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Love On Delivery (DVD) (US Version) DVD Region 1

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Love On Delivery (DVD) (US Version)
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Customer Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7 out of 10 (2)
All Editions Rating: Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8.9 out of 10 (9)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Stephen Chow knows kung-fu - or at least, he thinks he does - in the uproarious 1994 comedy Love on Delivery! The superstar king of comedy turns in a hilariously lovable performance as Ho, a dopey delivery guy who falls for the local college beauty Lily (Christy Chung). However, Ho is a complete coward, and is bullied by judo champ Black Bear (Cheng Cho) and just about everyone else at the local school. Lily won't date Ho because of his cowardice, so there's only one thing he can do: learn kung fu! Ho enlists with a crippled martial arts master named Devil Killer (Ng Man Tat), who basically rips off Ho and fools him into thinking he's become a kung-fu master. But when Black Bear threatens Lily, Ho rushes to her aid. Will Ho's fake kung-fu mean his end? Or will he miraculously triumph?

Love on Delivery was a slight departure for Chow when it was first released, relying more on visual gags reminiscent of Japanese manga and anime instead of the omnipresent wordplay Chow was known for in previous flicks. No matter; Love on Delivery was still one of the biggest hits of 1994, and has only grown on audiences in the years following its release. Directed by Stephen Chow and usual co-conspirator Lee Lik Chi (From Beijing with Love, The Lucky Guy).

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Technical Information

Product Title: Love On Delivery (DVD) (US Version) 破壞之王 (DVD) (美國版) 破坏之王 (DVD) (美国版) Love On Delivery (US Version) Love On Delivery (DVD) (US Version)
Artist Name(s): Stephen Chow | Lee Lik Chi | Christy Chung 周 星馳 | 李力持 | 鍾麗緹 周 星驰 | 李力持 | 锺丽缇 周星馳(チャウ・シンチー) | 李力持(リー・リクチー) | 鍾麗緹 (クリスティー・チョン) 주성치 | Lee Lik Chi | Christy Chung
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Release Date: 2004-08-03
Language: Cantonese, Mandarin
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese
Country of Origin: Hong Kong
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 1 - USA, Canada, U.S. Territories What is it?
Duration: 95 (mins)
Publisher: Tai Seng Video (US)
Package Weight: 110 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1003697265

Product Information


導演︰李力持
Director: Lee Lik Chee

  何金銀乃榮記冰室送外賣的小伙計,心地善良,樂於助人,卻因懦弱怕事,經常成為眾人戲謔的對象,他倒能樂天知命,不以為中忤。阿麗乃環球體育中心柔道部女學員,美麗活潑,成為眾人追求的對象,其中柔道部教練黑熊更是百般獻媚。一日,黑熊邀請前往演唱會不果,瞎纏索吻,適阿銀送外賣至,麗故意在黑熊前親吻阿銀並邀同往演唱會,用以戲弄黑熊,銀受寵若驚,為博麗芳心,幾經辛苦取得入場券邀麗同往,麗竟欣然答應。

  Ho, a young underdog who worked for a small snack bar as delivery boy, was deeply attracted by Lee, a beautiful Judo student at the Universal Sports Center. One day Lee was harassed by Black Bear when she was on her way to school. Ho put on a mask and come to Lee's rescue with some invincible strokes. Yet before Ho revealed his true identify, a boxer come to tell Lee that her masked hero was actually himself. Ho's hope scattered He had no choice but decided to have a duel with the boxer......
Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

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Professional Review of "Love On Delivery (DVD) (US Version)"

October 20, 2006

This professional review refers to Love On Delivery (Digitally Remastered) (Hong Kong Version)
Based upon Takashi Hamori's King of Destruction manga, Love on Delivery follows the plight of He Jin-Yin (Stephen Chow Sing Chi) - a down on his luck delivery boy who finds himself attracted to Lily (Christy Chung), a student of martial artist Black Bear (Joe Cheng) who is constantly hounding the young woman. But Yin is a cowardly chap, which reflects poorly on his employers and others around him. Furthermore he fails each and every time to keep Black Bear away from her. In order to impress Lily and attain some self respect he decides to take up martial arts training, when he spots a sign exclaiming "Coward's Saviour" hanging above a rubbish grocery store. The owner of the store is "Devilish Muscle Man" (Ng Man-Tat), a con-man who thinks he can squeeze as much out of Yin as possible, offering to help him by teaching him the ways of Ancient Chinese Boxing. To become a successful fighter he teaches Yin that he must wear a mask and harness deadly skills (which he actually makes up on the spot), but when he realises that he can't get rid of Yin after learning that he has no money left, his troubles go from bad to worse. Eventually he squares off with Black Bear, but soon Lily is visited by an old friend named Duan Shui Liu (Ben Lam), who is also the chief of the Karate club and seeks to take over the Elite Centre and marry Lily. Yin decides that enough is enough; he challenges Liu to a televised duel, and so begins a rigorously training regime which will prepare him for the biggest fight of his life.

