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Shanghai Knights
When a Chinese rebel murders Chon's estranged father and escapes to England, Chon and Roy make their way to London with revenge on their minds, they team up with Wang's sister Lin to bring the perpetrators to book.
25 January 1942, Wirral, England, UK
24 June 1969, Beijing, China
27 January 1971, Singapore
1968, Camden, London, England, UK
5 May 1974, Kensington, London, England, UK
27 January 1953, Warwickshire, England, UK
19 January 1968, North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
April 29, 2009
You have to wonder when these lackluster Chan and Wilson vehicles will end.
February 07, 2003
A desperately unfunny action comedy, mirthless not only in its effect on an audience but in its whole aura.
February 07, 2003
[A] mundane sequel.
January 05, 2010
The Chan/Wilson chemistry that drove the first film and draws people back to this one hasn't lost any of its snap.
May 14, 2013
This innocent, sixties-style, big-budget comedy-romance-action-adventure romp is solid family entertainment that would make any self-respecting kid's jaw drop for a good two hours. [Blu-ray]
January 12, 2016
There are no surprises here.
February 10, 2003
Like an Abbott & Costello comedy, Shanghai Knights is truly dumb, sometimes inconsistent, but awfully funny.
December 28, 2010
Martial arts buddy sequel is exactly what you expect.
February 07, 2003
Knights will surely find an enthusiastic following before it gets to video.
February 07, 2003
Grand, undemanding entertainment.
February 11, 2003
It's a merry surfeit, lofted by calisthenic wow above the usual level for late-era Jackie and Wilson's mellow-gold delivery.
May 07, 2016
Jackie Chan and Owen Wilson bring the Far East and the old West to 19th century London as they search for Chan's sister (Fann Wong) in Shanghai Knights (2003), a high spirited but dumbed-down sequel to Shanghai Noon.

