A pair of evil kung fu artists, Heaven and Earth, are slaughtering the entire Yin-Yang brotherhood. It will ultimately be up to a man who hunts frogs and snakes and keeps them in his pants and a man so lazy he uses windmill-driven levers to deliver things to and from bedside, even a chamber pot and breakfast to confront the evil forces. (Source: IMDb) Edit Translation
- English
- Русский
- Polski
- magyar / magyar nyelv
- Native Title: 龍騰虎躍
- Also Known As: Fearless Hyena II , Fearless Hyena Part II , Long Teng Hu Yue
- Director: Chan Chuen
Where to Watch Fearless Hyena 2
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Cast & Credits
- Jackie ChanChing Lung / "Stone"Main Role
- Austin WaiAh Tung/ [Lazy young man]Main Role
- Yen Shi Kwan"Heaven Devil"Main Role
- James TienChing Tsun NamSupport Role
- Dean Shek"Shek Earth"Support Role
- Ma Chiang"Beggar Siu"Support Role
Reviews
The cinematic equivalent of a coma
The cinematic equivalent of a coma, the story behind Fearless Hyena II is more well-known than the film itself. A patchwork disaster that barely holds together, but how on earth Lo Wei managed to convince Jackie to do a nude scene is truly beyond me. Originally set to be Jackie's first film under a new contract with Wei, the story of how he avoided getting killed by the triads and returned to Hong Kong to become a megastar is the stuff of legends. Ultimately, Lo Wei supervised a reshoot of the uncompleted film, mainly by taking the footage from the 1980 shoot, incorporating some used and unused scenes from Chan's previous films, and hiring a double to bridge the gaps created by his former star's departure; Lo was able to assemble some form of sequel which, to his credit does manage to cover for it's lack of main star until the climax when Chan's absence becomes blatantly obvious. The premise is almost exactly the same as the original film, aside from the awful Jackie Chan lookalikes who play his "relatives" that never existed before, with the most outrageous wigs and fake beards you’ll ever see. The direction is laughable, carrying a definite Lo Wei vibe throughout, which ultimately makes the film feel more like a film from the 60s than one from the 80s, while Austin Wai's protagonist does the film no favours, although to be fair, there is at least some competently staged fights in places. Ultimately, Fearless Hyena II is nothing more than a simple novelty, only really worth the watch to see the smattering of scenes Chan shot prior to his departure, because the film has nothing else going for it… Game of Death was a better-made film than this.Was this review helpful to you?
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