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Sam Hui Movies

1999  
 
In this action-packed comedy from Hong Kong, Mr. Wong is a notorious con man who has bilked hundred of people out of their savings over the course of a long career, but no one has been able to put him behind bars. Pauline Wu (Joey Yung) is a woman with a personal grudge against Wong, since he took her father for a large sum of money many years ago; determined to get revenge, she teams up with another con artist, Ferrari (Nicholas Tse), who has reasons of his own for wanting to get even with Wong. However, while Ferrari would like to pull one over on the master, he's also trying to stay one step ahead of an inept police detective (Karl Maka) who is hot on his trail. Ferrari and Pauline enlist the services of strong-arm man Sze (So Yau-Pang), and together they plot a major scam that will nail both Wong and his daughter. But is it possible Wong could be turning the tables on them?
~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Sam HuiNicholas Tse, (more)
 
1998  
 
Gordon Chan directed this Hong Kong action drama about Kowloon cop Tung (Anthony Wong). Addicted to gambling, Tung takes an occasional bribe. He shows his new partner, American-born Michael Cheung (Michael Fitzgerald Wong), aka "The King of Killers," the usual neighborhood routines. The duo deals with triad trickery after gang leader Big Brother (Roy Cheung) leaves town. Mike meets Yoyo (Kathy Chau), one of the women Big Brother kept on a string. Left dangling after Big Brother's departure, Yoyo begins a relationship with Mike. Shown at the 1998 Hong Kong Film Festival and in the Market section at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi

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Starring:
Michael WongAnthony Wong, (more)
 
1990  
 
Loosely based on Kazuo Koike's famous manga Crying Freeman, Clarence Fok Yiu-leung spins this wild and woolly gangster drama. The film centers around a ruthless band of criminals called "The Eight Hundred Dragons," who pitilessly track down and kill any defecting members. Snooker (Dean Shek Tien) has held out the longest by hiding out in Russia. When the grand master of the clan learns of Snooker's whereabouts, he kidnaps him and his young daughter. Meanwhile, the villainous master also orders the kidnapping and brainwashing of Snooker's friend Yao (Sam Hui Kook-kit). After his memory has been erased with mind rubbers, Yao is given over to elder master Chimer (Nina Li Chi) and turned into a secret hired gun. When he whacks the Godfather of Japan, who is protected by the wrathful Hunteress (Carrie Ng Kar-lai), Yao soon finds a hit out on him. During the assassination, he runs into May (Maggie Chueng Man-yuk), Yao's former girlfriend. Since she is a witness to the crime, Chimer orders her dead too, but Yao can't bring himself to do it -- even though he has no memory of her. Soon, finds himself protecting May from both Chimer's and the Huntress' henchmen. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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1986  
 
Popular Hong Kong action filmmaker Ringo Lam (City on Fire and Replicant) reputedly directed this third of four official sequels to 1982's Aces Go Places only as a favor to star Karl Maka, and it shows. King Kong (Sam Hui) once again joins bald detective Albert Au (Maka) and his son Baldy Jr. as they fly to New Zealand to save Albert's wife (Sylvia Chang) from a gang of crooks who have kidnapped her. The crooks, led by Ronald Lacey in a send-up of his role in Raiders of the Lost Ark, are trying to get control of an experimental prism which they need for a machine which turns men into indestructible super-beings. The film is dark, violent, and not quite as funny as previous installments, and the goofy subtitles call Sylvia Chang's character "Sylvia" instead of "Nancy." Still, there is a good supporting cast of genre veterans like Sally Yeh, Kwan Tak-hing, and Cho Tat-wah to please Asian film buffs and Lam keeps the film moving at a speedy clip. The official series ended with the next installment, 1989's Aces Go Places V: The Terracotta Hit, but was revived eight years later with a new cast in the subpar 97 Aces Go Places. ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi

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Starring:
Sam HuiKarl Maka, (more)
 
1984  
 
In this typical Hong Kong melodrama, a sensitive photographer and his interior-designer wife decide to live apart, but their family has other ideas. The young son goes to stay with his father and grandfather, while the daughter stays with her mother, thereby gaining a youthful foothold in each camp. But one thing after another seems to sabotage the children's efforts to bring their estranged parents together again. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
Sam Hui
 
1984  
 
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After appearing in cameos in the first two Aces Go Places movies, it was only a matter of time before cult filmmaker Tsui Hark took a turn in the director's chair himself, and the result is a spectacularly silly send-up of the spy genre and one of the series' best installments. King Kong (Sam Hui) is kidnapped in Paris by a British agent called James (Jean Marchent) who wants to recover one of the stolen crown jewels, the Star of Fortune. For some reason, the jewel is hidden at the headquarters of the Hong Kong police, meaning that King Kong will have to steal the jewel without the knowledge of his best friend, bald detective Albert Au (Karl Maka). Albert and his wife, the fiery Superintendent Ho (Sylvia Chang), have a new baby in their house, but their tempestuous relationship produces as many fireworks as ever, with Albert ready to walk out and King Kong using the situation to his advantage by setting Albert up on a date so he can pull off the heist. Eventually, of course, King Kong realizes what the duplicitous James is up to and joins his friend in bringing the bad guys to justice. Peter Graves and Richard Kiel show up to add to the fun, and there are numerous jabs at various genre clichés to go alongside the series' usual blend of action, slapstick, and interpersonal conflict. Purists should note that the dubbed English version on Thorn-EMI is missing approximately 12 minutes and loses a great deal in the translation. The next installment, 1986's Aces Go Places IV, would be helmed by Ringo Lam. ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi

