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A Better Tomorrow III: Love and Death in Saigon

Original title: Ying hung boon sik III: Zik yeung ji gor
  • 1989
  • R
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
4K
YOUR RATING
Chow Yun-Fat in A Better Tomorrow III: Love and Death in Saigon (1989)
Gun FuPeriod DramaActionCrimeWar

A man travels from China to Vietnam, on the brink of war with America, to retrieve his uncle and cousin but find complications when he falls in love with a female gangster with a dangerous e... Read allA man travels from China to Vietnam, on the brink of war with America, to retrieve his uncle and cousin but find complications when he falls in love with a female gangster with a dangerous ex.A man travels from China to Vietnam, on the brink of war with America, to retrieve his uncle and cousin but find complications when he falls in love with a female gangster with a dangerous ex.

  • Director
    • Hark Tsui
  • Writers
    • Yiu-Ming Leung
    • Foo Ho Tai
    • Hark Tsui
  • Stars
    • Chow Yun-Fat
    • Tony Ka Fai Leung
    • Anita Mui
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Hark Tsui
    • Writers
      • Yiu-Ming Leung
      • Foo Ho Tai
      • Hark Tsui
    • Stars
      • Chow Yun-Fat
      • Tony Ka Fai Leung
      • Anita Mui
    • 31User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

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    Top cast19

    Edit
    Chow Yun-Fat
    Chow Yun-Fat
    • Mark Gor
    • (as Chow Yun Fat)
    Tony Ka Fai Leung
    Tony Ka Fai Leung
    • Cheung Chi-Mun
    Anita Mui
    Anita Mui
    • Chow Ying-Kit
    Shih Kien
    Shih Kien
    • Mun's Father
    • (as Kien Shih)
    Saburô Tokitô
    Saburô Tokitô
    • Ho Cheung-Ching…
    Wai Lun Cheng
    • Pat
    Maggie Ho-yee Cheung
    Maggie Ho-yee Cheung
    • Ling
    • (as Maggie Ho Yee Cheung)
    Yeung-Wah Kam
    • Jimmy
    • (as Andrew Kam)
    Ling Nam Lam
    • Bond
    Hsiang Lin Yin
    • General with Bond
    • (as Seung Lam Wan)
    Chi Wai Wong
    Chi Wai Wong
    • Bodyguard
    Kirk Wong
    Kirk Wong
    • Bodyguard
    Wai Tam
    Wai Tam
    • Bodyguard
    Wei-Ho Tu
    • Soldier
    Chi-Mun Ho
    • Mr. Ho's Board Member
    Hsin Liang
    • Extra
    William Cheng
    Lung Fei
    • Director
      • Hark Tsui
    • Writers
      • Yiu-Ming Leung
      • Foo Ho Tai
      • Hark Tsui
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews31

    5.93.9K
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    Featured reviews

    the_saint_107

    On a different road but still going fast.

    Different to John Woo's original two films, but it's almost as good. Chow (coolest man in the world) yun fat, gives a very charismatic performance, hilarious in the opening scenes when he walks around the airport with an unlit cigarette hanging from his lip, and gives a raw, powerful, emotional performance at the end. The action scenes although lacking the finesse of the John Woo trademark mayhem, are still high velocity and powerful. Aided well by the soaring soundtrack, this film although it can be a little slow, is a welcome and worthy addition to the better tomorrow films. I just loved every second of it. Although the subtitles were a little tricky to read in places but you can't blame the film for what someone else did to it. The major problem is the badly done music editing after the credits have rolled. However seeing as the actual film had finished by that point, not many people would notice.
    8toyguy

    A different ABT

    A lot of people tend to think this movie is inferior to the first 2 ABT's. If you are one of these people, keep in mind that its pretty much due to the story. I think the direction and acting wasn't bad at all. Like many prequel/sequels, it suffers from hype and expectations. If its made exactly like the previous movies, then we have a rehash. If it goes in a different direction (like in this case) it runs the risk of alienating a lot of loyal fans.

    Not sure how many of you knew the storyline prior to watching the film. I was at least privy to the plot summary before watching it in the theaters way back when. So I at least knew it took place in the 70s in Vietnam. Right there and then, I knew it would be very different from the first 2 films. War-torn Vietnam of the 70s would hardly be the kind of place where you find our heroes riding around in Rolls Royce's, making high stake deals in fancy hotels or mansions, wearing Fracescetti suits, etc. A lot of the "cool" element of the original is due to Chow of course, but settings and atmosphere had something to do with it as well. And Vietnam is not the kind of setting we're previously used to.

    What the film does show, is probably a more realistic side of smuggling and counterfeitting. You make your deals at night in dark alley ways, your clothes are cars are are much less flashy (to avoid attracting attention to yourself). And of course, Mark hasn't acquired his cool persona yet, so we're missing that important element throughout most of the film.

    In short, much of what we see is not entirely unexpected if you took the time to read the synopsis on the video box. Because the movie takes place at the time and place it did, I'd say the crew did an OK job.

