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Chow Yun-Fat Movies

One of the most instantly recognizable faces in Asia, Chow Yun-Fat is an actor of phenomenal renown and popularity. An icon of the action genre thanks to his numerous collaborations with Hong Kong directors John Woo and Ringo Lam, Chow gained fame playing the killer with a soul (and two large guns) in such films as Woo's classic A Better Tomorrow, and in doing so, inspired new trends in action filmmaking. However, although he is best known on the international level for his work in action films, Chow has also acted in films of almost every conceivable genre, proving himself equally adept in melodramas, romances, and comedies alike.

Born May 18, 1955, on Lamma, a small island off of Hong Kong's Victoria Harbor, Chow got his start as a professional actor while still in his teens. Chow's first break came in 1973, when he enrolled in Hong Kong TV station TVB's training program for young actors performing in a number of soap operas. In the early '80s, he would star in the station's popular series Shanghai Beach, earning lasting fame as the ultra-cool gangster Hui Man-Keung.

Chow broke into films in the mid-'70s, winning a lead role in the forgettable Massage Girls in 1976. He had his first critical success five years later as the star of Ann Hui's The Story of Wu Viet. He won a Best Actor award from the Asian Pacific Film Festival and Taiwan's prestigious Golden Horse for his performance in Leung Po-Chi's Hong Kong 1941 (1984), a romantic drama set against the backdrop of World War II. Two years later, he had his true breakthrough when then-obscure director John Woo cast him as hitman Mark Gor in A Better Tomorrow, a hugely influential movie responsible for the birth of the Hong Kong gangster film genre. The character of Gor has remained one of Chow's most popular to date, and made him -- to say nothing of Woo -- an instant star in Asia. The actor's portrayal won him a prestigious Hong Kong Film Award, and Gor became something of an icon in the action genre, influencing such international directors as Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez.

Chow would star in the two Better Tomorrow sequels, which followed in 1988 and 1989, but in the meantime he continued to prove his abilities in a number of other films like Dream Lovers, An Autumn's Tale, My Will, I Will, Prison on Fire, and the particularly acclaimed City on Fire - which became the inspiration for Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs. One of the most standout films Chow would appear in during this period would be Woo's Hard-Boiled - a movie that would earn acclaim on both sides of the Pacific. Cast as a tough cop with a heart of gold who teams up with a precariously unstable undercover agent (Tony Leung Chiu-Wai), Chow did his part to help amass one of the highest body counts in cinematic history, and in doing so, he further exhibited the kind of graceful will to destruction that had become his trademark. The film was Woo's last before he departed for Hollywood, and was the inspiration for Face/Off, starring John Travolta and Nicolas Cage in variants of the Chow/Leung roles.

Having attained such unparalleled popularity in Asia, it was almost inevitable that Chow would make the crossover to American films. He did so in 1998 as the star of Antoine Fuqua's The Replacement Killers. The film received mixed reviews, but Chow kept at with The Corruptor, and Anna and the King. Interestingly, Chow would find more success in America with a movie based on Chinese folklore in director Ang Lee's martial arts epic Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. Released to standing ovations at the 2000 Cannes Film Festival, the picture -- which cast Chow as a warrior haunted by the unavenged death of a friend -- enjoyed a long and healthy life at the North American box office, eventually becoming the most successful foreign-language picture ever released in the States up to that point. Better yet, Chow's work was universally cited by critics as one of the actor's most soulful, compassionate turns.

American audiences would next see Chow in House of Flying Daggers director Zhang Yimou's The Curse of the Golden Flower. A lavish and romantic period adventure set against the backdrop of the Tang Dynasty, The Curse of the Golden Flower presented a distinguished-looking Chow as the oppressive emperor struggling against a fierce rebellion. Though The Curse of the Golden Flower featured stunning cinematography courtesy of Zhao Xiaoding and took home multiple honors at the Hong Kong Film Awards, many fans felt that wasn't as cohesive as such previous Yimou efforts as Hero and the aforementioned House of Flying Daggers, and perhaps as a result, the film performed rather poorly at the American box office.

