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Police Story 2 (Special Collector's Edition)

4.4 out of 5 stars 48 customer reviews

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Special Features

  • Rare alternative outtakes
  • "Stunts Unlimited: The Legendary Police story 2 Stunt Team" featurette
  • Police Story 2 Location Guide
  • Commentary by Rush Hour director Brett Ratner and Hong Kong cinema expert Bey Logan
  • "Celebrating a Sequel" – A Conversation with Brett Ratner and Bey Logan
  • Hong Kong and US trailers

Product Details

  • Actors: Jackie Chan, Maggie Cheung, Kwok-Hung Lam, Bill Tung, Keung-Kuen Lai
  • Directors: Jackie Chan
  • Writers: Jackie Chan, Edward Tang
  • Producers: Edward Tang, Leonard Ho, Raymond Chow
  • Format: Multiple Formats, Closed-captioned, Color, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Language: English (Dolby Digital 5.1)
  • Subtitles: English, Spanish
  • Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Rated:
    PG-13
    Parental Guidance Suggested
  • Studio: Weinstein Company
  • DVD Release Date: February 13, 2007
  • Run Time: 101 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (48 customer reviews)
  • Domestic Shipping: Currently, item can be shipped only within the U.S. and to APO/FPO addresses. For APO/FPO shipments, please check with the manufacturer regarding warranty and support issues.
  • International Shipping: This item is not eligible for international shipping. Learn More
  • ASIN: B000KX0IMW
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #108,668 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
  • Learn more about "Police Story 2 (Special Collector's Edition)" on IMDb

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: DVD
Police Story 2 was made to be the sequel to Police Story 1. Jackie directs this (and PS 1) and keeps the same type of serious tone but adds in more humor. The story is not as tight or gripping as the first but most Jackie fans will enjoy this.

Unlike PS 1, this is sort of a mindless movie. It starts out with the bad guy who Jackie sends to jail at the end of PS 1 (famous Shaw Brothers director Yuen Chor) out for revenge now that he is out of jail. He hires a guy to constantly harass Jackie and get into fights with him. It gets more complex than that and there is a real plot but the movie drags along too much before the fantastic ending sequence finally comes.

It was cool to see old school star John Cheung ('Snake in the Monkey's Shadow' and 'Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story') in a major role as one of the bad guys. Ben Lam ('Legend of the Wolf') also has a major part. Even one of Jackie's very best stuntmen Benny Lai is given a big role as the deaf mute. Benny Lai is a little guy but his kicking abilities are spectacular. I think the movie could have been a lot better but Maggie Cheung is even more enjoyable than she was in part 1 and it is a very fun film. Michael Chow and Lau Ching Wan also have cameos as cops. Both being fairly new to the movie scene at this time. And of course it is always great to see Bill Tung playing Uncle Bill and Mars as one of Jackie's cop buddies. You have to love Uncle Bill.

Akin to Jackie Chan's other movies, expect the best of the best stuntwork from Jackie and his team. Very inventive as always. I can't even imagine how much it would hurt trying to lay down every night during the shooting of this. In PS 1, Jackie came up with his own type of action choreography.
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Format: DVD Verified Purchase
As night follows day, box office smash hits will get their bigger-budgeted sequels. But while POLICE STORY 2 is bigger, it isn't necessarily better. It's actually a terrific film. I'm just saying it's not as good as the first. But it's definitely worth a look, especially if you haven't seen the 122 minute long version. If you've only seen the much edited international release, then you haven't seen the real thing. Either way, Jackie Chan is still singing that theme song.

For his reckless actions in the first POLICE STORY (demolishing a squatter village, wrecking a mall, holding the police superintendent hostage, etc.) Detective Chan Ka Kui (Jackie) of the Royal Hong Kong Police is demoted to traffic duty. But when the mob boss he had arrested (again from the first POLICE STORY) is released from prison - because apparently he only has three months left to live - Ka Kui and his girlfriend May (Maggie Cheung, getting more screen time) become targets of the mob boss's vengeance. But that's only one set of thugs. Ka Kui also ends up tangling with vicious bomb extortionists and taking on that tiny little formidable deaf-mute martial artist whose only mangled uttered words sound like "Abba, abba." Detective Chan Ka Kui persists in being a loose cannon, and I'm astonished that in the next sequel he isn't demoted to the permanent assignment of getting cats out of trees.

Jackie's trademark slapstick is toned down as his character maintains that incredible intensity for the most part. There are those running gags with the guy whose glasses kept getting cracked and also with Uncle Bill's toilet issues.
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Format: DVD Verified Purchase
Jackie Chan does it again with another successful film Police Story 2. Jackie Chan fights a group of bombers attempting to extort $10 million from building owners. And if they don't get there money then they can say bye to there building and people. Later on in the movie Jackie Chan meets up with the same gang that were in the first film Police Story sent by there leader who Jackie put behind bars Mr. Chu, who is let out of prison. With incredible fight scenes, and stunts that will amaze you, makes this movie good.
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Format: DVD
Police Story 2 has it's moments, but it's mostly just a regurgitation of the first film. It even spends the first several minutes recapping the first movie and as well as using flashbacks to reference it. As usual Jackie Chan's stunts are incredible, but there was significantly less action in this one compared to the first film. Luckily the ending fight scene gives the movie a little more of it's substance.
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Format: DVD
Sequels in the 1980s and early 90s tended to be retellings of the original story. Sure, time had passed between the events of the first and second films and screenwriters would make a reasonable attempt to make obligatory mention of what happened the first time around, but largely sequels were designed to give us more of the same. The 80s/90s, if I have my chronology correct, were before the Lord of the Ringses and Pirates of the Carribeanses, movies that tried to string a single narrative through multiple films. The definition of a sequel and remake were dangerously close during this era of movie history. Ghostbusters 2 made the gang once again face an influx of supernatural activity in New York, leading to yet another climax where a giant creature walks the streets of the city; Predator 2 transplants the same plot into an urban location; Die Hard 2: Die Harder, apparently afraid the audience will not realize the similarities between the first and second movie, takes immense pleasure in having characters point out how much the movie's events have in common with the original film, as if to say, "Hey, remember that movie you really liked, Die Hard. Well, this is a lot like that."

Apparently Jackie Chan doesn't like to hit the reset button because Police Story 2 not only deals with the fallout from the first film, but makes these consequences an important, if not always central, part of the movie. In fact, the opening title is translated as Police Story, Part 2. I think the "part" subtitle tends to class up the place. It's a way for the filmmaker to tell you that he's not in it for the money. He just wants to finish the grand narrative he began with the first one.
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