Image Gallery Now Loading… Previous Next Close

Once A Gangster (VCD) (Hong Kong Version) VCD

Ekin Cheng (Actor) | Jordan Chan (Actor) | Alex Fong Chung Sun (Actor) | Conroy Chan (Actor)
Our Price: US$8.49
Availability: Usually ships within 7 - 14 days
This item belongs to:
Important information about purchasing this product:
  • This product is accepted for return under certain conditions. For more details, please refer to our return policy.
Once A Gangster (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Young and Dangerous stars Ekin Cheng and Jordan Chan reunite on the big screen for the first time in ten years for the gangster satire Once a Gangster. Co-written and directed by Infernal Affairs co-writer Felix Chong, Once a Gangster is a hilarious reversal of the popular Hong Kong triad film of the 1990s. Chong tells the absurd story of two gangland figures doing their best to not become the triad boss with sly references to Election, Chong's own Infernal Affairs, and even Hong Kong politics. In addition to the two leads, Once a Gangster also features scene-stealing performances by Alex Fong Chung Sun (Overheard), Candice Yu (Whispers and Moans), Michelle Ye (Accident), Conroy Chan (The Heavenly Kings), and pop star Wilfred Lau, who gives a memorable impression of Tony Leung Chiu-Wai's Infernal Affairs character.

Roast Pork (Jordan Chan) joins the triad as a young man and ends up becoming a trusted lieutenant of boss Kerosene (Alex Fong Chung Sun). However, his true passion is in his successful chain of restaurants, his loving wife (Michelle Ye), and his two children. So when Kerosene wants to promote his trusted right hand man to the top of the organization as a way to take on his financial debts, it's understandable why Roast Pork would want to refuse. Roast Pork comes up with an intricate scheme with his men that would take himself out of the running, but Kerosene's intervention causes it to fail. When all hopes appears to be lost, lifelong gangster Sparrow (Ekin Cheng) is released from jail after serving a 20-year sentence for committing a gang-related murder that earned him a guarantee for the leader spot. However, Sparrow has made his own plans to stay out of the gang, setting off a battle of wits between the two men.

© 2010-2012 YesAsia.com Ltd. All rights reserved. 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.

Technical Information

Product Title: Once A Gangster (VCD) (Hong Kong Version) 飛砂風中轉 (VCD) (香港版) 飞砂风中转 (VCD) (香港版) 飛砂風中轉 (香港版) Once A Gangster (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)
Artist Name(s): Ekin Cheng (Actor) | Jordan Chan (Actor) | Alex Fong Chung Sun (Actor) | Conroy Chan (Actor) | Candice Yu (Actor) | Michelle Ye (Actor) | Wilfred Lau | Kwok Fung | Wong Yau Nam (Actor) | Derek Tsang (Actor) | Pong Nan | Pakho Chau (Actor) | Cheng Sze Kwan | Chapman To 鄭伊健 (Actor) | 陳小春 (Actor) | 方中信 (Actor) | 陳子聰 (Actor) | 余安安 (Actor) | 葉 璇 (Actor) | 劉浩龍 | 郭峰 | 黃又南 (Actor) | 曾國祥 (Actor) | 藍奕邦 | 周柏豪 (Actor) | C君 鄭 | 杜汶澤 郑伊健 (Actor) | 陈小春 (Actor) | 方中信 (Actor) | 陈子聪 (Actor) | 余安安 (Actor) | 叶璇 (Actor) | 刘浩龙 | 郭峰 | 黄又南 (Actor) | 曾国祥 (Actor) | 蓝奕邦 | 周柏豪 (Actor) | C君 郑 | 杜汶泽 鄭伊健(イーキン・チェン) (Actor) | 陳小春 (ジョーダン・チャン) (Actor) | 方中信(アレックス・フォン) (Actor) | 陳子聰 (コンロイ・チャン) (Actor) | 余安安(キャンディス・ユー) (Actor) | 葉璇 (ミッシェル・イップ) (Actor) | 劉浩龍(ウィルフレッド・ラウ) | Kwok Fung | 黄又南(ウォン・ヤウナム) (Actor) | 曾國祥(デレク・ツァン) (Actor) | 藍奕邦(ポン・ナン) | 周柏豪 (パコ・チャウ) (Actor) | Cheng Sze Kwan | 杜汶澤 (チャップマン・トー) Ekin Cheng (Actor) | Jordan Chan (Actor) | Alex Fong Chung Sun (Actor) | Conroy Chan (Actor) | Candice Yu (Actor) | Michelle Ye (Actor) | Wilfred Lau | Kwok Fung | Wong Yau Nam (Actor) | Derek Tsang (Actor) | Pong Nan | Pakho Chau (Actor) | Cheng Sze Kwan | Chapman To
Director: Felix Chong 莊 文強 庄 文强 莊文強(フェリックス・チョン) Felix Chong
Producer: Alan Mak 麥 兆輝 麦兆辉 麥兆輝(アラン・マック) Alan Mak
Release Date: 2010-07-22
Language: Cantonese, Mandarin
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese
Country of Origin: Hong Kong
Disc Format(s): VCD
Rating: IIB
Duration: 95 (mins)
Publisher: Mega Star (HK)
Other Information: 2VCDs
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1022966984

Product Information

Director : Felix Chong

Celebrity cook Roast Pork (Jordan Chan) is known for his culinary sleight of hand, but hardly anyone realizes he used to be a young and dangerous slayer who cut human flesh rather than poultry meat. Now a family man who strives to be a caring father, he finds his idyllic life turn topsy-turvy when his Triad mentor comes out of nowhere and commands him to run for the “Dragon Head” in the underworld.

