IMDb RATING
7.3/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Two Macao pedicab drivers love a baker and a prostitute who work for abusive bosses. They must figure out how to win their hearts while helping them escape their oppressive work situations.Two Macao pedicab drivers love a baker and a prostitute who work for abusive bosses. They must figure out how to win their hearts while helping them escape their oppressive work situations.Two Macao pedicab drivers love a baker and a prostitute who work for abusive bosses. They must figure out how to win their hearts while helping them escape their oppressive work situations.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
Mok Siu-Chung
- Malted Candy
- (as Siu Chung Mok)
Corey Yuen
- Coolie
- (as Kwai Yuen)
Chia-Liang Liu
- Gambling House Boss
- (as Kar-Leung Lau)
7.31.3K
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Featured reviews
10loganx-2
The Joys Of Being Hung
"...The film is like a battleground. Love. Hate. Action. Violence. Death. In one word...emotion." -Samuel Fuller, "Pierrot Le Fou"
Before "Kung-Fu Panda" there was Sammo Hung, who is a burly martial arts action star, and in "Pedicab Driver" a five star director who knows how to throw his weight around without missing a beat. Like Jackie Chan (who he choreographed fight sequences for), Hung combines physical comedy with self propelled stunt work, showcasing both the fury and the funny.
In 1930's Macau, China two rival groups of pedicab drivers negotiate how to split up the cities work, half will take passengers, and the other half will take cargo, and civil war is nearly averted until a chef chases a cat into the room and all hell breaks loose. The subsequent battle seamlessly recalls both "Star Wars" and "The Three Stooges", without loosing any of it's frantic energy or becoming a parody.
Pedicab Driver is first and foremost a Hong Kong action film, but while watching it you don't get the sense that each scene is designed to introduce a new excuse to fight. Some sequences, like the battle in the gambling den, do seem non-sequitters, as we never return to that set or it's characters, but the execution of this scene is so flawless that you rarely ease back from the edge of your seat long enough to mind let alone gripe. Sammo and his friend "Malted Candy" are passenger drivers, who both fall in love in with different girls at the same time. Sammo has to compete with a lecherous baker to win the heart of his girl in classic slapstick fashion.
While Malted Candy's story, which is minimized early on but expanded later, takes the form of a romance, and then a tragedy once it's revealed that his love interest is not all she seems. This does not have the makings of a great tale, but it is very much a great movie, that handles these stories with a poise that genuinely enhances the action sequences, which are almost submerged under the story and characters (a rarity if not a freak, for an action film of this caliber).
Yes, the bad guy is ugly, the good guy is handsome which is all very obvious, but Sammo is big ol kung fu teddy bear, whose agility and lightening fast speed belie his Chris Farely physique, and it's his performance which elevates the movie into something amazing. The comedy is funny, the romance is sweet, and the action is one of a kind combining the best of martial arts cinema, with an easily accessible drama that makes us care about the characters and their pains, joys, and inevitable revenge.
Pedicab Driver is badass and brutal at times, but never sacrifices the charming lightness that makes the movie so enjoyable and gratifying in a way few of it's exciting peers (then and now) permit themselves to be. It's the type of film that gives the impression that everyone involved was enjoying themselves by effortlessly doing what I do best. This joy pours from the screen, and it's hard not to become immersed in it.
I recently watched another HK action film featuring Sammo called "Zu: Warriors Of The Magic Mountain" and though it had similar sizzling combat (though largely artificial; wire or animation driven), it lacked a humane element, like reading a dry translation of an ancient myth. Pedicab Driver has a face, and a heart, and a fist, and watching them collide is a true joy to behold. I challenge anyone to not be entertained by this movie. Go on, I dare you!
Before "Kung-Fu Panda" there was Sammo Hung, who is a burly martial arts action star, and in "Pedicab Driver" a five star director who knows how to throw his weight around without missing a beat. Like Jackie Chan (who he choreographed fight sequences for), Hung combines physical comedy with self propelled stunt work, showcasing both the fury and the funny.
