morning Musume). Yee has a past connection to the sisters, and after a fashion he agrees to take over the kitchen and train Ken, who acts annoying and arrogant until Yee beats him in a sashimi slicing contest. However, Master Joe is unhappy to hear about Yee's return, and sends his goons (led by Flash Point's Xing Yu), all fashionably dressed up like Miami Vice-era Don Johnson clones, to mess things up. Can Yee and his new family beat up an army of baddies dressed in powder blue blazers?

Unlike the disappointing Kung Fu Fighter, Kung Fu Chef delivers solid fight sequences that recall light Hong Kong fare from years past. The action isn't bloody or over the top, but it's not marred by extraneous editing, sometimes allowing for more than your usual two or three points of contact per shot. Yuen Clan members Yuen Cheung-Yan and Yuen Shun-Yi deserve credit, as do actors like Sammo Hung, Bruce Leung (as Yee's fallen older brother) and Fan Siu-Wong - namely guys who can handle more complex choreography than your standard popstar types. Still, the chiseled Vanness Wu handles his fight sequences well, and even Timmy Hung gets in on the action. His role is basically to play his father's punching bag, but he takes the punishment gamely. If Sammo getting to hit his flesh-and-blood is what it takes for him to suit up for more action films, then Timmy, please play a bad guy more often.

The fight sequences help compensate for the film's negatives, which number quite high when tallied up. Besides the barely existent story, you have lousy sound design, odd continuity, terrible editing, and numerous nonsensical sequences that appear pretty much out of nowhere. The chefs frequently display X-ray eyesight, and at one point Cherrie Ying demonstrates telepathic powers which she uses to, uh, select a dish for a cooking competition. Later on in the film, certain characters are in great peril, but rather than race to save them, everyone else stands around for a, "Hmmm, thank you for having honor, no don't kneel, let's stand around and talk" conversation that really stretches the clock.

The sloppy filmmaking extends to the acting; Sammo Hung is great and grizzled as Yee, but Vanness Wu mugs up a storm as super-hip kung-fu slacker Ken. However, Wu is outdone by Ai Kago, whose cute and funny girl act is so egregious that it could cause scars in more impressionable audiences. The rest of the players are either appropriate or unobtrusive, with Fan Siu-Wong making the biggest impact in yet another of his borderline comic "I'm an evil person" roles.

Kung Fu Chef is little more than a low-rent populist product, with easily digestible themes of family and honor, and a screenplay that's so hackneyed that it becomes funny. People say cartoon-like pretentious stuff like, "It's easy to cook; it's hard to do well in life", while also engaging in classic bon mots like, "Bitch, are you looking for trouble?" Screenwriting genius this is not, but the writers do get one thing very right: the cooking. The film has numerous scenes featuring delicious dishes, with cooking techniques and exotic foods described in pleasing detail. The description of simple foods is also effective, with scenes about cooking scrambled eggs or cabbage in chicken soup proving surprisingly successful.

Also, the film features the expected cooking competitions, where delicious food is prepared with running commentary from the peanut gallery describing every move in deep detail. The judging usually involves manga-like reactions, but the film eschews over-the-top God of Cookery-type mugging while still channeling much of the same feel. Overall, Kung Fu Chef provides decent return for its meager investment, and manages some fun amidst the expected sloppy filmmaking. It's really unfortunate that the direction is so substandard; had it been even a bit more inspired perhaps Kung Fu Chef could actually be classified as quality. As it is, the film is better than nearly anyone would expect, which is already cause enough for cheer.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com

Editor's Pick of "Kung Fu Chefs (DVD) (2-Disc Edition) (Hong Kong Version)"

Picked By Sanwei
See all this editor's picks


October 30, 2009

Kung Fu in the Kitchen
After Kung Fu Fighter, it's understandable to want to run away screaming at the mere thought of another Ken Yip-directed Kung Fu-titled movie starring the tagteam of Vanness Wu, Fan Siu Wong, and those Kung Fu Hustle guys. I certainly went in expecting the worst, but Kung Fu Chefs turned out to be surprisingly enjoyable. The film has way better production values than Kung Fu Fighter, and there's a feel-good, self-effacing wackiness to the whole thing that makes it hard to hate on. Plus, Sammo Hung is in it!

As a kung fu-in-the-kitchen action movie, Kung Fu Chefs is as silly and chop-socky as the premise and production pedigree promise. Sammo Hung plays a master cook who gets kicked out of his village clan because of his vengeful nephew's scheming. He ends up taking a chef position at the Four Seas restaurant, and teaching the way of the wok, kung fu-style, to Vanness Wu's impatient young grasshopper.

Kung Fu Chefs embraces the everything-but-the-kitchen-sink approach to cinema, and the results are about as messy and authentic as chop suey, but the movie is quite agreeable for much of its duration. The action is solid, and the acting is entertaining. Vanness Wu mugs away with his ironic eyebrows, Sammo Hung spouts zen, cutesy bad-girl idol Kago Ai pouts prettily, Fan Siu Wong overacts like there's no tomorrow, and everyone else looks mildly amused - all of which add up to a happy, harmless watch for the audience.

Kung Fu Chefs is full of precious small moments that make the film guiltily entertaining, like Sammo Hung and Bruce Liang's fight scene, Kago Ai suddenly high-kicking a baddie, Sammo beating up his real-life son Timmy Hung, and X-ray vision shots of a chicken. Thanks to the genre mishmash, we also get both a cooking competition showdown and a kung-fu kickdown for the climax. The parts don't really add up to a coherent whole, particularly in the last quarter of the film when things go inexplicably awry with strange editing and chunks of the story going MIA - but even that is kind of amusing.

What I found especially endearing about Kung Fu Chefs though is that it looks and sounds suspiciously like a live-action anime/manga. There's a clear Japanese influence over the film. The character and restaurant names sound like Japanese Chinese, and apparently Japan thought highly enough of it to release a Premium Box Edition DVD. The art of cooking, chopping, dicing, and sauce-making are portrayed with comic reverence and loving detail, and tasty food is rewarded with exaggerated reaction shots straight out of an anime or Japanese cooking show. Maybe it's the Cooking Master Boy fan in me speaking, but Kung Fu Chefs is a lot of fun.
This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.
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