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McDull Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong (DVD+AVCD Edition) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region All

Anthony Wong | Sandra Ng | the pancakes | Brian Tse (Director, Producer)
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YesAsia Editorial Description

Hong Kong's favorite dim-witted piglet with a heart of gold embarks on a brand new adventure in McDull Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong! The third animated McDull film after My Life as McDull and McDull, Prince de la Bun, McDull Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong makes the sojourn to China where things are much different and yet the same for young McDull, now a bumbling martial arts apprentice. Sandra Ng reprises as the voice of McDull's get-go mother Mrs. Mak, while Anthony Wong returns as McDull's kindergarten principal and The Pancakes as teacher Miss Chan. Jim Chim and singer Wan Kwong also lent their distinctive voices to the production. Directed by Brian Tse, who wrote and produced the previous two features, the beautifully animated Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong again champions the bittersweet sentiments and humorous mix of juvenile jokes and spot-on satire that have endeared McDull to not only children but also adults. As the most straightforward and least episodic of the McDull films, Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong is accessible to audiences of all ages and cultures, while still retaining the same distinctly Hong Kong identity and charm

Running out of ideas in Hong Kong, Mrs. Mak decides to try her business luck in China. She leaves McDull at a martial arts boarding school on the famous Mt. Wudang, where he makes new friends (that look a lot like his old friends), gets in trouble, and learns Tai Chi very very slowly. Whenever McDull feels discouraged and homesick, a gentle roly-poly giant panda with a funny accent comes out to give him a hand. But will that be enough to get McDull ready for the upcoming martial arts competition?

This edition comes with the AVCD Movie Soundtrack.

© 2009 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: McDull Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong (DVD+AVCD Edition) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) 麥兜响噹噹 (DVD+AVCD) (中英文字幕) (豪華雙碟版) (香港版) 麦兜响噹噹 (DVD+AVCD) (中英文字幕) (豪华双碟版) (香港版) 麥兜响噹噹 (豪華雙碟版) (香港版) McDull Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong (DVD+AVCD Edition) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
Also known as: McDull Wudang / McDull, Kung Fu Kindergarten 武當麥兜 武当麦兜 McDull Wudang / McDull, Kung Fu Kindergarten McDull Wudang / McDull, Kung Fu Kindergarten
Artist Name(s): Anthony Wong | Sandra Ng | the pancakes | Alice Mak | McDull | Jim Chim | Huang Bo | Wan Kwong 黃秋生 | 吳君如 | the pancakes | 麥家碧 | 麥兜 | 詹瑞文 | 黃渤 | 尹光 黄秋生 | 吴君如 | the pancakes | 麦家碧 | 麦兜 | 詹瑞文 | Huang Bo | 尹光 黄秋生 (アンソニー・ウォン) | 呉君如 (サンドラ・ン) | the pancakes | Alice Mak | McDull | 詹瑞文(ジム・チム) | 黄渤(ホァン・ボー) | 尹光(ワン・クウォン) Anthony Wong | Sandra Ng | the pancakes | Alice Mak | McDull | Jim Chim | Huang Bo | Wan Kwong
Director: Brian Tse 謝立文 谢立文 Brian Tse Brian Tse
Producer: Brian Tse 謝立文 谢立文 Brian Tse Brian Tse
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Release Date: 2009-10-06
Language: Cantonese, Mandarin
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese
Country of Origin: Hong Kong
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Aspect Ratio: 1.78 : 1
Widescreen Anamorphic: Yes
Sound Information: Dolby Digital 5.1
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: All Region What is it?
Publisher: Panorama (HK)
Other Information: DVD+AVCD
Package Weight: 200 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1021331521

Product Information

As the 18th descendant of an extremely insignificant philosopher and inventor from ancient China, McDull is fortunate that he does not have a lot to live up to. However, his mother has higher aspirations for him and decides to send him to a martial arts school in China. Overweight and slow on his feet, McDull is the last of his classmates to run away when the headmaster needs to choose someone to represent the school in an international children's martial arts competition.
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 "McDull Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong (DVD+AVCD Edition) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)"

September 22, 2009

That lovable little pig with the low IQ, McDull returns in the long-awaited McDull Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong. Formerly known as McDull Wudang among other names, this long-in-production sequel supplies the same stuff that the previous animated McDull movies did - a love of Hong Kong culture, abundant local satire, identifiable emotions, and simply the resigned feeling that it's okay to live an average life. That last message sounds like a total downer, and in some ways the previous McDull movies were. However, both My Life as McDull and McDull, Prince de la Bun gave that message a strange and affectionate nobility, making an average or below-average life seem sad, pathetic and yet worthy and sublime. If there's a definitive list of films that represent Hong Kong, the McDull movies would surely be on it.