Despite seemingly shying away from big-budget Hollywood efforts since 2003's Bulletproof Monk, Chow would make a swashbuckling return to the world stage as cunning Chinese pirate Sao Feng in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End. The eagerly anticipated third installment of the highly profitable Disney film series, Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End presented Chow in the minor yet pivotal role of the one man who may hold the key to preserving the Age of Piracy against the nefarious East India Trading Company and its dreaded leader Lord Cutler Beckett (Tom Hollander). 2010 would find the actor portraying the title role of the legendary Chinese philosopher Confucius in a biopic about the figure, but Chow was back to the action genre later that same year, with a role in the gangster film Let the Bullets Fly. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi
1980  
R  
A young still relatively unknown Chow Yun Fat stars in this low-budget critically panned police action-comedy. Fresh out of the academy, straight-laced and obtuse rookie cop Chu quickly lands in hot water when his integrity and by-the-book manner gets his colleagues in trouble. When he accidentally exposes his British boss' illegal gambling ring, the humiliated now ex-cop sends a gang of roughguards after Chu. While Chu's friends try a variety of different means to bail their buddy out, including visiting their local Taoist priest and a Peking opera troupe, a loose affiliation of goons and crime lords try to bring the hapless innocent down. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Chow Yun-Fat
 
1981  
R  
Add The Postman Fights Back to Queue Add The Postman Fights Back to top of Queue  
Chow Yun-Fat stars in this historical drama from Hong Kong. During the Republican era in China, warlords divided the nation and fighting was fierce. But while many of the best soldiers could command a handsome fee for their services, the greatest warrior of them all was a man who would not fight for money. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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1981  
 
Hong Kong action star Chow Yun-Fat landed one of his first starring roles in this somber military drama. Wu Viet (Yun-Fat) is a Vietnamese refugee who wants to leave his country behind and start over in the United States. First, he must make his way to Hong Kong, but as he passes through Thailand, he meets a beautiful woman who travels with him. Wu and his new love end up in a refugee camp in Thailand, where they discover many of their countrymen are disappearing under mysterious circumstances. As Wu tries to learn the truth about what's happening, he discovers his life is in danger, and he must flee to the Philippines for safety. The Story of Wu Viet was released on home video in the United States under the title God of Killers after Chow Yun-Fat's later rise to international fame. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Chow Yun-FatLo Lieh, (more)
 
1982  
 
Chow Yun Fat, star of many a John Woo actioner, is top-billed in Long Goodbye. Alternately known as Hunting Heads, this is the story of a vengeance-motivated hit man. His methods are unorthodox, not to mention gruesome. The film is alternately known as The Head Hunter. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Chow Yun-FatRosamund Kwan, (more)
 
1983  
 
Set designer Tony Au Ding-ping makes his directorial debut in this stylish romantic drama set in Paris. While venturing to France, Ha-ching (Carol Cheng Yu-ling) visits her old school chum, Bing (Pat Ha Man-chik), who is engaged to be married. While on the subway, she is approached by Hong Kong lothario Kwong-ping (Chow Yun-fat), who she later meets again at a party thrown by Bing's fiancé. Though charmed by his charisma and magnetic good looks, Ha-ching is wary of Kwong-ping's wandering eye. When Ha-ching's bumptious husband also visits Paris, she has to choose between her rakish would-be lover and her dullard spouse. Of course, her decision is complicated greatly when she finds Kwong-ping in the sack with Bing. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Chow Yun-Fat
 
1983  
 
Wong Shu-tong spins this family drama about life on the set of kung-fu flicks, featuring a young Chow Yun-Fat. Bullet (Chow) is the youngest and best performer in a family stunt outfit that is barely staying afloat. Bullet's older brother Chin lacks the ability of his younger sibling and his father, Chen Wai Lung (Lam Chiao), once a highly sought-after stunt man, is suffering from failing health. Later, Bullet falls in love with his long lost cousin from the Mainland, Ching Hsiao (Chan Man-ngai), and takes a choice job in Taiwan, abandoning the family business. As his son becomes a major film star, Lung decides to make one last stunt gig and gets horribly injured in the process. Unable to contact Bullet, Chin resorts to a botched robbery attempt to pay for his father's urgently needed surgery. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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1984  
NR  
Add Hong Kong 1941 to Queue Add Hong Kong 1941 to top of Queue  
This melodrama is one of many that have embraced the period setting of Hong Kong during the Japanese occupation of World War II. Chow Yun-Fat, in an award-winning performance, plays a poor worker at a small rice shop. He befriends a rickshaw driver (Alex Mann) who falls in love with the shop owner's daughter. When the shop owner forbids the couple to marry, the trio decides to runaway to mainland China. However, their plan is interrupted by the Japanese invasion, and their friendship and loyalty is put to the test in the events that follow. Similar to films like Casablanca, Hong Kong 1941 is a good example of how Hong Kong cinema has made much use of this period and the theme of love in a desperate time. However, the film also depicts the brutality that occurred during the occupation, and the portrayal of the Japanese invasion force in this film reflects a deep resentment that parallels the representations of the German Nazis in Western film.
~ Jonathan E. Laxamana, Rovi

