| Shaolin Soccer | 
enlarge | List Price: $14.99 (€11.84) Buy New: $4.99 (€3.94) You Save: $10.00 (€7.90) (67%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $4.99 (€3.94)
Avg. Customer Rating:   (based on 131 reviews) Sales Rank: 4229 Category: DVD
Actors: Cecilia Cheung, Lam Tze Chung, Pu Ye Dong, Li Bin Hong, Cao Hua Publisher: Miramax Studio: Miramax Manufacturer: Miramax Label: Miramax Format: Anamorphic, Animated, Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Ntsc Languages: Cantonese (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), English (Dubbed), English (Published) Rating: Unrated Media: DVD Running Time: 89 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: DISD29158D UPC: 786936208412 EAN: 0786936208412 ASIN: B000286RNY
Release Date: August 24, 2004 Theatrical Release Date: 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Description With tons of action, eye-popping special effects, and nonstop laughs, here's a hilarious martial arts comedy about a team of misfits who take their best shot at winning a championship! Sing is a skilled Shaolin kung fu devotee whose amazing "leg of steel" catches the eye of a soccer coach! Together they assemble a squad of Sing's former Shaolin brothers inspired by the big-money prize in a national soccer competition! Using an unlikely mix of martial arts and newfound soccer skills, it seems an unbeatable combination ... until they must face the dreaded Team Evil in the ultimate battle for the title!
Amazon.com Computer generated special effects have seldom been so giddy as in Shaolin Soccer, a gleeful fusion of kung fu and a classic Bad News Bears sports story. A former soccer star--whose "golden leg" was broken by a hired mob--assembles a team of former students of Shaolin martial arts, whose assorted skills (indicated by their nicknames, like Mighty Steel Leg and Iron Head) lend themselves to the swift interplay of the world's most popular game. Along the way, the team's leader (Hong Kong comic superstar Stephen Chow) meets a sticky bun baker (Vicki Zhao) whose kung fu is the equal of any of his teammates. Shaolin Soccer is supremely silly--in the final match, their opponents are called Team Evil--but that's part of the fun. American movies rarely achieve this perfect balance of the absurd and the sincere. A delight. --Bret Fetzer
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 126 more reviews...
  Stephen "WOW' Chow!! November 26, 2008 If subtitles are not an issue, then by all means consider this fine selection. It has it all, drama, comedy, action, adventure and my 5 star rating. I could bore you with details but that is pretty much useless for this type of movie. What you need to know is that it is loads of fun! BTW, I also loved his other film, Kung Fu Hustle. Chow is currently in production on Kung Fu Hustle 2, and pre-production on The Green Hornet (he will star as Kato!).
  great seller!!!!!! November 23, 2008 Got my movie on time and in the condition that it was supposed to be in!!! GREAT PRICE!!! I would buy again any day!!!
  Get a crowd over and prepare to laugh October 20, 2008 You have to see it to believe, its campy, silly, fun and fall off the chair hilarious... get the crowd over !!
  Finally! A truly "great" kung fu genre spoof! October 20, 2008 From the beginning of the movie, I was laughing my hindquarters off... Granted there were some awkward moments and some slow moments. But overall, the movie made me laugh (pretty hard in a few places).
I really didn't care for Kung Fu Hustle and thought The White Dragon, Kung Phooey! and Where Is Mama's Boy were all rather sophomoric attempts at spoofs. I did laugh pretty hard at Kung Pow - Enter The Fist, but I still think that Shaolin Soccer is the better "movie." It actually felt like fully-fledged movie rather than a strung out set of slapstick and sight gags.
It was definitely reminiscent of Balls of Fury in tone and plot, however. But, again, I think it came off much better.
I'd actually recommend this movie for fans of the kung fu genre who are looking for a light-hearted spoof that still somewhat bottles a little bit of the kung fu genre's spirit.
  Loved it September 30, 2008 Loved this movie the first time I saw it. I let a friend borrow it and they never gave it back. The great thing about this new version is that it is dubbed. Even though the subtitled version is a little different it does make for easier viewing. The subtitled version is available on this disc too. Great movie. Funny, quirky, not the norm.
|
|
|