

Fusing ancient martial arts with hard-hitting physical comedy and the high-flying energy of competitive sports, 'Shaolin Soccer' is written by, directed by and stars Stephen Chow. Dedicated Shaolin practitioner Sing (Stephen Chow) is determined to re-unite his brothers to apply the ancient art of Shaolin to a modern sport. With the help of ex-football champion, Fang, the group of unlikely footballers are whipped into shape and train hard to earn a place in the National Football Tournament. The brothers battle their way through the rounds with unusual moves such as 'Iron Head' and 'Hooking Foot', getting closer and closer to the ultimate challenge of the National final. It is her that they will face Team Evil - the most ruthless team ever assembled. Review: No Own Goal - I was a little apprehensive about this movie, after all kung fu football? Even more left field than the average baseball movie! But its a hoot, never a dull moment, even if its obvious what is going to happen at the end. A ragtag team of dreamers, disillusioned drifters and failed entrepreneurs, with an alcoholic crippled ex-footballer as a coach take on the all conquering Team Evil. Now what do you think happens? This is pure escapist fun from Stephen Chow and his team of usual suspects. No great acting on show here, simple one dimensional characters and a hackneyed storyline. Yet carried off with so much verve and panache its impossible not to love. This movie does exactly what it says on the tin. But watch the cantonese version, its longer, makes more sense and the jokes are even better than the stilted english delivery. And thats not even mentioning the incredible action and stunts............. Review: amazing movie - highly recommended, this is now available everywhere.
| ASIN | B009LPXLBA |
| Actors | Man Tai Ng, Patrick Tse, Stephen Chow, Vicki Zhao |
| Customer reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (916) |
| Director | Stephen Chow |
| Media Format | VHS |
| Producers | Daniel Lam, Stephen Chow |
| Rated | Suitable for 12 years and over |
| Run time | 1 hour and 27 minutes |
| Studio | Walt Disney Studios Home Ent. |
| Writers | Stephen Chow |
K**R
No Own Goal
I was a little apprehensive about this movie, after all kung fu football? Even more left field than the average baseball movie! But its a hoot, never a dull moment, even if its obvious what is going to happen at the end. A ragtag team of dreamers, disillusioned drifters and failed entrepreneurs, with an alcoholic crippled ex-footballer as a coach take on the all conquering Team Evil. Now what do you think happens? This is pure escapist fun from Stephen Chow and his team of usual suspects. No great acting on show here, simple one dimensional characters and a hackneyed storyline. Yet carried off with so much verve and panache its impossible not to love. This movie does exactly what it says on the tin. But watch the cantonese version, its longer, makes more sense and the jokes are even better than the stilted english delivery. And thats not even mentioning the incredible action and stunts.............
D**N
amazing movie
highly recommended, this is now available everywhere.
M**E
a must see for the fun of it!!
this film is full of belly laughs right from the opening credits. Stephen Chow's unique style is one not to be missed and here is a film which will delight and bring a smile to even the grumpiest of old men!!! Here we see Chow employ the skills learned in the Shaolin temple to soccer with hilarious results. A film i would certainly recommend and if you liked Kungfu Hustle then you will love this. Surreal and the special effects used to the maximum take nothing away from what is a very very funny film. Can be viewed in both cantonese and english but the english version misses out a few scenes.
S**Y
Shaolin fun!
Great, not for everyone but then again if you're gonna watch a movie called Shaolin Soccer you're probably pretty open to whatever is gonna happen on screen. Fun and lighthearted, is great for a bit of mindless, utterly ridiculous fun. Plus you actually get involved with the silly characters, and end up rooting for them, even including all the nonsensical stuff happening. Do it, watch it, so ridiculous its great.
S**.
not english dubbed
not the film i wanted to buy as not english dubbed
M**R
A film of two halves - extremely witty then extremely poor!
As the cliche goes, this is a film of two halves. The first half is funny, witty, ground breaking stuff - a Kung Fu film that you laugh with and not at. I was amazed at the sharpness of the occasionally surreal comedy and of the fast paced and clever script, that surprised and amazed in equal measure. However, the scene where our hero chats up the female lead is the 'Jump the Shark' moment, where the film turns from ground breaking to cliched and predictable. All the special effects in the world can't make the final match work, and the whole enemy-team-on-drugs ploy doesn't explain why they are so much better than the Shaolin monks. Anyways, the film is definitely worth watching as all new experiences are to be cherished and honoured. Just beware that, like Girl Next Door , it is possible for a film to lose it's rhythm half way and seem cut-and shut... P.S. On an unrelated sidenote, Star Wars VI: Return Of The Jedi fans among you may be interested to know that the ideas of the Jedi & 'The Force' were partly derived from the Shaolin Monks of China...
O**S
One of my favourites
Great movie and good condition of the dvd
M**N
Worth a veiwing
The first Steve Chow film, quirky and unlike his contemporaries. If you want to see where Kung Fu Hustle came from, this is worth a viewing.
G**K
Great Comedy with a touching story.
Vicki Zhao and Stephen Chow head out this wacki comedy that mixes soccer and KungFu on the field of battle -- a soccer field. Innocent Chinese humour is refreshing -- and at times tad odd to Western audiences -- but like Bruce Lee movies, this one has a message about how to live life with the principles of the martial arts. The DVD contains BOTH versions of the movie; the 2001 original Chinese release, and the heavily redone MIRAMAX version intended for theatre release in 2003 -- which features English being added to signs, 20 minutes removed (mostly Vicki Zhao story, and violence) and English dub (Stephen Chow does his own voice, and the others are VERY well done, but not the actors). Surprisingly, the caption versus dub is VERY different, probably due to matching the lips as best as possible. *SPOILER BELOW* The secondary story with Vicki Zhao (Wei Zhao in credits); playing Mui (Moo-ie). Obviously, they lucked out with this actress as her story is VERY effective and touching -- all about surface versus inner beauty; and perception (those who see past their eyes). The edited out part has to do with people making (pretty cruel) fun of her when she unsuccessfully tries makeup and dressing up. Really interesting to watch both versions (outtake footage at the end of the Chinese version), and even turning the dubbing on and off. Shaolin Soccer -- highly recommend. Pretty violent for YOUNG children, and they have scary parts of how "Team Evil" is created by the bad guys.
P**L
Fun 2000' comedy in a standard dvd package
Absent from streaming and vod platforms, had to buy the dvd. Fun comedy with unusual humour. My 10yo son loved it.
J**R
English Dub makes 2x hilarious
This is the only way to watch this in English dub and honestly it’s worth the cost because it really makes this already comical movie ever more hilarious! Highly recommend if you like to laugh!
L**.
Quant le foot croise le kung fu
J ai reçu le DVD avec avance c est un plaisir de retrouver ce film qui est un petit bijou du genre
A**A
Kung fu e pallone: grande mix!
Ho già visto questo film in cinese coi sottotitoli inglesi e volevo guardarlo in italiano. Bello: il doppiaggio è ben fatto, fa ridere e mi è piaciuto molto. Le parlate dialettali italiane, anche se all'inizio sconcertano un poco, non sono poi così male. La storia è comunque tagliata in alcune parti (ma ho scoperto che la versione internazionale è stata accorciata), ma è comprensibile. Lo consiglio a chi vuol vedere un film che tratta con unorismo sia il calcio che il kung fu (Stephen Chow è davvero magnifico nella parte dell'adepto di kung fu che vuol emergere propagandandolo come farebbe Anthony Robbins coi suoi seminari di sviluppo personale).
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