Miracles

Miracles     ASIN B000006A17     Medium Count 1     Medium DVD     Release Date 12/23/2003     Group Glass Frame     Link [+]     UPC 043396016859     EAN 9781404939929     Aspect Ratio 2.35:1     DVD Region 1     Running Time 127     Studio Sony Pictures     Theatrical Date 1/1/1989     Audience Rating PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)     Cast Bee, Kenny / Chor, Yuen / Gua, Ah Lei / Hui, Kara / Hui, Ricky     Format Anamorphic / Closed-captioned / Color / Dolby / DVD-Video / Full Screen / Subtitled / Widescreen / NTSC     Language English (Subtitled) / French (Subtitled) / Spanish (Subtitled) / Cantonese (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono) / English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono) / Mandarin Chinese (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono)     Original Title Miracles, Mr. Canton And Lady Rose, Black Dragon, The Canton Godfather     ISBN 140493992X     Date Imported 11/25/2007     List Price $14.94     Rating 4.04.04.04.04.0     Genre Martial Arts     Copy Count 1     Tag Hong Kong      

Amazon.com Directed by and starring Jackie Chan, and set in 1930s Hong Kong, Miracles is a gangster film that is equal parts comedy and action film, with a touch of melodrama thrown in for good measure. Chan stars as a young man who rescues a dying crime boss in 1930s Hong Kong. When the boss passes away, he is tapped to become the new leader. He attributes his good luck to an old rose seller and the roses he buys off of her. To pay her back for all of his good fortune, he helps her pretend to be a wealthy socialite, just as she had described herself in letters to her daughter in order to help impress her daughter's wealthy fiancé and not queer their upcoming marriage. The plot is lifted from Frank Capra's Lady for a Day (1933), which Capra remade in 1961 as Pocketful of Miracles. Of course, like all Jackie Chan films, this movie contains more--and more innovative--fight scenes than Capra could ever dream of. Two set pieces in particular are stunning: A big fight in a restaurant and the final battle in the warehouse of a rope factory. Along the way, Chan throws in a musical number inspired by Busby Berkeley and a whole lotta heart, making this a well-rounded and entertaining film, which Chan himself has allegedly referred to as his favorite. --Andy Spletzer