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Starring:
Chow Yun-FatCecilia Yip, (more)
 
1984  
 
Add The Occupant to Queue Add The Occupant to top of Queue  
A doctoral student whose thesis deals with Chinese superstition discovers the ghosts of two people who died in her apartment 11 months before she moved in. She unwisely opts to let them possess her in order to gain firsthand experience about life after death. Fortunately, a helpful detective (Chow Yun Fat) soon arrives to assist. ~ Kimber Myers, Rovi

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1984  
 
The time is the late 1930s and a pending war with the Japanese forms a part of the epic setting for a fashionable and old-fashioned love affair between a once-wealthy widow and divorcée (Cora Miao) newly arrived in Hong Kong and a rich Chinese playboy educated at Cambridge. The epic treatment of their romance is provided by background music in the form of Chinese opera or contemporary love songs and dazzling, opulent settings along the seashore or in tourist spots. The gloss and glitter dominate but cannot hide the flaws in the plot or eliminate the moments of wooden acting. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
Cora MiaoChow Yun-Fat, (more)
 
1985  
 
Add Witch from Nepal to Queue Add Witch from Nepal to top of Queue  
Noted action director Ching Siu-tang spins this wild and woolly supernatural romantic thriller. Joe Wong (Chow Yun-fat) is an architect, who, while on vacation in Nepal with his lady friend, Ida (Yammie Nam Kit-yang), gets thrown from an elephant, injuring his leg. While convalescing in a Kathmandu hospital, he has a vision of a beautiful veiled woman who has strange, magical powers. When his leg becomes infected, he soon finds himself in a hospital in Hong Kong only to discover the same woman named Sheila (Emily Chu Bo-yee) in his dream in the same hospital and she magically heals his leg. Unable to forget this unusual lass, he returns to the hospital just in time to save her from the evil immigration officers who are about to haul her back to her native Nepal. While on the lam, they soon fall in love. Later, Joe realizes that he has been chosen to be the defender of a remote tribe in Nepal. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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1985  
 
Not everyone would agree with the premise of this standard story of female bonding -- that divorced or single women are secretly longing for a male relationship -- but the camaraderie of the "Happy Spinsters Club" and the life of the heroine Liang Bo-yi (Cora Miao) are not as controversial. Bo-yi's husband is having an affair with another woman, and this is what propels her to ask for a divorce and join the "spinsters." Her marital woes are juggled with caring for her young son, maintaining an on-going relationship with her mother, and letting off steam with her friends. But is this the kind of life she really wants?
~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
Cora MiaoChow Yun-Fat, (more)
 
1985  
 
Add Spiritual Love to Queue Add Spiritual Love to top of Queue  
Directed by Taylor Tai-Loi, this supernatural love story stars Chow Yun-fat as an amiable n'er do well with a grumpy girlfriend with a very unique quality--namely, the fact that she's been dead for quite sometime. Complications ensue when the her husband, also dead, leaves Hell in the form of a purple, flying, disembodied head in hopes of brining her back. Meanwhile, a young woman (Cherie Cheung) pines for Chow in secret, and researches several ancient methods she could potentially use to ban the ghost back to the afterlife.

~ Tracie Cooper, Rovi

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1986  
R  
What do a cannibalistic, flying-demon baby, a spine-sucking Worm-tribe god, a blood curse that can only be cured by eating a nipple, and Hong Kong superstar Chow Yun Fat have in common? If you guessed they are all elements of one of the most outrageous and bizarre Hong Kong films of the 1980s, you obviously have a palate for high-camp and way too much time on your hands. Director Ngai Kai-Lam (of Story of Ricky fame) helms this lightning-paced supernatural adventure concerning cognac-sniffing, pulp-fiction heroes Dr. Yuen and Wisely (Andy Lau and Yun Fat respectively). On a frantic mission to cure Lau of the blood curse placed on him by a vengeful witch doctor (his veins periodically erupt into blood-spewing geysers), save the girl, and save 100 local village children from being sacrificed, the heroes battle a multitude of demons, monsters, and horrible curses. Sure, it's derivative of the Indiana Jones series and also lacks the budget needed to fully realize it's outlandish vision, but the film's pacing and originality are sure to please even the most jaded Hong Kong cinema fan. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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1986  
 