McDull Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong would be on that list too, perhaps a few notches below the previous two films, but still above the 2006 animated/live-action combo McDull, the Alumni. Brian Tse, writer-producer of the previous animated McDull films, takes over as director, once again spotlighting young McDull (voiced by Kwok Kwan-Yin), who lives in Tai Kok Tsui with his mother Mrs. Mak (voiced by Sandra Ng). However, the mother-son relationship - so central to the previous two McDulls - is given less focus this time, as is Hong Kong. After some opening narration from Jim Chim, plus some scenes at McDull's school, McDull and Mrs. Mak hightail it for China, where Mrs. Mak hopes to find new opportunities (like opening her dream restaurant, called "Chicken on Fire") plus escape her debts. But she can't do this with McDull always at her side, so after reaching the Wuhan region she drops him off at a martial arts school in the famed Wudang Mountains. Curiously, the Master of the school looks just like McDull's principal at the Springfield Kindergarten, complete with balding pate and mustache, and even shares the same voice actor in Anthony Wong.

No, the Master is not the Principal's twin brother. As seen in the previous McDull films, lots of people all over Hong Kong look just like the Principal. Also, the Master's assistant looks like McDull's teacher Miss Chan (and is again voiced by singer-songwriter The Pancakes), and even his animal friends Fai, Goosie, Darby, etc., have analogues up in the Wudang Mountains. This use of doppelgangers is just one of the metaphorical things that the McDull movies do, and indeed it's part of the series' charm. It's also a way of making McDull's world familiar to us, and it's needed as things have changed a bit. Urban Renewal has taken hold in McDull's home district of Tai Kok Tsui, replacing most of the old and rundown local buildings with glistening high-rise housing estates, and China and Hong Kong are now further intertwined. Things are supposedly changing for the better - and that's what McDull and Mrs. Mak try to do too, through emigration to China, latching onto trends, or simply chasing that one idea in hopes that it'll lead them to prosperity. But with each effort comes routine failure, and the resilience that Hong Kong people show in the face of this is part and parcel of the McDull movies' affectionate, satirical look at modern life.

The previous McDull films took similar themes and ran with them, frequently sacrificing coherence for scattered vignettes and minor gags that were so layered that even some of the films' target audience might have been lost. Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong still possesses some of the McDull movies' trademark density, but it also proves the most coherent and conventional of the films. Once McDull ends up in the Wudang Mountains, he makes new friends (including Brother Panda, the mysterious guardian panda bear), gets involved in mischief around the school and learns a few lessons about devotion, responsibility and giving things your best. The central part of the film is reminiscent of a typical animated film for tykes - it's got positive lessons and seems to follow a solid, even cliched story. That portion is still enjoyable and entertaining - after all, how can you go wrong with animated pigs, turtles and pandas - but a little of the McDull magic is lost. Despite its general effectiveness, the film's central narrative is really not novel, and anyway, McDull films have always been more about feeling than nuts-and-bolts story. Ultimately, seeing little McDull go through standard narrative paces feels a bit off.

What's not off? Just about everything else. Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong is still plenty about Hong Kong, with references to actual locations, local media and other cultural institutions. The characters' amusing preoccupation with eating and pooping is back, and the satire on modern Hong Kong life is delightfully fun. Besides the references to Urban Renewal, Mrs. Mak auditions for a menopause medicine commercial that satirizes a local Nancy Sit ad, plus she seems to follow all the latest trends (e.g., Hong Kong's omnipresent "slimming" beauty business) in hopes of making her fortune. McDull is enrolled in a private school that uses the experimental "Mozart Effect" (where tykes listen to Mozart to spur their development), but is unfortunately made the "control" in the experiment - simultaneously making fun of Hong Kong's consumer education culture and providing a reason for McDull's dim-wittedness. Also, on a technical level, this is easily the best McDull film, with animation improved and the contrast of hand-drawn characters against the CGI city backdrops proving less intrusive.

