Shanghai Knights
Shanghai Knights (2003)

Shanghai Knights

1/5
(10 votos)
6.2IMDb58Metascore

Detalles

Elenco

Errores

When one of the men stabs at Chon Wang during the Fleet Street fight, he hits a wooden box instead.

The rubber blade of the knife curls almost all the way back as it hits the box.

The London street urchin that O'Bannon chases turns out to be 'Charles Chaplin' (qv).

The film is set in 1887; Chaplin wasn't born until 1889.

In the ceremony when someone is made a Knight or a Dame, the Monarch speaks that person's full name.

Doyle was born Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle.

When Queen Victoria knights him, she doesn't say "Ignatius".

Nor does she speak Wang's and O'Bannon's full names.

'Arthur Conan Doyle' (qv) was never a detective for Scotland Yard.

He was a doctor by trade.

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was knighted in 1902.

One of the film's many "historical cameos" is made by Jack the Ripper.

The film is set in 1887; Jack the Ripper's crime spree began in August 1888.

Aircraft contrails visible over 19th century London, and again at Stonehenge.

Charlie's face is dirty when Wang and O'Bannon meet him.

But a few minutes later, when Charlie, hiding in a crate, sneaks a peek at Wang fighting a group of thugs, his face is clean.

Work began on Tower Bridge in 1886, but it was not completed until 1894.

When John and Roy are leaving on the steamship, a bridge can be seen on the left crossing over the Hudson River.

A Hudson River crossing was not completed until 1931.

The first commercially available automobile did not appear until 1888, and it looked very different from the cars seen in the movie.

The particular Renault automobile owned by Rathbone was made around 1914.

During the fight in Rathbone's study, we can see the Chinese stuntman that is obviously doubling for an English attacker caught in the ladder.

During the fight in Rathbone's study one of the attackers is wearing chest armor.

When the fight escalates near the ladder he is knocked over to the right of the ladder while the other attacker is stuck in the ladder.

When he gets kicked by Chon he is on the left side of the ladder with no armor.

In the next angle he is already standing and coming back to attack with his sword and armor.

At Stonehenge, modern rubber radial tires can be seen on the automobile that Wang and O'Bannon stole from Rathbone.

The Palace guards are shown holding Lee-Enfield rifles.

These were not accepted by the British military until 1895, although the movie is set in 1887.

The particular Lee Enfield Rifles shown with the Buckingham Palace Guards are Number 4 rifles which were not adopted until 1940.

The facade of Buckingham Palace shown in the movie wasn't created until the 1930s.

The Statue of Liberty is shown surrounded by scaffolding as the ship leaves New York harbor.

The statue was dedicated on July 4th, 1886.

All exterior work on the statue requiring scaffolding was completed by that time, although the scene is set supposedly almost a year later.

Non-British citizens, such as Chon and Roy, would be not dubbed with a sword when knighted, and would not be given the title "Sir".

Blue flashes in the fireworks at the end.

Firework makers could not make strong blue colors at the time.

After being Knighted the three of them turn to face the audience, thus turning their backs to the monarch.

After being knighted a person backs away from the monarch.

The chimes of Big Ben at 12.

00 were wrong.

They don't immediately start with the 12 "bongs", but with the four quarter chimes.

In the "Kung Pow Chicken" scene, when Chan is fighting with the thugs, he traps one of the thugs' hand in between two boxes.

The thug is wearing modern shoes.

Lord Rathbone addresses Queen Victoria as "Your Highness".

The correct form of address is "Your Majesty" or "Ma'am", although a Lord who is tenth in line to the throne should have known this.

The film incorrectly shows Big Ben's minute hand moving in clunky steps.

The clock also chimes the quarter hour, not just the hour as stated.

When Roy is sitting in the hotel talking with the mayor's daughters, we hear "Ain't misbehavin" being played by the pianist in the background.

The song was written around 1927.

The movie is set in 1887.

The machine gun clearly uses tracers.

Tracers were not available until World War I.

When Chon, Roy, and Charlie are relaxing in the fancy house, Charlie pours Roy some brandy.

When Charlie sets the brandy on the table, it is sloshing around in the bottle.

After a brief cut to Chon then back to Roy, the brandy is motionless.

When Roy, John and Charlie are in the fancy house, the level of the brandy in the serving cup changes from shot to shot.

When Lord Rathbone revealed an automatic Gatling gun and said it was British ingenuity he was partially incorrect.

The Gatling gun was a hand cranked weapon that was created by Richard Gatling, American, in 1861 and patented May of 1862.

