PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,8/10
47 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Un joven que visita y ayuda a su tío en la ciudad de Nueva York se ve obligado a luchar contra una pandilla callejera y la mafia con sus habilidades en artes marciales.Un joven que visita y ayuda a su tío en la ciudad de Nueva York se ve obligado a luchar contra una pandilla callejera y la mafia con sus habilidades en artes marciales.Un joven que visita y ayuda a su tío en la ciudad de Nueva York se ve obligado a luchar contra una pandilla callejera y la mafia con sus habilidades en artes marciales.
- Premios
- 2 premios y 11 nominaciones en total
Man-Ching Chan
- Tony's Gang Member
- (as Chan Man Ching)
Lauro David Chartrand-Del Valle
- Tony's Gang Member
- (as Lauro Chartrand)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesFilming in Vancouver, British Columbia on October 6, 1994, Jackie Chan broke his right ankle while attempting the scene where he jumps onto the hovercraft. Despite the injury, he was present at the premiere of La leyenda del luchador borracho (1994) at the Vancouver International Film Festival that night. Later in the production of this movie, director Stanley Tong sprained his ankle, completing the movie on crutches. Françoise Yip also broke her leg while filming the scene where she rides a motorbike across the tops of parked cars. She insisted on returning to the set after her leg was plastered at the hospital. Two stuntwomen also broke their legs during the filming of the motorcycle chase.
- PifiasDanny's Sega Game Gear, given to him by Keung, has no game inside it. In spite of this, Danny seems to enjoy playing with it.
- Créditos adicionalesAs is customary for Jackie Chan movies, the end credits show a blooper reel of outtakes of the movie's stunts gone wrong.
- Versiones alternativasThe Australian DVD was taken from the censored European master. A majority of the brutal impact hits of the bottles being hit into Jackie have been removed and cause several continuity errors.
Reseña destacada
I'd guess you'd have to call 'Rumble in the Bronx' an extreme example of a guilty pleasure. Though back in the 1990s, it was not my first introduction to Jackie Chan (the inferior 'Supercop' was) it was the one that got me hooked on his work. All the way through this viewing – the first in many years, the word "silly" kept popping up in my mind. It's dialogue, acting, stereotypes and shoddy cop work was so hilariously bad, I could only think this had to be written by someone who's only contact with the U.S.A. involves watching old 1970s cop hour-long dramas. And while some scenes were actually funny (SEE: the wrench threat) some were downright unintentionally funny (SEE: the toddler-toss and the entire closing on the golf course.) Leaving all that negative behind, it was an extreme joy watching Chan perform his own stunts in many, many inventive ways while simultaneously creating a very human and good-hearted character. The stunts were simply amazing and if one were to watch today for the first time, they need to know: he did them all himself, without a green screens, cables, etc. As arrogant as Chan is – I've read his biography, it's dripping with arrogance, he does have great gifts in originality, showmanship, pride in his work and making sure he never uses traditional American trickery/stunts. (This changes later in his work, when he was forced and got older, but this work and ones around it were all pure Chan.) Synopsis: Good-natured nephew Chan visits NYC and gets thrown in extraordinary circumstances: fighting both gangs and mob bosses while helping 2 women, his Uncle and a handicapped child. All that's irrelevant; what matters is once the action starts, it never lets up. And with an open-mind, what a fun rumble you'll have.
Side Note: Wow.. not only was it painful for all the actors to get hurt during production (not to mention the roughly 16 dozen vehicles) it was also gut wrenching to watch the closing credits that showed mostly the unintentional crashes, broken bones, etc. You really have to hand it to the devotion of the crew, cast and Chan. Definitely Chan. My comments about his arrogance does not mean I don't admire the man, especially his extremely poor and underprivileged beginnings to the entertainer he became. He's one of the very few actors/action stars that no matter how incredibly silly his movies look to me – it has to be a culture thing, it's always a rush to see how long his fight scenes last, how inventive he becomes and simply how exciting they are.
Side Note: Wow.. not only was it painful for all the actors to get hurt during production (not to mention the roughly 16 dozen vehicles) it was also gut wrenching to watch the closing credits that showed mostly the unintentional crashes, broken bones, etc. You really have to hand it to the devotion of the crew, cast and Chan. Definitely Chan. My comments about his arrogance does not mean I don't admire the man, especially his extremely poor and underprivileged beginnings to the entertainer he became. He's one of the very few actors/action stars that no matter how incredibly silly his movies look to me – it has to be a culture thing, it's always a rush to see how long his fight scenes last, how inventive he becomes and simply how exciting they are.
- thesar-2
- 5 sept 2009
- Enlace permanente
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 7.500.000 US$ (estimación)
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 32.392.047 US$
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- 9.858.380 US$
- 25 feb 1996
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 32.392.047 US$
- Duración1 hora 44 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Dolby Digital(original release)
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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Principal laguna de datos
What is the streaming release date of Duro de matar (1995) in India?
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