Roast Pork’s only chance to extricate himself from this quagmire is to lose the election to another candidate called Sparrow (Ekin Cheng), who supposedly is the designated heir apparent to the previous kingpin. Ironically enough, Sparrow has found his true calling in academia while serving terms in prison. He has set his mind to getting into the best university in Hong Kong rather than re-donning his Triad cloak.
Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

Other Versions of "Once A Gangster (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)"

Customers who bought "Once A Gangster (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)" also bought

Customers who bought videos directed by Felix Chong also bought videos by these directors:

Awards

This film has won 1 award(s) and received 1 award nomination(s). All Award-Winning Asian Films

Search Keywords

The following keywords are associated with this product. Please click on a keyword to search for similar items.

YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Once A Gangster (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)"

July 20, 2010

This professional review refers to Once A Gangster (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
Ekin Cheng and Jordan Chan are back - though things aren't what they used to be. Writer-director Felix Chong's Once a Gangster brings back the Young and Dangerous boys in a triad movie satire about aging gangsters thrust into a potential gang war where only one can emerge victorious. The winner gets to be head of the Wo Yee Sing triad, while the loser gets absolutely zip. The twist: Roast Pork (Jordan Chan) wants to be the loser. He's only up for the top spot because his lousy boss Kerosene (a hilariously scheming Alex Fong Chung-Sun) wants to saddle Roast Pork with the gang's large debt. Can Roast Pork find a way to extricate himself from the triad election and continue his dream profession, to be a chef?

It won't be easy. Roast Pork is being cajoled into the leader/fall guy role because of such concepts as honor, brotherhood and face - you know, the stuff that usually makes for good triads in your typical Hong Kong movie. Kerosene essentially uses a guilt trip to force Roast Pork into the running, but Roast Pork plots with his randy wife (a funny and fiery Michelle Ye) to somehow get out of the situation. Their best bet is the offspring of loud triad madam Pearl (an overacting Candace Yu). Her son Sparrow (Ekin Cheng) was promised leadership after a 20-year stint in the slammer, and when he's freed he immediately gets a huge entourage and heads into town, grinning like some would-be triad kingpin. Who'll be the top dog, the chef who doesn't want to be Number One, or the suave ex-con who seemingly wants the job? It should be obvious, right?

But it's not. Once a Gangster may feature serious triad actors but it's a subversive laffer, using surreal comedy, broad performances, local satire and deadpan absurdities to send up its genre. Some of the stuff won't translate so well to western audiences; a classic Maria Cordero tune (featured in Ringo Lam's Prison on Fire) is belted out ironically by a large assemblage of triad dudes, and the many references to local economic, political and even geographical issues may be lost on non-Hong Kongers. At the same time, there's some smart satire here, and everyone seems to be having a good time getting in on the joke. The gags lampooning triad film clichés are incisive and recognizable (e.g., the obvious Election references), and the extended Infernal Affairs parody, which features Wilfred Lau in a dog-eared Tony Leung Chiu-Wai impression, is fun stuff. The whole film may be a tad esoteric for the casual Hong Kong Cinema fan, but there's still plenty to enjoy.

Unfortunately, Felix Chong's direction isn't so sharp. Chong previously co-directed such films as Moonlight in Tokyo and Overheard, one a quirky character comedy and the other a solid commercial thriller. Once a Gangster skews towards Moonlight with its sometimes dark and off-kilter laughs - but this sort of comedy is hard to effectively present. Chong is no Pang Ho-Cheung (probably Hong Kong's best director at mounting effective satire), and sometimes the gags sag underneath suspect camera placement or shot length. Also, the film was clearly done on the cheap, and Chong doesn't compensate well. Many scenes take place in distracting darkness, where the shadows seem to exist only to hide the fact that they couldn't afford quality art direction. The performances are wildly uneven too, with many of the actors seemingly acting against rather than with one another. For a first-time solo effort, Felix Chong does a passable job, but there's room for improvement.

Still, Chong's direction doesn't hurt the film's entertainment value, and he paces the film decently. What he can't overcome, though, is the fact that his top-billed star doesn't even appear before an hour(!) onto the film. Ekin Cheng's Sparrow isn't even mentioned until the film is way past the halfway point, and his performance only clicks because it lampoons his legendary Young and Dangerous character. Thankfully, Jordan Chan picks up the slack, and despite the uneven nature of the performances, there are some standouts. Conroy Chan steals his scenes as a less-than-sharp triad boss lusting for the top spot, and it's fun to see Derek Tsang and Wong Yau-Nam essay younger versions of Jordan Chan and Ekin Cheng. And hey, just having Ekin and Jordan together again represents some sort of Hong Kong Cinema triumph. In some ways, the two actors are like David Chiang and Ti Lung - two guys who shared the screen so often that their careers are largely intertwined. Once a Gangster is already good stuff for the Hong Kong Cinema faithful. Seeing the two Hung Hing boys back together is just the cherry on top.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com

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.

Browse Other Related Categories

K-Dramas - Buy 4 Get 1 Free The Great Magician All's Well, End's Well 2012 Love Blu-ray Store I Love Hong Kong 2012 New Perfect Two
  • Region & Language: No Region Selected - English
  • *Reference Currency: No Reference Currency
 Change Preferences 
Please enable cookies in your browser to experience all the features of our site, including the ability to make a purchase.
Close