In 1930's Macau, China two rival groups of pedicab drivers negotiate how to split up the cities work, half will take passengers, and the other half will take cargo, and civil war is nearly averted until a chef chases a cat into the room and all hell breaks loose. The subsequent battle seamlessly recalls both "Star Wars" and "The Three Stooges", without loosing any of it's frantic energy or becoming a parody.
Pedicab Driver is first and foremost a Hong Kong action film, but while watching it you don't get the sense that each scene is designed to introduce a new excuse to fight. Some sequences, like the battle in the gambling den, do seem non-sequitters, as we never return to that set or it's characters, but the execution of this scene is so flawless that you rarely ease back from the edge of your seat long enough to mind let alone gripe. Sammo and his friend "Malted Candy" are passenger drivers, who both fall in love in with different girls at the same time. Sammo has to compete with a lecherous baker to win the heart of his girl in classic slapstick fashion.
While Malted Candy's story, which is minimized early on but expanded later, takes the form of a romance, and then a tragedy once it's revealed that his love interest is not all she seems. This does not have the makings of a great tale, but it is very much a great movie, that handles these stories with a poise that genuinely enhances the action sequences, which are almost submerged under the story and characters (a rarity if not a freak, for an action film of this caliber).
Yes, the bad guy is ugly, the good guy is handsome which is all very obvious, but Sammo is big ol kung fu teddy bear, whose agility and lightening fast speed belie his Chris Farely physique, and it's his performance which elevates the movie into something amazing. The comedy is funny, the romance is sweet, and the action is one of a kind combining the best of martial arts cinema, with an easily accessible drama that makes us care about the characters and their pains, joys, and inevitable revenge.
Pedicab Driver is badass and brutal at times, but never sacrifices the charming lightness that makes the movie so enjoyable and gratifying in a way few of it's exciting peers (then and now) permit themselves to be. It's the type of film that gives the impression that everyone involved was enjoying themselves by effortlessly doing what I do best. This joy pours from the screen, and it's hard not to become immersed in it.
I recently watched another HK action film featuring Sammo called "Zu: Warriors Of The Magic Mountain" and though it had similar sizzling combat (though largely artificial; wire or animation driven), it lacked a humane element, like reading a dry translation of an ancient myth. Pedicab Driver has a face, and a heart, and a fist, and watching them collide is a true joy to behold. I challenge anyone to not be entertained by this movie. Go on, I dare you!
One Of My All-Time Favorites
Pedicab driver effortlessly mixes genres in a way that feels like it uniquely belongs to HK cinema. It has comedy,tragedy, kung fu and it manages to be a period piece while it's at it!
I love absolutely everything about this film from its cast, to the choreography and its constantly interesting and genre-bending story.
A legendary film
10 out of 10!
A legendary film
10 out of 10!
Fantastic
"In fact, men are responsible for all the whores. It's a man's responsibility to stop the prostitution. We've got no right to call 'em cheap. In fact, we're worse than they are."
The chubby Sammo Hung is as agile as he is charming, and the fight choreography in this film is consistently something to behold. The light saber bit, his battles with Lau Kar-leung and Billy Chow, and some pretty impressive stunt work involving pedicabs and stairways were all top notch. But it was the shift this film took from meet-cute mixed with marital arts to something more dramatic that really made me love it. Without spoiling it I'll just say it was a little contrived, but damn if it wasn't touching, and Fennie Yuen was fantastic in her emotional scenes. Meanwhile, I must admit that the humor was pretty juvenile early on, but as the film progressed, how it was dropped in to fight sequences and after serious moments was impressive, keeping the film light. Hung's character is given a love interest as well (Nina Li Chi), and I thought this was a rare film that worked across the genres of romance, comedy, and drama, the latter of which included tragedy. The pro-women messages were a nice touch, and while women don't play a big role in the fighting, I chuckled when the wife threw caution to the wind and entered the fray. Hell, the film even has a Three Stooges reference. Very entertaining.