Stephen Chow and director Li Lik-Chi were no strangers by the time that Love on Delivery hit Chinese theatres to huge success in 1994, having worked previously together on Legend of the Dragon in 1990, Magnificent Scoundrels in 1991 and Flirting Scholar two years later. They solidified their relationship throughout the rest of the nineties when Chow began writing his own scripts and began co-directing with Li; as such From Beijing with Love, God of Cookery and King of Comedy are widely regarded as some of Chow's finest films. Love on Delivery came just after he'd completed work on part two of the magnificent A Chinese Odyssey tale and would prove to influence his later films, including Shaolin Soccer and most recently Kung Fu Hustle, by sharing a common theme in which the downtrodden protagonist would rise up against his tormentors and become a true hero.

Love on Delivery works best when it's naturally showcasing Stephen Chow's talents, as well as his gifted group of supporters who we all know too well by now. Being as much an ensemble piece, it's filled with impeccable timing from everyone; the film gives off rapid quick-fire exchanges, barely giving us time to take in one joke before it delivers the next. Chow and the rest of his cast portray familiar archetypes, each one having since been employed in subsequent movies, with Ng Man-Tat leading the support as a local con-man who once was well respected, but now lives a life of squalor - think Shaolin Soccer and you'll almost have the exact same character. Love on Delivery is also a very accessible piece, perhaps more so than any of the other collaborations between Chow and Li, being largely geared toward a martial arts movie fan base, with references and parodies going to any number of Kung Fu features, particularly in relation to several overtly silly training montages which instantly start ringing those brain bells. And it's a lot of fun, with Chow in his element, knowing that his visual cues are spot on piss-takes/homages of the familiar clichés. Naturally the humour becomes quite broad as the film carries on and we find a lot of contemporary references littered throughout, namely in association with television and music entertainment; Garfield, Kamen Rider, Jacky Cheung, Leon Lai - all providing some form of bizarre and often convenient set up, not to mention a very funny Terminator 2 nod and the obligatory cartoon violence which is always so becoming of Chow and his wonderful facial expressions.

To get a little critical, though the bulk of Love on Delivery's storyline highlights just what's wrong with many of Chow's films, in which he attempts to win the girl and save the day. In the twelve years since its debut, he still hasn't quite grasped the importance of building relationships; often sidelining these elements in favour of showing off his own skills or his comraderie with his familiar supporting cast. It's not often that his female companions are given prominent roles whereby we can sympathise with them, save for the likes of Fight Back to School, Forbidden City Cop, A Chinese Odyssey and From Beijing with Love being amongst the best in highlighting Chow at top of his game. The problem, then, with Love on Delivery - although we can't blame him for the script - is that the film's central objective, the main drive behind his character being his love for Lily, is a little less than compelling. There's never a moment where we actually care about whether or not these two will get together, and a lot of that is partially down to Christy Chung's rudimentary performance, which does very little to offer any kind of real chemistry between she and Chow. Her character's ideals are typical and she naturally spends too long overlooking the poor fellow because he's not the kind of hero she always envisioned herself wanting. While Chow tries his utmost to impress, Chung's character isn't anywhere near as likeable, being severely underwritten, and this proves to be a small deterrent in an otherwise fun and zany comedy.

It probably doesn't help though that Li Lik-Chi ends up formulating the entire third act around the ultimate "Happy Boxing Championship", which is only ever about presenting as many ludicrous moves - albeit however impressively staged - from Chow as possible. It's all very enjoyable and energetic, however, but it certainly lessens the narrative, which by this point seems to have up and left. Still, despite these reservations, Love on Delivery does as good a job as any other recent Chow movie, by issuing the message he so often cites with metaphorical aids - that people shouldn't have to hide behind false pretenses, that there is a hero in everyone, which nobody else can see unless you open yourself up to them. In that respect Love on Delivery is a pleasant enough experience. It misses some of its marks, but it makes up for this with its simpler and sincere side, and if it can do that by making people laugh along the way then Chow has done his job well enough.

DVD
It took a little while coming, but there wasn't much doubt over a remastered disc turning up, in light of Chow's catalogue seeing recent re-releases on DVD. Brought to us by Celestial Pictures.