The film's China portions allow for rural backdrops that are as well realized as the McDull films' signature renderings of Hong Kong. There's also plenty of satire and cultural love there too; the film makes fun of Bruce Lee and martial arts, and rewrites classic Chinese songs with new, sometimes off-color lyrics sung by famous local singer Wan Kwong (who also provides one of the film's voices). One flashback sequence even re-imagines the famous painting Along the River During the Qingming Festival (known informally as the Chinese Mona Lisa) for a sequence featuring McDull's ancestor McFat. An inventor who was unfortunately way ahead of his time, McFat is another metaphorical nugget for audiences to chew on; sometimes in life, a complete ne'er do well like McFat or even McDull could end up doing something great - he just might not be around to see it, and may live his natural life as average or even less. In offering that theme and more, Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong manages a familiar affection towards the simple, unglamorous life that most of us are destined for. That emotion is pure McDull, and reason enough to warrant the film similar, if not the same regard as McDull's lovely and bittersweet first adventures.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com

Editor's Pick of "McDull Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong (DVD+AVCD Edition) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)"

Picked By Sanwei
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September 30, 2009

McDull Goes to China
If I had to pick one movie character that most embodied Hong Kong, it would have to be McDull. On the outset, McDull seems an unlikely candidate. Hong Kong is fast, smart, trendy, materialistic, on the ball. McDull is slow, naive, emotional, and not very bright. Also, he's an animated kindergarten pig. And yet, one would be hard-pressed to name another figure that captures the local culture, sentiments, landscape, language, and lifestyle of Hong Kong as well as McDull does. The neverending urban redevelopment, the cycle of newfangled trends, the flurry of accents and colloquialisms, the obsession with success, and, yes, even the potty humor in McDull's world are all quintessentially Hong Kong. McDull may be the slow kid who can't keep up with his hometown's breakneck pace or his mother's high hopes, but he epitomizes the Hong Kong spirit of "try try again".

As the third animated film in the McDull series, McDull Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong starts with a very "Hong Kong" phenomenon, leaving Hong Kong. Migration and transience have long been a part of the region's culture, and this time McDull and his can-do Sandra Ng-voiced mother Mrs. Mak, like so many other Hong Kongers, are going north to China. While Mrs. Mak looks into starting a business in Wuhan, McDull ends up at storied Mt. Wudang learning Tai Chi. This foray into martial arts and secluded mountains is probably the least Hong Kong and most conventional thread of the McDull series, but yet even that doesn't stray far from the McDull world. After all, the martial arts school looks and sounds exactly like McDull's kindergarten back home, a nod to the series' long-running visual themes and abstract philosophizing, and let's just say McDull does not turn into Kung Fu Pig.

McDull Kung Fu's China setting presents the chance for some historical gags, including an amusing tangent about McDull's ancestor McFat, a great inventor who was too ahead of his time to be appreciated. Plus, this time we get to not only see animated urban Hong Kong, but also pastoral and temple scenery and some charming Wuhan and Mt. Wudang scenes. The establishing vista shots when McDull arrives at the mountain really do look like Wudang! Traveling to China also allows the production to add another animal to the McDull menagerie: PANDA. You can never go wrong with the panda. Other additions are local stage and comedy icon Jim Chim and Wan Kwong - a quintessentially local Hong Kong singer if there ever was one - to the voice cast.

The previous two McDull features' dry humor, silly gags, repeating wordplay, episodic stories, and, in the case of McDull, Prince de la Bun, completely befuddling narrative structure might be at times too "Hong Kong" for non-locals to fully appreciate. In comparison, McDull Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong is a lot more universal and accessible, though the historical gag intro may still leave some scratching their heads. McDull Kung Fu Ding Ding Dong is a very kid-friendly film, indeed the most kid-friendly of the series, but like its predecessors, the sentiments and stories still speak most poignantly to adults - despite the whole animated pig thing. And did I mention there's a panda?
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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