The first automatic, self-powered machine gun was invented by an American born Briton, Sir Hiram Maxim in 1884 and first displayed in 1885.

The Maxim gun bared little resemblance to the Gatling gun.

Automatic Gatling style guns did not come about until the 1940's.

When Roy is sitting with his back to the revolving fireplace, we can see a crewmember actually moving the fireplace on the left-hand side.

Time on Big Ben is 12:30 when Chon and Roy fall.

It is 12:24 when guys are repairing it the next day.

The clock was broken so couldn't have moved either forward or back on its own All the gears in the Tower Clock are moving much too quickly.

Most gears in a clock move very slowly, so that the hands move at the proper pace.

The film was set in 1887, and ends with Roy O'Bannon talking about Hollywood and the new fascinating invention (Film) that is growing there.

However, moving pictures weren't invented until 1894, in France, by the brothers Lumiére.

And it took years before Hollywood came on the scene.

Roy screams at Lin that there is a "serial killer on the loose" when speaking about Jack the Ripper.

Yet the term was not coined until the late seventies by FBI agent Robert Ressler or by Dr.

Robert Keppel.

A wide shot of Old London Town shows Portcullis House next to the Houses of Parliament, completed in 2000.

The shot of Buckingham Palace includes the Victoria Memorial in front of it, designed by Sir Thomas Brock in 1911.

Lord Rathbone would not have had to kill 10 members of the Royal family, but at least 20 to gain the throneThe Prince of Wales, his sons Albert Victor and George; Prince Arthur and his son Arthur Jr.

; Prince Alfred and his son Alfred Jr.

; Prince Leopold's son Prince Charles; and the Princes Christian Victor and Albert (nephews of the queen).

Because British royal rule is not salic (meaning passed down along the male line, but rather, through immediate family), following the deaths of these people each of Queen Victoria's 'untitled' daughters would assume the throne in turn; Princess Louise, Princess Helena, and finally Princess Beatrice.

Had these people been killed, the crown would have passed on to the eldest daughter of the Prince of Wales, Victoria, and, following her death, about 11 of her cousins in succession.

Rathbone would actually have been 21st in line; not far from Roy's '20th in line' jibe.

During the fight with Rathbone, Roy's knocked outside of the tower onto the hands of the clock.

While the camera inside focuses on Chon and Rathbone the silhouette of Chon's arms can be seen, but not Roy's.

'Queen Victoria' (qv) is shown as ambulatory.

But, in fact, by the time the story takes place, she was wheelchair-bound.

She was so overcome with grief by the death of her son Leopold in 1884, she had lost the use of her limbs.

When Roy and Chong are at the Royal Palace, the red uniforms the guards are wearing didn't come around until 1904.

The film is set in 1887.

After the escape from the burning barn in London, Roy and Chon crash at Stonehenge.

Stonehenge is, in fact, 85 miles away.

The real Stonehenge is located in the middle of flat grassland with roads on two sides, not amongst hills.

One of the Roy O'Bannon's book features zombies, but zombies weren't popularized until the 1930s-1960s.

When Chon and Roy are talking following being picked up by Lin on the way from Stonehenge, Chon calls Roy "Owen".

Haggis is not black and shaped like a hot-dog.

It is grey, fat and usually weighs about 500 g to 1 kg.

The Union flag is hanging the wrong way round on the Big Ben Tower.

Spotted Dick is a steamed pudding (cake) containing fruit.

It is not what was shown.

During the fighting scene in the study, the man caught in the ladder changes from a British guard to an Asian guard and back again.

The Boxer Rebellion occurred much later than the movie's time-line, but it is never claimed that the Boxers gang of London has any connection to that rebellion.

Such connection also makes no sense, because the rebellion happened in China, not in England.

Ferdinand von Zeppelin did not seriously consider building his airship until 1890.

Even though he had such plans in 1887, it is highly unlikely that anyone could invest in airships at that time as Roy did.

