Rush Hour 2 [DVD] [2001] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC]

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  • Lowest New Price: £3.14
  • Lowest Used Price: £0.01
  • Total New: 3
  • Total Used: 24
  • Total Collectible: 0
  • Total Refurbished: 0
  • Actor : Jackie Chan
  • Actor : Chris Tucker
  • Actor : John Lone
  • Actor : Ziyi Zhang
  • Actor : Roselyn Sanchez
  • Aspect Ratio : 16:9 - 2.35:1
  • Binding : DVD
  • Creator : Jackie Chan
  • Creator : Chris Tucker
  • Creator : Andrew Z. Davis
  • Creator : Arthur M. Sarkissian
  • Creator : Charles Wang
  • Creator : Darryl Jones
  • Creator : James M. Freitag
  • Creator : Jeff Nathanson
  • Creator : Ross LaManna
  • Director : Brett Ratner
  • EAN : 9780780636934
  • Format : Anamorphic
  • Format : Closed-captioned
  • Format : Colour
  • Format : Dolby
  • Format : DTS Surround Sound
  • Format : DVD-Video
  • Format : Widescreen
  • Format : NTSC
  • Is Adult Product? : No
  • ISBN : 0780636937
  • Label : New Line Home Video
  • Languages : Subtitled: English, Original Language: English
  • Manufacturer : New Line Home Video
  • MPN : TRNDN5404D
  • Number Of Discs : 1
  • Number Of Items : 1
  • Package Dimensions : 0.60 inches (Height) x 7.50 inches (Length) x 0.20 pounds (Weight) x 5.30 inches (Width)
  • Package Quantity : 1
  • Part Number : TRNDN5404D
  • Picture Format : Widescreen
  • Product Group : DVD
  • Publisher : New Line Home Video
  • Region Code : 1
  • Release Date : 2001-12-11
  • Running Time : 90
  • SKU : 794043540424BAKME
  • Studio : New Line Home Video
  • UPC : 794043540424

Rush Hour 2 retains the appeal of its popular predecessor, so fans will enjoy the antics of the returning stars, Chris Tucker and Jackie Chan. The action--and there's plenty of it--starts in Hong Kong, where Detective Lee (Chan) and his LA counterpart Detective Carter (Tucker) are attempting a vacation, only to get assigned to sleuth a counterfeiting scheme involving a Triad kingpin (John Lone), his lethal henchwoman (Zhang Ziyi, from Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon) and an American billionaire (Alan King). Director Brett Ratner simply lets his stars strut their stuff, so it hardly matters that the plot is disposable, or that his direction is so bland he may well have directed the film from a phone in a Jacuzzi. At its best, Rush Hour 2 compares favourably to Chan's glossiest Hong Kong hits, and when the action moves to Las Vegas (where Don Cheadle makes an unbilled cameo), the film goes into high-pitched hyper-drive, riding an easy wave of ambitious stunt-work and broad, derivative humour. However, echoes of Beverly Hills Cop are easy to see and stale ideas (including a comedic highlight for Jeremy Piven as a gay clothier) are made even more aggravating by dialogue that's almost Neanderthal in its embrace of retro-racial stereotypes. Of course, that's what makes Rush Hour 2 a palatable dish of mainstream comedy: it insults and comforts the viewer at the same time, and while some may find Tucker's relentless hamming unbearable, those who enjoyed Rush Hour are sure to appreciate another dose of Chan-Tucker lunacy. --Jeff Shannon, Amazon.com

- Amazon.co.uk Review


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