    As a prequel to ABT, I am a bit surprise at the choice of location if not the time. I remember a scene in the original ABT where Mark talks about the "old days" of making counterfeit deals with Ho in Indoesia!! That was suppose to be 12 years ago according to movie dialog, which would place us in the early 70s as well. So the movie would've been more continuous if we had Mark working for the H.K. crime organization already, and making drops in Indonesia (with or without Ho, depending on whether they can get Ti Lung back for the role). I also think it might have been more interesting this way. Anita can still play Mark's love interest, and much of the current ABT3 storyline can be incorporated; as long as Mark isn't so goofy and inexperienced.
    8Bogey Man

    Prequel to John Woo's first two "Tomorrow" films

    Tsui Hark directed this sequel (1989) to John Woo's classic heroic bloodshed films Better Tomorrow 1 and 2 made couple of years earlier, and this third installment is more a prequel than sequel. It concentrates on what happened before the first two films and has more drama than action in it. Chow Yun Fat is again Mark Gor who is in Vietnam and meets there his cousin Mun (Leslie Cheung) who is just released from prison when Mark arrives in Vietnam. They meet mysterious female assassin Kit (the beautiful sweetheart Anita Mui) and both of the men are attracted by Kit. The film concentrates pretty much on the war infested Saigon and the hell that's free in there, so there isn't any particular plot in the film, but that doesn't mean it's not interesting.

    I think there's couple of strong scenes of social criticism, mostly the horrific "customs scene" at the airport when Mark, Mun, Kit and Mun's father try to travel away from the country and are abused by the corrupted custom officers. Also the scene at the hospital is very harrowing and is there to underline righteously the state of the world of that time, and unfortunately there are even today places with same kind of circumstances in our world. Fortunately Tsui's attitude isn't this time as underlining as in his Once Upon a Time in China (1991), and Tomorrow 3 is therefore perhaps more noteworthy film as commenting society.

    The visuals are also brilliant as can be expected from this director. There are great use of blue smoke again and the gun fights are incredibly beautifully shot and are more effective than any gun fight in some Western effort. The slow motion death scene of one important character in the film's finale is perhaps among the most beautiful "heroic death scenes" I've seen and it is finished very carefully and thus it has such a power. After that scene everyone should know what this name "heroic bloodshed" for this genre means and what makes it so unique. The end is very sad, too, but as we know how Mark ends up in his subsequent adventures, it gives some positivism for the sad ending of this third film. The ending is little irritating due to it's prolonged gun battles and fire power, and I think it should have stopped little earlier in order to be more effective finale for the otherwise pretty great film.

    Better Tomorrow 3 is not as great and interesting as Woo's films, but still this is much more than average effort from Hollywood, and due to Tomorrow 3's great look and visuals, I give this gladly 8/10 rating and think this is among the greatest films Tsui Hark has directed himself. He has produced perhaps as many films as he has actually directed and many have said he is better producer than director, but this film shows that he really knows how to direct noteworthy films, too.
    5chrichtonsworld

    Chow Yan Fat is great the rest is bad

    I ordered this movie on tape (dvd didn't exist then). I expected the same classic shootouts and drama like the first two "Better Tomorrow"'s. I knew it was a prequel. The back cover said that this movie was about "Mark" becoming the hit-man he was in "Better Tomorrow 1". Boy was I misinformed. It did show some background on Mark's History. And the reason he became a killer. (Love for a woman who gets killed.) But that's it. Nothing more. Nothing about his adventures he told us about in Better Tomorrow 1. To not use this concept is the reason why this movie fails. To be fair there were some nice things like some action scenes,but they were nothing special. These action scenes cannot be compared to John Woo's sequences. Some reviewers call this the best one of the series. That really is a mystery to me,because this movie isn't even in the same league as 1 and 2. Everybody is entitled to their own opinion,but for me this was definitely the worst one of the series!
    action-6

    Lacks the magic from its older brothers

    A Better Tomorrow 3 is not a sequel to A Better Tomorrow 2, but a prequel to A Better Tomorrow 1. We get to know how Mark Gor(Yun-Fat`s legendary ultracool gangster from ABT1) became a gun-toting gangster in Vietnam in the 1970`s. The movie itself is okay, but a lot worse than its legendary older brothers. The action is directed by Tsui Hark, a very good actiondirector, but not a patch on John Woo. Also, the gunfights lacks the intensity, smoothness and violence that we have come to expect from the ABT-series. If you`re a fan of Hong-Kong-cinema, ABT3 is worth a go, but remember that the other two are a lot better. 5/10

    Best Emmys Moments

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      John Woo (director of the first two films in the series) wrote the original screenplay for this third installment, but he never got to direct this third entry due to having had artistic differences with producer Hark Tsui during the filming of A Better Tomorrow II (1987). Instead, Woo took his screenplay and made it into Bullet in the Head (1990). Hark himself would direct his own version of "A Better Tomorrow III". The two films have many parallels, most notably, both being set in the Vietnam War.
    • Goofs
      In the subtitled version, Ho reveals that his real name is "Tanaka". However, later in the film he refers to his name as being "Tokito". The role was being played by 'Saburo Tokito'.
    • Quotes

      Mark Gor: Nobody knows what tomorrow may bring.

    • Alternate versions
      A 130-minute Mandarin version was released in Taiwan and has appeared on home video several times over the years. No Cantonese version is in circulation, but an English dub appeared on VHS in France. A 145-minute cut is said to exist, but it is unavailable on video and may be apocryphal. The Taiwanese VCD advertises a running time of 145 minutes, but it is in fact the 130-minute edit.
    • Connections
      Follows A Better Tomorrow (1986)
    • Soundtracks
      Sunset Song
      Performed by Anita Mui

      Lyrics by Chen Shaoqi

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    FAQ16

    • How long is A Better Tomorrow III: Love and Death in Saigon?Powered by Alexa
    • What are the differences between the HongKong Theatrical Version and the Taiwanese Version?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 8, 2025 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Hong Kong
    • Languages
      • Cantonese
      • English
      • Vietnamese
    • Also known as
      • A Better Tomorrow III
    • Filming locations
      • Vietnam
    • Production companies
      • Golden Princess Film Production Limited
      • Film Workshop
      • Nova Media
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 45m(105 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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