Carter et Lee se rendent à Hong Kong pour des vacances, mais sont impliqués dans une opération de contrefaçon de billets de banque.Carter et Lee se rendent à Hong Kong pour des vacances, mais sont impliqués dans une opération de contrefaçon de billets de banque.Carter et Lee se rendent à Hong Kong pour des vacances, mais sont impliqués dans une opération de contrefaçon de billets de banque.
- Prix
- 10 victoires et 22 nominations au total
Ziyi Zhang
- Hu Li
- (as Zhang Ziyi)
Mei Melançon
- Girl in Car
- (as Meiling Melancon)
Wing Sang Pang
- Suit Salesman
- (as Pang Wing Sang)
William Wai-Lun Duen
- Carter's Cab Driver
- (as William Tuen)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe scene where Carter and Lee are running down the street naked in Hong Kong was an actual take. Production could not block the street off for the shoot.
- GaffesWhen Carter is in the club singing and invites all the ladies up onto stage with him they are all wearing sequined dresses. When Lee runs out, the women around Carter are wearing beige/tan tops. In the next scene, their dresses revert to the nice dresses again.
- Citations
James Carter: Who died, Lee?
Lee: You!
James Carter: Detective Yu?
Lee: Not Yu, you!
James Carter: Who?
Lee: You!
James Carter: Who?
Lee: Do you understand the words that are a-coming out of my mouth?
James Carter: Don't nobody understand the words that are comin' out of your mouth.
- Générique farfeluNo chickens were harmed during the making of this film.
- Autres versionsThe DVD includes several deleted scenes:
- a bit of banter between Carter and Lee before they enter the nightclub.
- Carter talks to Captain Diel (Philip Baker Hall) over the phone and gets berated for doing police work in Hong Kong.
- When Carter is wandering through the marketplace and asking for the massage parlor, he mistakenly asks an old man in Cantonese if he can spank his daughter with a ping-pong paddle.
- Carter talks his way in to the yacht party by claiming to be the band's lead singer.
- On the flight back to L.A., Carter loudly sings along to Stevie Wonder's "Superstition".
- An extended version of the scene in which Carter and Lee try to get rid of the "bomb" at the hotel.
- The original version of the scene in the truck. In this version, Carter and Lee are not tied up and they find the counterfeit money in large wooden boxes.
- At the Red Dragon casino, Carter pulls Steven Reign aside and they exchange sarcastic remarks.
- Different takes of Chris Tucker's ad-libbed speech to Hu Li after their fight.
- Different takes of Chris Tucker ad-libbing the name of his "good friend" in San Juan.
- Different takes of Jeremy Piven ad-libbing during his cameo.
- Bandes originalesCalifornia Girls
Written by Brian Wilson and Mike Love
Performed by The Beach Boys
Courtesy of Capitol Records
Under license from EMI-Capitol Music Special Markets
Commentaire en vedette
`Rush Hour 2' is a highly enjoyable follow-up to the original 1998 box office smash. Like the previous film, this first of what will undoubtedly be a long line of lucrative sequels combines sardonic humor with eye-popping martial arts action sequences to entertaining effect. Chris Tucker and Jackie Chan repeat their roles as unlikely cop buddies, starting off the film in Chan's home territory, Hong Kong, and finishing up in Tucker's, the good ole US of A.
Chan, with his sheepish deadpan delivery, makes a perfect straight man for Tucker's fast-talking bad brotha wiseacre, whose mouth engages in more heavy-duty action than Chan's karate-chopping hands and feet. Much of the humor is generated by Tucker's ability to seem totally unflustered by any peril that happens to come his way, managing to sass talk his way out of one dangerous predicament after another. Moreover, Chan's ability to create humor out of perfectly choreographed stunt sequences puts him right up there with some of the silent comedy greats like Chaplin and Keaton. The split-second perfection of these scenes, combined with the balletic grace with which they are executed, makes him one of the truly unique talents working in movies today. Luckily, in his move to mainstream American filmmaking, Chan has been able to find behind-the-scenes talent good enough to match his own. The screenplay by Jeff Nathanson, though no world-beater when it comes to originality or depth, does posses a playful spirit that works well in the context of the genre. Likewise, director Brett Ratner keeps the action percolating along at a lively, often dizzying clip.
As with most Chan films, however, `Rush Hour 2' seems to go on for about a half hour too long even though its running time barely clocks in at a very short 90 minutes. Perhaps this type of material really can't be sustained much beyond an hour before the repetitiousness of it begins to take its toll. However, that is certainly a minor quibble about a film that, for the most part, provides plenty of laughs, some kick-ass performances and action sequences that, as per usual for a Chan film, will, quite literally, make your jaw drop. .
Chan, with his sheepish deadpan delivery, makes a perfect straight man for Tucker's fast-talking bad brotha wiseacre, whose mouth engages in more heavy-duty action than Chan's karate-chopping hands and feet. Much of the humor is generated by Tucker's ability to seem totally unflustered by any peril that happens to come his way, managing to sass talk his way out of one dangerous predicament after another. Moreover, Chan's ability to create humor out of perfectly choreographed stunt sequences puts him right up there with some of the silent comedy greats like Chaplin and Keaton. The split-second perfection of these scenes, combined with the balletic grace with which they are executed, makes him one of the truly unique talents working in movies today. Luckily, in his move to mainstream American filmmaking, Chan has been able to find behind-the-scenes talent good enough to match his own. The screenplay by Jeff Nathanson, though no world-beater when it comes to originality or depth, does posses a playful spirit that works well in the context of the genre. Likewise, director Brett Ratner keeps the action percolating along at a lively, often dizzying clip.
As with most Chan films, however, `Rush Hour 2' seems to go on for about a half hour too long even though its running time barely clocks in at a very short 90 minutes. Perhaps this type of material really can't be sustained much beyond an hour before the repetitiousness of it begins to take its toll. However, that is certainly a minor quibble about a film that, for the most part, provides plenty of laughs, some kick-ass performances and action sequences that, as per usual for a Chan film, will, quite literally, make your jaw drop. .
- Buddy-51
- 28 janv. 2002
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Rush Hour 2
- Lieux de tournage
- Desert Inn - 3145 Las Vegas Boulevard South, Las Vegas, Nevada, États-Unis(Red Dragon casino, now demolished)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 90 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 226 164 286 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 67 408 222 $ US
- 5 août 2001
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 347 325 802 $ US
- Durée1 heure 30 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1
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What was the official certification given to Heure limite 2 (2001) in Japan?
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