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Starring:
Sam HuiKarl Maka, (more)
 
1983  
 
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Prolific Hong Kong director Lau Kar-wing helmed this first of four official sequels to the 1982 hit Aces Go Places (there was an abortive 1997 follow-up feature as well). An assassin called Filthy Harry is hired by a shady figure (clearly meant to represent Henry Kissinger) and charged with killing the series' unlikely pair of heroes, bald detective Albert Au (Karl Maka) and reformed criminal King Kong (Sam Hui). The film is quite lively, as Albert's relationship with the fiery Superintendent Ho (Sylvia Chang) has hit the skids. The men are framed twice for different robberies by King Kong's new girlfriend, nearly committed to a mental hospital by their devious boss, and forced to battle Filthy Harry's weaponry-laden robot while covered with time bombs. As in the previous film, action scenes are tempered with a great deal of broad slapstick, mostly centering on the heroes' combative interpersonal relationships. Viewers should be cautioned that one English-dubbed version in video circulation is missing nearly 15 minutes of footage from the 102-minute original. Eric Tsang, who directed the first film, co-stars with Raymond Wong, Billy Lau, and Tsui Hark, who appears in a cameo as an insane man who believes himself to be an FBI agent. Hark would direct the next sequel, Aces Go Places III: Our Man From Bond Street, in 1984. ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi

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Starring:
Sam HuiCarl Mak, (more)
 
1982  
 
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A hugely successful crime-comedy from Cinema City and director Eric Tsang, Aces Go Places set records at the box office and made a star of Sam Hui. Hui plays King Kong, a clever thief who steals a cache of diamonds from some gangsters, framing another thief called White Glove for the crime. That's when the bald detective Albert Au (Karl Maka), who has been chasing King Kong for quite some time, pairs with the volatile female Superintendent Ho (Sylvia Chang) to bring him to justice. King Kong ends up joining the good guys, with the requisite hostile patter firmly in evidence, to defeat White Glove and another bad guy dubbed Mad Max (Chen Sing), and recover the diamonds from the hiding place where they were left by King Kong's dead accomplice. The English version is missing ten minutes of the comedy which makes this movie special, and the fight scenes are nothing to write home about, but the original's mix of broad action and even broader slapstick made it a hit, spawning four sequels over the next seven years and a failed 1997 attempt at revival with a new cast. Dean Shek co-stars with Cho Tat-wah, Raymond Wong, and cult filmmaker Tsui Hark in a small role. ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi

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Starring:
Sam HuiCarl Mak, (more)
 
1981  
 
Popular Hong Kong comedy trio Michael, Sam and Ricky Hui star in this box-office smash hit. Chou Sai-cheng (Michael Hui Koon-man) runs Wong's security company with an iron fist. Called "The Crab" by his haggard employees because he walks like Charles Bronson, Chou is in charge of training the employees in all manners of self-protection, ranging from the odd to the bafflingly stupid. Sam (Sam Hui Koon-kit) and Ricky (Ricky Hui Koon-ying) are Chou favorite targets of abuse. Yet the Chou soon finds the shoe is on the other foot when Ricky gets promoted after saving the day in a botched bank heist. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Michael HuiRicky Hui, (more)
 
1978  
 
The owners of a Hong Kong television station play a legalistic trick on new employees. They are forced to sign a piece of paper which legally binds them to work for the station for eight years, no matter what. In this comedy, Chi-Man (Michael Hui) gets together with an inventor and a magician to try to steal the contract back from the station even though it is in a heavily guarded safe. Chi-Man uses multiple disguises to distract the safe-keepers; in one he is a dancer-singer auditioning for a role, and another finds him dressed up as a very sexy lady. This film was a number one box-office hit in Hong Kong at the time of its release. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
Michael HuiSam Hui, (more)
 
1986  
 
An adventurous scholar (Sam Hui) travels to the Himalayas in search of his missing friend Professor Kwan (Teddy Robin) in this big-budget science-fiction adventure. Kwan has taken a holy relic from a five-year-old monk. When Kwan is killed in a plane wreck, the scholar agrees to help the gifted child retrieve the coveted item. The pair travels to India, Egypt, and Hong Kong in search of the magic black pearl. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi

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198z  
 
Filmed in Cantonese, Naughty! Naughty! stars Sam Hui. The behavior of the principal character justifies the film's title: Hui is an unrepentant con artist. At least, that's the condition that prevails until a beautiful woman enters his life. For her sake, Hui vows to go straight (or does he?) In the original release version of Naughty! Naughty!, Hui's regeneration takes nearly two hours; American prints might be shorter. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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