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Mad Mission 3: Our Man from Bond Street (1984)

Mad Mission 3: Our Man from Bond Street (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)
Director(s):
Tsui HarkEric Tsang, (more)
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Mad Mission 3: Our Man from Bond Street

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

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
81 mins

Complete Cast of Mad Mission 3: Our Man from Bond Street


Director(s):
Eric TsangTsui Hark
Writer(s):
Raymond Wong
Producer(s):
Raymond WongDean ShekKarl Maka
Categories:
ComedyAction / Adventure
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Patricia C.

Third in the series goes international as the producers bring in a couple of known faces to further the laughs. All convoluted wackiness aside, this film is breezy fun thanks to the continued chemistry of stars Hui, Maka and Chang. How King Kong can continue to break the law and be seen as a friend of the police is beyond me, but this is a series so mired in its own slapdash, anything-goes rules that it’s ok. If you loved the first two, you’ll like this one. The Aces Go Places movies were definitely a product of their times; if you can dig that then these movies will probably tickle you. (Kozo 1998) - I recommend the HK Cantonese edition w/ English subtitles over Anchor Bay's English-dubbed DVD.

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Greg P.

This flick was too lame to watch.

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