An exceptional and at times disturbing drama, Lunatics is among the top-grossing films of all time in Hong Kong. The somewhat fact-based tale centers on a social worker's attempts to help the mentally ill people who furtively live and work on the teeming city streets. As the story opens, Fung the social worker is calming a confused patient who has been threatening patrons of the local marketplace with a meat cleaver. Later, an investigative reporter assigned to write a critical report of an apparently failing health system, Yip, catches up to the busy Fung and begins following him on his rounds. It is an eventful day and Yip sees that Fung does much good for the outcast and the dispossessed. For Fung it is just another day until he must face down a desperate husband who is making a final, bloody stand in a kindergarten to keep from losing custody of his young son. After he kills a teacher, Fung has no recourse but to kill him. Towards the end of the day, the meat-cleaver man is back at the marketplace. Again, Fung comes to the rescue, but unfortunately, a photographer's flash frightens the deranged fellow and he murders Fung. The story ends on a brighter note when Yip decides to become a social worker just like Fung. Many of Hong Kong's most popular actors make cameo appearances throughout the story. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Deanie YipChow Yun-Fat, (more)
 
1986  
 
Yeung Fan writes and directs this melodrama about Rose (Maggie Cheung Man-yuk), a beautiful orphaned teenager who has boys pursuing her by the boatload. When she decides to study in France, her overly protective brother Charles (Chow Yun-fat) begs her to return to Hong Kong. Instead, she marries one of her fellow students and eventually has a daughter. Later, Charles dies of a long painful illness. Grief-stricken, Rose gets a divorce and returns to her family home. One day, she meets Ga-ming, who is the spitting image of Charles (and who is also played by Chow). A passionate, if creepy, relationship ensues only to be complicated by the return of an old flame from her school days. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Chow Yun-FatMaggie Cheung, (more)
 
1986  
 
Billie (Irene Wan) is a beautiful model who falls for Tony (Tony Leung) in this engaging crime drama. The playboy son of a wealthy rice merchant, Tony has a penchant for nightclubs and drinking when his daily work with his father is complete. Jade Screen (Elaine Jin) is a starlet who comes home to find that her roommate, singer Jane (Tsai Chin), has been murdered. Sergeant Lau (Chop Yun Fat) is the methodical detective called in to unravel the twisted case. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi

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Starring:
Irene WanElaine Jin, (more)
 
1986  
 
Add Hearty Response to Queue Add Hearty Response to top of Queue  
A tough detective fights for the freedom of an illegal immigrant in this action-packed Hong Kong thriller starring Chow Yun Fat. When Detective Bond accidentally harms an illegal immigrant named San during a routine police operation, his guilty conscience prompts him to invite her back to his home so that she may safely recover. Unfortunately Detective Bond's benevolent generosity is soon compromised by the simmering jealousy of his wife - who immediately assumes that her husband is having an extramarital affair with San. Later, when San is abducted and raped by a ruthless villain who attempts to extract a tidy ransom for her return, Detective Bond travels to the psychopath's hideout and single-handedly takes on his entire gang. After subsequently realizing that they were indeed meant for one another, Detective Bond and San are forced to go their separate ways. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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1986  
 
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John Woo established himself as one of Hong Kong's premiere action directors with this ultra-hip, ultra-violent action classic. The film centers around the complex relationship between two brothers: Sung Tse-kit (Leslie Cheung) is a recent graduate of the police academy while Tse-ho (Ti Lung) runs a massive counterfeiting ring along with his gangland associate, Mark Lee (Chow Yun-fat). Tension between the two brothers comes to a head when their father is murdered after a crime deal goes sour and Tse-ho lands in jail after being double-crossed. In perhaps the most influential scene in Hong Kong cinema in the 1980s, Mark avenges his friend by staging a dinner table assassination. As Mark tries to shoot his way out of the restaurant, pulling a series of hidden pistols from potted plants and alcoves, he gets horribly injured. With both founding members of the counterfeiting syndicate incapacitated, the operation falls into the hands of Shing (Waise Lee Chi-hung), Tse-ho's former underling who has little of his boss' élan or experience. When Tse-ho gets out of jail, he reunites with his now-crippled comrade, Mark, to take out Shing and to protect Tse-kit whose life is in danger for investigating their former subordinate. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Chow Yun-FatLeslie Cheung, (more)
 
