Project A (1983)
Project A is a 1983 Hong Kong martial arts action comedy film starring and directed by Jackie Chan, who also wrote the screenplay with Edward Tang, who produced with Leonard Ho and Raymond Chow. The film co-stars Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao. Project A was released theatrically in Hong Kong on December 22, 1983. Set in the 19th century in old Hong Kong, Project A blends martial arts with comedy moments and spectacular stunts. One stunt in particular involved Chan hanging and falling from the hand of a clock tower some 60 ft (18 m) high, tearing through awning canopies before hitting the ground. The film was a box office success in Asia and Europe. At the 4th Hong Kong Film Awards, Chan received two nominations for the film (and another for Wheels on Meals), including his first Best Actor nomination, and won his first Best Action Choreography award. A sequel, Project A Part II, was released in 1987.Plot.
Sergeant Dragon Ma is part of the Hong Kong Marine Police’s effort to suppress the pirates, who have been raiding ships for months. Members of the Hong Kong Police Force and the Marine Police, who have strong inter-service rivalries, get into a fight in a bar. Shortly after this, Captain Chi releases all of the sailors to their commanding officer, and two of the Marine Police’s ships get blown up. Gangsters Chiang and Mr. Chou meet at a VIP Club and discuss fleeing to Vietnam. As soon as Chiang leaves, he meets one of the pirates and they laugh about sabotaging the Marine Police ships. The pirate tells Chiang that his boss, San-pao, wants 100 police rifles. Dragon Ma and his squad are forced to become regular police officers. They have to undergo “hard training” with the police under Captain Chi’s nephew, Hong Tin-tsu. After the police learn that Chiang is at the VIP Club, and that the guests there are not to be disturbed, Dragon and Tin-tsu go to arrest Chiang.a big fight breaks out. Tiring of the blatant corruption in the police force, Dragon arrests Chiang out and tells Tin-tsu to take the credit. That is his last official act as an officer with the Hong Kong police.
Fei finds Dragon in the street. They have a conversation and Fei reveals that someone in the police force is selling rifles. Fei tells Dragon that all he wants are the guns, and Dragon can catch the traitor. At night, Dragon and Fei interrupt a gun deal between the Army and the police Captain. After pushing everyone into the water and making off with the guns, Fei hides the rifles inside a log and marks it with a red flag. He later tries to sell the guns to the gangsters and pirates, but Dragon has removed Fei’s red flag and put flags on other logs instead.
Having thwarted Fei’s plan to sell the rifles to the pirates, Dragon has a conversation with the Admiral’s daughter, Winnie. He learns that the Captain wasn’t smuggling rifles for San-pao, he was buying the rifles from the army to arm his men. Overhearing this, Fei gets into an argument with Dragon. The gangsters come after Fei, and he tells them that Dragon is to blame for the missing rifles. Dragon is forced to flee with Winnie. After teaming up with Fei, being tortured for information about the rifles, and falling from the face of a clock tower, Dragon is tracked down by the police for a for a third time, and they help him get away as they arrest the gangsters.
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Title.
In the 1980s, Chan chose vague, generic film titles such as Project A and Police Story so as not to give the plots of the films away prior to their release. It was felt that the titles of previous Chan films such as Snake in the Eagle’s Shadow and Drunken Master gave too much away about the kung fu style they featured (Snake Style and Drunken Fist respectively). Project A was originally going to be titled Pirate Patrol, but it was feared that once announced, other Hong Kong film producers would rush to copy and release films featuring pirates.Production.
