Two cops from different worlds team up to solve the murder of a powerful businessman.Two cops from different worlds team up to solve the murder of a powerful businessman.Two cops from different worlds team up to solve the murder of a powerful businessman.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Park Joong-hoon
- Kim
- (as Joong-Hoon Park)
Ben Immanuel
- Angelo
- (as Benjamin Ratner)
Roger Cross
- Dion Edwards
- (as Roger R. Cross)
Robert Daprocida
- Enzo
- (as Rob Daprocida)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I know it was made it 1998, but this movie is so 80s it almost hurts, but that's probably because it's a straight-to-video thing complete with all the usual 80s cliches - hammy over-acting, angry/rogue cop, Yakuza assassins, revolvers with infinite ammo unless the scene requires them to be empty for Dramatic Reasons...but somehow it manages to rise above the cliches to at least be worth watching.
Michael Biehn is in fine form as the Angry/Rogue Cop in America, with Park Joong-Hoon joining him from as the Specially Assigned Asian Cop sent from Korea to help investigate killings in a Mafia vs Yakuza war. Two other cast members are the ICONIC Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa as the head of the local Yakuza, and Hiro Kanagawa as one of his underlings.
Honestly, you know pretty much exactly what you're getting here, and that's not necessarily a bad thing because at least it IS fun. Yes, it could have been better, but it could also have been a LOT worse.
Michael Biehn is in fine form as the Angry/Rogue Cop in America, with Park Joong-Hoon joining him from as the Specially Assigned Asian Cop sent from Korea to help investigate killings in a Mafia vs Yakuza war. Two other cast members are the ICONIC Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa as the head of the local Yakuza, and Hiro Kanagawa as one of his underlings.
Honestly, you know pretty much exactly what you're getting here, and that's not necessarily a bad thing because at least it IS fun. Yes, it could have been better, but it could also have been a LOT worse.
The movie is a slightly-above average violent action flick about a mismatched pairing of a rebellious American cop and a foreign policeman. Interesting setting, involving the Italian Mafia fighting it out with the Japanese Mafia and a mysterious Asian assassin in New York City. Michael Biehn is the hot-tempered policeman who gets paired with a Korean cop from Seoul, Korea (Joong-Hoon Park), while investigating the beginnings of a gangland war between the two crime syndicates. Lots of silly fights and violent action scenes. What raises the film above the standard is the Asian motif, the Mafia vs. Yakuza, and the good performances of Biehn and Park.
Okay, if you want a good movie with comedy between America and China, pick up the Rush Hour franchise. Don't get me wrong, I love Rush Hour, but I love the seriousness and suspense that's felt in some of the scenes, especially when the leader of the Yakuza meets his underlings in the harbor office. If you understand a bit of Japanese customs and culture, you would be able to feel that level of tension that I'm talking about.
I'm also a nut about Korean and Japanese cultures and customs and I was able to get into it easily. What Michael Biehn said at the end, "kahnsahamnida," is Korean for "Thank you very much." I train in Tae Kwon Do (a Korean Martial Art), and it's what drives my fascination about the cultures of Korea and Japan. Okay, I'm drifting off the subject, so I'll get back ON the subject.
A murder in Seoul,Korea of a detective's family...a black lotus origami-styled folding (I have no idea what they call it in Korea, so I'm using the Japanese similarity. If anyone knows what it's called, please let me know.) is the only clue that's given. Fast forward several years later to a murder in the New York alleyways; several members of the Yakuza are flat on their backs with their throats slashed out. A NY detective (Biehn) investigates the area and notices a black lotus origami floating by and scans the design to be sent to all police networks around the world. It is the same detective who's family was murdered that picks up the bulletin and when the two meet, you can tell there's some resentment until they have at it. It gets even better when the two go meet the Yakuza at the Harbor office.
I won't say anything more, but it gets better and better. I recommend this movie for anyone who wants good serious police work between two cultures.
I'm also a nut about Korean and Japanese cultures and customs and I was able to get into it easily. What Michael Biehn said at the end, "kahnsahamnida," is Korean for "Thank you very much." I train in Tae Kwon Do (a Korean Martial Art), and it's what drives my fascination about the cultures of Korea and Japan. Okay, I'm drifting off the subject, so I'll get back ON the subject.