1986  
NC17  
Noted art director Tony Au Ding-ping helms this acclaimed romantic fantasy featuring Chow Yun-fat and Brigitte Lin Ching-hsia. Sony Yu (Chow) is a famous orchestra conductor who recently suffers from a series of bizarre visions of a beautiful woman and a Qin dynasty era terracotta statue. When he ventures to a exhibit of such ancient relics, he meets Cheung Yuet-heung (Lin), who not only looks exactly like the woman in his dreams, but also suffers from similarly intense but decidedly more violent visions -- in one Yu gets garroted by the imperial guard and others are simply too gory to be divulged. Soon the two consult with a medium who takes them that they are the reincarnation of a pair of lovers murdered some 2000 years previous. Yu's girlfriend Wah-lei realizes that she has no part in this relationship and graciously bows out. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Chow Yun-FatCher Yeung, (more)
 
1986  
 
Add 100 Ways to Murder Your Wife to Queue Add 100 Ways to Murder Your Wife to top of Queue  
Two football players currently stuck in unhappy marriages concoct a foolproof method of murdering their wives in a pitch black sports comedy starring Kenny Bee, Chow Yun Fat, and Anita Mui. Bee's wife is always making a spectacle of herself, and when she chastises her successful husband in front of a whole stadium of shocked fans, his growing resent balloons into an unbridled rage. Football Fat has the exact opposite problem; his wife is nice, a little bit too nice. When Fat becomes convinced that his wife is having an affair, the pain simply becomes too much to bear. One night while bonding over a little booze, Bee and Fat realize that the solution to their problem is to simply do away with their wives. They'll have to be creative about it though, and after considering a variety of murderous methods the pair soon stumble upon the perfect plan for murder. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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1987  
 
Add Tragic Hero to Queue Add Tragic Hero to top of Queue  
Taylor Wong Tai-loi directs this sequel to his gangster epic Rich and Famous. With crime boss Chai (Chow Yun-fat) now a successful legitimate businessman, Yung (Man Chi-leung) wants to kill him more now than ever. While Chai tries to negotiate gangland peace, Yung steady kills off every competitor in the crime family until there is no one but Chai left. War between the two men seems inevitable. Meanwhile, Kwok (Andy Lau), Yung's brother, returns from self-imposed exile in Malaysia to calm tensions. At the same time, one of Chai's underlings tries to take Yung out himself but fails miserably while Yung orders the murder of Kwok's wife and child. Chai and Kwok soon band together to kill Yung. Though this film was intended as the sequel to Rich and Famous, it was actually released first. The producers thought that this film had more commercial promise. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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1987  
 
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Taylor Wong delivers this gangster saga about brotherhoood and betrayal. Bumptious, ill-tempered Yung (Man Chi-leung) has run up a huge gambling debt is about to get his finger loped off for non-payment until his more levelheaded brother, Kwok (Andy Lau), intercedes. When Yung's troubles become too great for even Kwok to handle, they turn to Chai (Chow Yun-fat), a big-time gangster who hires the two to aid with his business ventures. Enthusiastic and dependable, Kwok quickly becomes Chai's right-hand man, much to Yung's displeasure. When a Thai drug lord stops shipment to Chai, underworld tensions build. Eventually Yung shows his true self and joins the other side, setting the stage for bloody gangland violence. This film is followed up by Tragic Hero. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Chow Yun-FatMan Chi Leung, (more)
 
1987  
 
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The ganglord Ho has many loyal followers, thanks to his skill in showering his troops with praise and tangible thanks, giving them much honor in the process. However, in this violent movie, three of his senior associates have been picked up by the police on serious charges, and it is beginning to look as though his trust was misplaced, for they are planning on selling what they know about him for lighter sentences. Regretfully, Ho orders another associate, his most trusted henchman and bodyguard, to see to it that the three men die. At their funerals, he is genuinely bereaved -- both for his now departed men, and for the code of trust which they took with them to their graves. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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1987  
 
Two close brothers (Alan Tang and Chow Yun-Fat) grow up and go their separate ways. One of them (Yun-Fat) gets married and settles down, while the other (Tang) goes into business with a local triad (organized crime family). When a rival triad tries to muscle in on his business and threatens his life, the two brothers band together to fight them. ~ Brian Gusse, Rovi

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