Due amici di origine cinese, che gestiscono un food truck a Barcellona, in Spagna, usano le arti marziali per aiutare un amico investigatore privato a proteggere la borseggiatrice Sylvia... Leggi tuttoDue amici di origine cinese, che gestiscono un food truck a Barcellona, in Spagna, usano le arti marziali per aiutare un amico investigatore privato a proteggere la borseggiatrice Sylvia, che è nel mirino di una banda spietata.Due amici di origine cinese, che gestiscono un food truck a Barcellona, in Spagna, usano le arti marziali per aiutare un amico investigatore privato a proteggere la borseggiatrice Sylvia, che è nel mirino di una banda spietata.
- Premi
- 1 candidatura
- Moby
- (as Samo Hung)
- Gloria
- (as Susanna Sentis)
- Mondale
- (as Pepe Sancho)
- The Butler
- (as Luis Palenzuela)
- Dino
- (as J. Fonoll)
- Fat Man in Bar
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizDuring filming, Keith Vitali accidentally kicked Jackie Chan in the throat after numerous takes for a particular fight scene. When Keith hit Jackie, he realized the danger of the situation and broke character by concern for Jackie's health. By doing this, Keith was yelled at by the entire crew as he was supposed to wait for the director to yell "Cut!", no matter what had happened in the scene.
- BlooperWhen the yellow Mitsubishi van makes a huge jump, the van is changed to another van (an older type).
- Citazioni
Henchman eating meal in castle: Ok guys, stop playing now and come and have something to eat. Come on.
- Versioni alternativeFive separate audio versions of this movie exist.
- Two Original Cantonese versions, mono and new remastered 5.1 mix.
- The Mandarin version.
- Two English versions: One produced by Golden Harvest with a new score composed by Keith Morrison, and one later produced by Fortune Star featuring the original music score by Tang Siu-lam. The Golden Harvest dub/re-score was also used for the Japanese theatrical cut of the film, titled "Spartan X". (The Golden Harvest dub actually contains the dubbed voices of the real three lead actors themselves: Jackie Chan, Yuen Biao, and Sammo Hung.)
- ConnessioniEdited into Fist to Fist (2000)
- Colonne sonoreTheme from Spartan X
Performed by Den Minamida
Music and Arrangement by Kirth Morrison
Words by Larry Johnston
The star trio (their third picture together, preceded by PROJECT A and WINNERS AND SINNERS, both released in 1983) brings about authentic bonhomie in their two against one raillery, with Hung often comically in the receiving end of the ribbing and pratfalls. Forner's deceptively virtuous damsel-in-distress (petty larceny merely a peccadillo) doesn't drive a wedge between the two cousins, instead, Thomas and David's gauche vying for her affection elicits abundant lulz, including one sterling idea from Thomas, by suggesting David's father (Paul Chang Chung) to marry Sylvia's mother (Sentís), both mental hospital residents (there are stimulating cameos from regular collaborators Richard Ng, Wu Ma and John Sam as fellow head cases) who are smitten with each other, to the utter dismay of Yuen, since he and Sylvia will become step-siblings.
Whereas the plot gives no spectacular twists or suspense to elevate WHEELS ON MEALS head and shoulders above its similar peers, the climatic action set piece is a captivating blinder, in particular, the fisticuffs between Jackie Chan and kickboxing champion Benny Urquidez, which gives a visceral flesh-to-flesh impact that bespeaks what makes martial arts actioner such an entertaining delight to watch, and Chan's epiphany of loosing up in the face of a formidable rival well speaks volume of his trademark amalgamation of levity and lethality that eventually would win him gazillion of fans in every nook and cranny of the world, an exemplar of how to take up the baton (from Bruce Lee, obviously) and pass it on with one's own distinctive style (Chan is in his sixties and his clout still rolls on).
Elsewhere, Hung relishes in the self-referential jokes of his (only slightly at then) portly figure (when Moby hollers around in looking for a man named Fatso, whose corpulence can legitimately pale him into insignificance, or the running jokes of being unable to keep up with a simian Chan in all the shinning and whisking), and in fact, Hung is famous for his disproportionate agility that lends him a unique presence among other uniformly jacked Chinese martial artists. Without any help of wire-fu, Hung really cuts it both in and behind cameras, and WHEELS ON MEALS is a testimony to the halcyon days of Hong Kong action cinema, fun, thrill and a bit of romance, recommended for the whole family.
- lasttimeisaw
- 14 apr 2019
- Permalink