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Mad Mission 2
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Directed by Eric Tsang
Prolific Hong Kong director Lau Kar-wing helmed this first of four official sequels to the 1982 hit Aces Go Places (there was an abortive 1997 follow-up feature as well). An assassin called Filthy Harry is hired by a shady figure (clearly meant to represent Henry Kissinger) and charged with killing the series' unlikely pair of heroes, bald detective Albert Au (Karl Maka) and reformed criminal King Kong (Sam Hui). The film is quite lively, as Albert's relationship with the fiery Superintendent Ho (Sylvia Chang) has hit the skids. The men are framed twice for different robberies by King Kong's new girlfriend, nearly committed to a mental hospital by their devious boss, and forced to battle Filthy Harry's weaponry-laden robot while covered with time bombs. As in the previous film, action scenes are tempered with a great deal of broad slapstick, mostly centering on the heroes' combative interpersonal relationships. Viewers should be cautioned that one English-dubbed version in video circulation is missing nearly 15 minutes of footage from the 102-minute original. Eric Tsang, who directed the first film, co-stars with Raymond Wong, Billy Lau, and Tsui Hark, who appears in a cameo as an insane man who believes himself to be an FBI agent. Hark would direct the next sequel, Aces Go Places III: Our Man From Bond Street, in 1984. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
The second film in the Aces Go Places series subscribes to the credo "bigger is better" and actually manages to deliver on both counts. Since the relationship between its cop and crook heroes has been established in the first film, Aces Go Places 2 is free to concentrate on perfecting its mix of stunts and slapstick. Like most of the other Aces Go Places films, the story connecting all the acts of mayhem is pretty thin, but the preponderance of action and the comedic chemistry of Sam Hui and Karl Maka hold it together. Director Eric Tsang keeps the well-calibrated combination of gags and action rolling at a lightning-fast pace and, more importantly, manages to make both elements equally effective: a multi-person brawl that destroys a posh restaurant is a slapstick set piece worthy of the Pink Panther films, and a memorable chase finale combines car stunts, guided missiles, time bombs, and a jet pack into one surreal but exciting set piece. To sum up, Aces Go Places 2 isn't for viewers in search of a strong story or sophisticated humor, but it delivers the wacked-out goods necessary to please cult film enthusiasts. ~ Donald Guarisco, All Movie Guide
 

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