The chubby Sammo Hung is as agile as he is charming, and the fight choreography in this film is consistently something to behold. The light saber bit, his battles with Lau Kar-leung and Billy Chow, and some pretty impressive stunt work involving pedicabs and stairways were all top notch. But it was the shift this film took from meet-cute mixed with marital arts to something more dramatic that really made me love it. Without spoiling it I'll just say it was a little contrived, but damn if it wasn't touching, and Fennie Yuen was fantastic in her emotional scenes. Meanwhile, I must admit that the humor was pretty juvenile early on, but as the film progressed, how it was dropped in to fight sequences and after serious moments was impressive, keeping the film light. Hung's character is given a love interest as well (Nina Li Chi), and I thought this was a rare film that worked across the genres of romance, comedy, and drama, the latter of which included tragedy. The pro-women messages were a nice touch, and while women don't play a big role in the fighting, I chuckled when the wife threw caution to the wind and entered the fray. Hell, the film even has a Three Stooges reference. Very entertaining.
As entertaining as they come
You know your film is off to a strong start when you aren't even 5 minutes in and it's already staging its own lightsaber fights, albeit with fluorescent bulbs. Marking the end of Sammo Hung's greatest period as both star and director with a mighty bang, Pedicab Driver exemplifies the type of cinema that Hong Kong loved during the 80s. What that means is it's a mismatched series of bizarre comedy, heightened emotions, sudden tragedy and yes, incredible fight scenes. The extended fight between Sammo and Lau Kar-Leung in the gambling den stands as one of the film's most memorable moments, despite its complete irrelevance to the plot. Although it seems a little overambitious at times in its storytelling, with several seemingly unrelated threads running parallel, the film does manage to hold it all together in a way that only Hong Kong cinema can. While the story threads are certainly only diversions from the main spectacle, they do enhance the film somewhat, thanks largely to the cast's terrific performances and great music. It all starts happy-go-lucky but by the end, revenge is the name of the game and it is one Sammo delivers tenfold with some fantastic direction. For its uneven mishmash of genres and tones, Pedicab Driver succeeds wholeheartedly thanks to its easily empathetic and loveable characters and their plights, it's as entertaining as they come and features something for everyone. While not quite a masterpiece it is well worth seeing.
Bone-cracking, physically punishing masterpiece with a warm heart
This, "Prodigal Son" and "Eastern Condors" are my favourite Sammo Hung films. The Fat Dragon is fatter in this outing than he was in "Condors", but he's no less sure-footed as director or actor. He is, in fact, at the top of his form and delivers a devastating, brutal actioner that boasts half a dozen amazing sequences and manages to tell a compassionate, sweet love story also. Love and romance are not the director's priorities here, but they serve as curious adjuncts to the action, and insure that viewers don't hit the fast-forward button between the physical clashes.
The opening scene, which features a funny light sabre duel, sets a solid but deceptive tone. A sequence in which Sammo's pedicab is chased by a car is beautifully staged and sweetened with a sharp, comic tone. The fast and furious stick fight between Sammo and Lau Kar Leung is a model of dazzling choreography and sharp, superb direction, and easily one of the best ever of its type. The film's violence escalates slowly until, finally, when the climactic showdown comes, we are subjected to some of the most brutal altercations ever seen in a Sammo production. The director/actor's assault on Billy Chow and a house filled with angry, menacing opponents is a bone-cracking, physically punishing delight.
Terrific on every level and one of the best martial arts movies ever made.
Great score, too.
The opening scene, which features a funny light sabre duel, sets a solid but deceptive tone. A sequence in which Sammo's pedicab is chased by a car is beautifully staged and sweetened with a sharp, comic tone. The fast and furious stick fight between Sammo and Lau Kar Leung is a model of dazzling choreography and sharp, superb direction, and easily one of the best ever of its type. The film's violence escalates slowly until, finally, when the climactic showdown comes, we are subjected to some of the most brutal altercations ever seen in a Sammo production. The director/actor's assault on Billy Chow and a house filled with angry, menacing opponents is a bone-cracking, physically punishing delight.
Terrific on every level and one of the best martial arts movies ever made.
Great score, too.
Did you know
- Quotes
Boss of Gambling House: Fatty, you with a thick face have hurt my instep.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Cinema of Vengeance (1994)
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