A murder in Seoul,Korea of a detective's family...a black lotus origami-styled folding (I have no idea what they call it in Korea, so I'm using the Japanese similarity. If anyone knows what it's called, please let me know.) is the only clue that's given. Fast forward several years later to a murder in the New York alleyways; several members of the Yakuza are flat on their backs with their throats slashed out. A NY detective (Biehn) investigates the area and notices a black lotus origami floating by and scans the design to be sent to all police networks around the world. It is the same detective who's family was murdered that picks up the bulletin and when the two meet, you can tell there's some resentment until they have at it. It gets even better when the two go meet the Yakuza at the Harbor office.
I won't say anything more, but it gets better and better. I recommend this movie for anyone who wants good serious police work between two cultures.
Ok, so this is just a cheesy action movie but that doesn't mean you have to hate it. It's got a lot of plus points. The performances of the two leads is good and they do have actual chemistry. Plus this movie is funny; whenever the cops come to a dead end they just beat some people up. There is a fight every few minutes. It's great. Plus it teaches kids an important lesson: VIOLENCE SOLVES EVERYTHING! Wooooo!
What I don't get is how come Michael Biehn isn't a bigger star. He is quality.
If you see "American Dragons" on TV then give it a look, you might like it as much as I did.
You might not though. I'm not promising anything, ok? OK?
What I don't get is how come Michael Biehn isn't a bigger star. He is quality.
If you see "American Dragons" on TV then give it a look, you might like it as much as I did.
You might not though. I'm not promising anything, ok? OK?
New York undercover cop Luca has his cover blown during an attempted sting on mobster Rocco. The fallout leaves a cop and a civilian dead. Meanwhile in Korea officer Kim lives in the shadow of his wife and child murdered by a gang called the black orchid. When Luca is moved top homicide he finds a connection to the black orchid gang bringing Kim from Korea. The two must work together to stop the mysterious assassins causing a gang war between the mob and the Yakuza.
I thought this would be a martial arts type US cross over movie and I wasn't far off. In fact this film covers all stereotypes of the mismatched-cop movies. We have a foreign cop, a hard assed cop, a firm but fair black captain etc etc. The cliches are overpowering and the story itself is nothing special. Because of the cliches you never get to the point of getting to believe in the characters. The action scenes are OK but it's nowhere near the type of martial rats stuff I expected even Martial Law is more exciting.
The cast are mixed Biehn is OK but really overdoes the tough guy stuff and delivers his lines flat. Park is not much better, at times I thought he was poor because he was foreign and at other times I thought he was poor because he was rubbish. Tagawa is always value for money but has too small a role. The rest of the cast are nothing more than stereotypes police captain, mobsters, informants etc. The whole cast is one big cliché.
The ending deserves special mention (don't worry I'm not spoiling the end!), the line `yeah, see you but next time I'll come to Korea!' is typical of this mass produced straight-to-video gumph, already planning an international sequel .
Overall it's almost rubbish. The fact that you know exactly what to expect from it means you're not disappointed (there's a backward compliment!) but it's still pretty poor. May I suggest you watch Rush Hour instead it's cliched too but it has more energy, comedy and flair. This is very workmanlike stuff.
I thought this would be a martial arts type US cross over movie and I wasn't far off. In fact this film covers all stereotypes of the mismatched-cop movies. We have a foreign cop, a hard assed cop, a firm but fair black captain etc etc. The cliches are overpowering and the story itself is nothing special. Because of the cliches you never get to the point of getting to believe in the characters. The action scenes are OK but it's nowhere near the type of martial rats stuff I expected even Martial Law is more exciting.
The cast are mixed Biehn is OK but really overdoes the tough guy stuff and delivers his lines flat. Park is not much better, at times I thought he was poor because he was foreign and at other times I thought he was poor because he was rubbish. Tagawa is always value for money but has too small a role. The rest of the cast are nothing more than stereotypes police captain, mobsters, informants etc. The whole cast is one big cliché.
The ending deserves special mention (don't worry I'm not spoiling the end!), the line `yeah, see you but next time I'll come to Korea!' is typical of this mass produced straight-to-video gumph, already planning an international sequel .
Overall it's almost rubbish. The fact that you know exactly what to expect from it means you're not disappointed (there's a backward compliment!) but it's still pretty poor. May I suggest you watch Rush Hour instead it's cliched too but it has more energy, comedy and flair. This is very workmanlike stuff.
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Did you know
- TriviaIn Argentina, this film was released straight to video as "Black Rain 2", a sequel of Black Rain (1989).
- ConnectionsReferenced in The Wishful Thinkers (2013)
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Double Edge
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $5,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 35m(95 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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