A/V
With Celestial behind the release, due to owning the entire Shaw Bros catalogue, Love on Delivery looks about as good as we'll ever see it. While it's generally free from distracting marks and looks relatively clean, it has a distinctly high brightness levels, which I suspect may be intentional; the film uses a fair amount of diffusion filtering, so it has that "hazy" look, while normal looking scenes still exhibit a lack of depth in black areas. Other tones come across quite pleasingly though, such as skin and backgrounds. There's a little softness, which appears inherent to the original source, a spot of edge enhancement and some minor aliasing, along with the transfer exhibiting ghosting. The film is presented anamorphically, in an aspect ratio of 1.85:1.

For sound we have original Cantonese mono and also Mandarin mono. There's very little to elaborate on here, suffice it to say that the film delivers as much as it can. There are no distortions or major distractions of any kind.

Subtitles
It's nice to see that we appear to have a newly translated subtitle stream. Going by some of the older Mei Ah and Universe releases of Chow on DVD, which featured spectacularly ropey translations, this is quite a revelation indeed. There are very few grammatical errors here, which are quite insignificant anyway, and the plentiful gags make a lot of sense, with none of those "huh?" moments to be found. Lily appears as "Li" though.

Extras
The special features are fairly brief, as to be expected. Aside from the original trailer and an updated one, along with a few more for other Chow films from Celestial, we have a couple of small photo galleries, biographies for Stephen Chow, Christy Chung, Ng Man-tat and Li Lik-Chi. Also available for viewing is the original poster and production notes (a.k.a. tiny synopsis/one paragraph review).

Overall
Love on Delivery is another fine entry into the canon of Stephen Chow. While it lacks resonance in certain important areas it carries itself very well in terms of its plentiful jokes, fronted by a fine performance from its star.

by Kevin Gilvear - DVD Times

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.

Customer Review of "Love On Delivery (DVD) (US Version)"

Average Customer Rating for this Edition: Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7 out of 10 (2)
Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8.9 out of 10 (9)

Kevin Kennedy
See all my reviews


September 5, 2009

This customer review refers to Love On Delivery (Digitally Remastered) (Hong Kong Version)
Truly a laugh-out-loud comedy Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
When I watched "Love On Delivery", my neighbors may have wondered about all the noise coming from my home; it was me, laughing. Stephen Chow stars as a nerdy delivery guy for a crummy restaurant who falls in love with lovely Lily (Christy Chung), who is suffering the unwanted attentions of her bullying judo teacher (Cheng Cho). Wishing to defend Lily's honor but knowing he has no chance against the brutish judo master, Chow seeks asssitance from a crippled fraud (Ng Man Tat), who claims to be a master of ancient Chinese boxing techniques. Chow takes the fraud's foolish teaching to heart and, shockingly, manages to defeat the judo teacher. But just as the way seems clear for Chow's relationship with Lily, another even more dangerous appears on the horizon...

Stephen Chow is hilarious. One of the keys to Chow's comic genius is that he understands that great comedy comes not from mugging and overplaying, but instead from underplaying and acting in a perfectly natural manner while chaos swirls all around. He employs this technique wonderfully here, and couples it with terrific physical comedy. Ng Man Tat also generates lots of laughs through his inspired silliness. When skies are grey and you are feeling low, spend some time watching "Love On Delivery" and things will brighten for you quickly.
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Jay
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May 5, 2007

This customer review refers to Love On Delivery (Digitally Remastered) (Hong Kong Version)
as good as ever Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
this movie has been one of my favourite stephen chow movies of all time but i am a little dissapointed in the digitally remastered hong kong version because they changed some of the dialog and its not as funny as the old dialog. But aside from that the picture quality is the best ive seen, of this movie, so far.
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Gravegirl
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April 27, 2006

This customer review refers to Love On Delivery (VCD) (China Version)
A Work Of Comic Genius Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
Love On Delivery, is one of the funniest movies I have seen in my lifetime. No lover of comic mayham should go to their grave without viewing this masterpiece.
The phyical comedy in this film is eye popping. You will laugh so hard; you're finger will remain on the review button as you ask your brain "Did I just see what I thought I saw".
Chow exposes his true ablity to work with language, both verbally and physically, in this must own for any Chow junkie.
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Anonymous

July 6, 2005

This customer review refers to Love On Delivery (DVD) (China Version)
one of Stephen Chow's best Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
This is a really funny film with some classic comic moments and has Stephen Chow and Ng Man Tat at there very best. Unlike some Stephen Chow films the comedy can be understood very easily (for non-chinese) and is not at all tiring. This is a must for Chow fans, and a great place to start to newcomers.
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Anonymous

June 22, 2005

2 people found the following helpful

The first Impression might fool you!! Customer Review Rated Bad 4 - 4 out of 10
I am a hugh Stephen chow fan, but i don't recommend watching this movie. The cover of this movie might fool you in thinking its idotic and homorous but its very not. The film contains funny comedy, but its doesn't have much and the comedy arn't very funny.
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