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Cast:
Brigitte
Lin
Sun
Yeuh
Jackie
Chan
Wang
Yu
Action:
Lam
Man Cheung
Producer:
Shen
Hsiao Yin
Director:
Chu
Yen Ping
Score:
    
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FANTASY
MISSION FORCE
AKA:
Dragon Attack ||
Fire Dragon
Year:
1983 Reviewer: Andrew
Saroch
This
film is well-documented as being Jackie Chan's strangest film
and a production that still baffles veteran Hong Kong viewers
to this day. As a favour to Wang Yu, Chan starred in this
bizarre hybrid of action, fantasy and very broad comedy with
the result being a definite black mark in his career, but a
strangely entertaining one.
Some
films are so bad they're good, but with Taiwanese director Chu
Yen Ping in control this is better described as so weird it's
watchable as however confusing and downright silly the film
gets, it does retain an unusual curiosity value. Any attempt
to explain the plot of the film with the written word is
near-impossible, but for those interested in the film, here's
the basic premise: The Japanese have kidnapped a number of
high-ranking officials during World War II and has kept them
captive in Luxembourg (?!). The allies assemble a force to
locate these generals and save them, and as it transpires, a
cache of gold. These unusual assortment of characters head out
in their Jeep to take on the might of the Japanese army and on
the way take on wizards, Amazonian warriors and traitors.
These few lines do not do the sheer quota of surrealism
justice as the audience is also treated to incredible period
detail (where World War II apparently featured armour wearing
Japanese warriors driving cars straight out of Starsky and
Hutch) and a jolting sing-a-long song that appears near the
beginning of the film. Jackie Chan appears for a couple of
routine fight scenes, but he's on screen long enough to be
thoroughly embarrassed by the whole production. Alongside him
is the very surprising sight of a young Brigitte Lin as one of
the main stars, this film coming briefly before she would
become a huge star in Hong Kong (with Jackie Chan's 'Police
Story' being one reason for this in 1985). 'Fantasy
Mission Force' is a ridiculous film, but if you think you've
seen every curio that Eastern cinema has to offer, this is
worth watching.
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