Box Office

FechaÁreaBruto
8 June 2003 USA USD 60,470,220
1 June 2003 USA USD 60,447,592
26 May 2003 USA USD 60,404,960
18 May 2003 USA USD 60,290,518
11 May 2003 USA USD 60,156,220
4 May 2003 USA USD 59,969,163
27 April 2003 USA USD 59,674,835
20 April 2003 USA USD 59,409,092
13 April 2003 USA USD 59,297,504
6 April 2003 USA USD 59,153,612
30 March 2003 USA USD 58,943,156
23 March 2003 USA USD 58,460,160
16 March 2003 USA USD 57,240,033
9 March 2003 USA USD 54,749,445
2 March 2003 USA USD 50,931,526
23 February 2003 USA USD 44,509,866
16 February 2003 USA USD 35,947,063
9 February 2003 USA USD 19,603,630
USA USD 60,476,872
27 April 2003 UK GBP 2,238,507
20 April 2003 UK GBP 1,940,442
13 April 2003 UK GBP 1,472,467
6 April 2003 UK GBP 749,655
Worldwide USD 88,323,487
Non-USA USD 27,846,615
11 April 2003 India INR 8,035,000
1 March 2003 Singapore SGD 3,100,000
11 May 2003 Spain EUR 823,590
4 May 2003 Spain EUR 697,460
27 April 2003 Spain EUR 364,174
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
9 February 2003 USA USD 19,603,630 2,753
6 April 2003 UK GBP 749,655 371
11 April 2003 Australia USD 987,676 183
28 March 2003 Brazil USD 82,980 50
4 April 2003 Europe USD 1,185,342 3
11 July 2003 France USD 397,353
31 January 2003 Hong Kong USD 17,352 20
4 April 2003 Iceland USD 30,250
14 November 2003 Japan USD 211,484 31
1 February 2003 Singapore SGD 1,500,000 60
29 August 2003 South Africa USD 136,693 70
27 April 2003 Spain EUR 364,174 170
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
8 June 2003 USA USD 8,767 18
1 June 2003 USA USD 26,678 52
26 May 2003 USA USD 88,391 88
18 May 2003 USA USD 93,691 132
11 May 2003 USA USD 131,278 190
4 May 2003 USA USD 186,696 253
27 April 2003 USA USD 224,240 275
20 April 2003 USA USD 64,365 114
13 April 2003 USA USD 98,179 134
6 April 2003 USA USD 135,259 180
30 March 2003 USA USD 245,726 271
23 March 2003 USA USD 668,280 628
16 March 2003 USA USD 1,548,917 1,316
9 March 2003 USA USD 2,688,514 1,905
2 March 2003 USA USD 5,027,902 2,515
23 February 2003 USA USD 6,507,878 2,526
16 February 2003 USA USD 12,796,818 2,755
9 February 2003 USA USD 19,603,630 2,753
27 April 2003 UK GBP 106,461 212
20 April 2003 UK GBP 187,409 317
13 April 2003 UK GBP 380,419 370
6 April 2003 UK GBP 749,655 371
11 April 2003 India INR 8,035,000
11 May 2003 Spain EUR 84,280 161
4 May 2003 Spain EUR 171,452 170
27 April 2003 Spain EUR 364,174 170

Comentarios

Jackie Chan and Owen Wilson reunite after the success of Shanghai Noon for more of the same, only this time with most of the action transferred to Victorian England. Chan is as charming as ever, but Wilson's routine wears a bit thin after a while.

The movie is as follows: dumb plot setup, Chan fights (and it's awesome), bad comedy, Chan fights again (and it's still awesome), story lumbers along predictably, Chan fights once again (and it's, of course, awesome), etc.

Very nice movie and a very great sequel of the first one they did it pretty good comparing to other movies who their sequel's suck . This had action in it stunts , comedy , laughs , little bit of romance in a few words it was just a masterpiece sequel .

This is another one of those films that I'm not quite sure about. In fact, I'm not really all that sure as to how well it did.

The East meets the West again in this sequel, where British Parliament rebel Lord Rathbone (Aidan Gillen) murders Chon Wang's (Jackie Chan) estranged father (Kim Chan) and escapes to England with Wang's Imperial Seal. Chon teams up with Roy O'Bannon (Owen Wilson) and sister Chon Lin (Faye Wong) to avenge his father's death and to uncover a plot to murder the royal family.

OK, I'll mention not of the bland storyline, not of the kung-fu action (Jackie Chan seems to be a tad slower these days don't you think?), not of the infamous ooh-la-la licking scene where a sultry Fann licks Owen.

Great movie, very funny, great fighting and creative action scenes, a rare sequel that is better than the original, and doesn't feel slightly dated like the first. great chemistry with the leads, awesome addition of beast chick fann wong.

Shanghai Noon (2000) gradually becomes Shanghai Knight, with both actors from the previous movie reprising their role as Chon Wang (Jackie Chan) and Roy (Owen Wilson). The movie is not as good as the first, but it is surprisingly interesting funny and captivating.

Three years after teaming up in "Shanghai Noon," Jackie Chan and Owen Wilson returned as Chon Wang and Roy O'Bannon in the often hilarious sequel, "Shanghai Knights." Chon's father, keeper of an imperial seal, is murdered in China, and the seal stolen.

Comentarios