On the audio commentary of the Hong Kong Legends (Region 2) DVD, Bey Logan reveals that Chan’s last period film, Dragon Lord (1982), had under-performed at the Hong Kong box office in comparison to the previous one, The Young Master (1980). Logan identifies that a possible reason for the poor performance was the comparative lack of action. Edward Tang and the production team felt that a period film could still have success if it had sufficient action, and so researched the history of Hong Kong during the time of pirates for Project A. Unlike other Hollywood period films that are set on an exact time and place, many Hong Kong films play fast and loose with their period in history. A prominent example by Bey Logan is set like this: the Hong Kong Marine Police is set up in 1846 by the British Colonial Government. The Hong Kong Headquarters is set up in 1884. The Kowloon Canton Railway Clock tower is set up in 1915. So in other words, this film takes place between the 19th and early 20th century. Jackie and the Golden Harvest team employ some researchers to come up with background for this story about pirates in Hong Kong and are not really concerned at all about depicting the film in the exact era. Bey Logan coined regarding historical heroes and stories like Wong Fei Hong: if you choose between the truth and the legend, you print the legend because if you pick the truth, you won’t have for example, having items, vehicles and certain historical figures if you are shooting it in a time where certain things would or would not have existed, unless it’s made as a documentary.
Project A marks the first time that veteran Michael Lai used orchestral music for a film score, instead of using library music or lifting the score from other films.
In rehearsal for the clock tower fall, Chan took a week to build the courage to drop from such a great height.[citation needed] During the shooting of the bicycle chase sequence, one of the stuntmen informed Chan that E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial was playing at the local cinema. Chan halted filming to watch the bicycle chase scene in the finale of E.T., to ensure that his scene and Steven Spielberg’s scene were not the same. After watching the film, Chan became more confident, realizing that the audience doesn’t really care so much about such minor details, only in watching the film and having a good time. According to his book I Am Jackie Chan: My Life in Action, Chan injured his neck while filming the scene.
Release, Box office.
Project A was released in Hong Kong on 22 December 1983. In the Philippines, the film was originally released as Mark of the Dragon,[citation needed] but First Films later rereleased it as Superfly 2 on 17 September 1992, connecting it to the unrelated film Armour of God II: Operation Condor (released as Superfly). Project A (along with Dragon Lord) marked Chan’s return to Asian cinema after his first attempt to break into the Hollywood market with a small role in The Cannonball Run and a starring role in the commercially disappointing Battle Creek Brawl. In contrast, Project A was a huge success at the Hong Kong box office, earning HK$19,323,824 (US$2,659,852). It was also very well received abroad, and particularly throughout East Asia. Reportedly, in Japan, Emperor Showa’s fondness of the film and eagerness to see a sequel led Chan to make Project A Part II.RELATED:
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At the Japan box office, Project A grossed ¥2.95 billion (US$12.42 million), becoming one of the top three highest-grossing foreign films of 1984 (along with another Jackie Chan starrer Cannonball Run II) and the year’s sixth highest-grossing film overall.
In Taiwan, it was one of the top five highest-grossing films of 1984, with 369,914 admissions grossing NT$24,170,723 (US$611,777).
Cast:
- Jackie Chan– Sergeant Dragon Ma Yue Lung
- Sammo Hung– Zhuo Yifei aka Fei / Fats
- Yuen Biao– Inspector Hong Tin-Tzu (Captain Chi’s Nephew)
- Kwan Hoi-san– Captain Chi
- Dick Wei– Pirate Chief Lor Sam Pau / San-Po
- Hoi Sang Lee– Mr. Lee Cho-Kou
- Mars– Big Mouth / Jaws
- Isabella Wong (Wong Man-Ying / Winnie Wong) – Winnie Shih
- Tai Bo – Tai Bo
- Lau Hak-suen – Admiral Shih
- Wong Wai – Chou Wing Ling
- Hon Yee-sang – Chiang
- Ng Min-kan – Pirate
- Kwan Yung-moon – Pirate
- Chan Chi-fai – Pirate / Policeman
- Law Ho-kai – Club Manager
- Cheung Ng-long – Assistant At Club
- Wan Faat – Assistant At Club
- Wu Ma– Mahjong player
- Lai Keung-kuen – Coast Guard
- Danny Chow – Ling’s thug
- Johnny Cheung – Ling’s thug
- Lola Forner– British Admiral’s Daughter
- Chris Li – Pirate
- Sam Wong – Pirate
- To Wai-wo as Policeman
- Chin Kar-lok– Police Coast Employee (extra)