Island Of Fire
CAST

Sammo Hung
Jackie Chan
Andy Lau
Tony Leung Kar Fei
Wang Yu

ACTION
Lam Maan Cheung
Jackie Chan
WRITER

Lee Fu
Yun Chiao Yeh

PRODUCER
Wang Yu
DIRECTOR

Chu Yen Ping

RATING
   Island Of Fire
Island Of Fire
AKA : Island On Fire || The Prisoner || The Burning Island
Year : 1992     Reviewer : Tony Ryan

Originally (and more correctly) titled 'Island On Fire' to echo the titles of earlier Ringo Lam movies 'Prison On Fire' and 'School On Fire' Jimmy Wang Yu called upon numerous favours to bring together such an illustrious cast. Most notably Jackie Chan who appeared as a result of being helped out by Wang Yu earlier in his career when triads had threatened him during the making of 'Dragon Lord'.

 

 

This film has been almost disowned by Jackie, as he hates it, probably due to the shocking finale, but this does not stop the film being entertaining or powerful despite its numerous flaws. The story appears (and was) hastily prepared which does not allow the narrative to flow smoothly and issues appear to be hastily glossed over. Each characters individual tale would probably have been enough to fill a movie by themselves, but the need to utilise each star actually works against the film by not linking them together well enough until the end, making it difficult for the audience to get fully involved.

 

 

Essentially a dark tale involving  a few desperate men, each incarcerated either harshly or unfairly, the characters themselves actually make you feel sorry for them, especially Sammo, and help the film reach out at more than the shallow level dramatic HK action movies often suffer from. The least amount of screen time is actually with Jackie, who is mostly there to provide a few short action sequences. Each was quickly put together but still impress more than other 90’s films such as 'City Hunter' or 'Project S' being more akin to the brutal style of 'Crime Story' than the graceful moves in 'Drunken Master 2'.

 

 

Best performance, as is so often the case, goes to Sammo, who again shows his acting skills are far superior than he is credited for, fleshing out what would otherwise have been a shallow character. How often can he make you want to both laugh & cry in the same film? Obviously not to the same level as 'Pedicab Driver' or 'Heart of Dragon' he still brings true emotion to the screen.

 

 

For a low budget, rushed production, the emotional content of the film and the quality of its cast save the day providing us with a kung fu influenced 'Shawshank Redemption' wannabe. I would recommend this to anyone who wants to see Jackie in one of his rare serious performances, but also to those originally put off by bad reviews from the cast. It scrapes into the 4 star category due to its decent action and Sammo's powerful performance.

Distributor : Hong Kong Legends
Region : 2 (PAL)
Running Time : 92 mins
Video :
Letterboxed at 1.85:1. Considering the quality of the original print, this is a marked improvement on all previous releases. Detail levels are good and colours have also been altered for the better. The one complaint is that it still possesses an overall grainy look but I doubt that anyone will be able to enhance the quality any further than HKL.
Audio :
Mandarin or English DD 2.0 soundtracks with removable English subtitles.
Extras :
- A rare treat from HKL in the form of some deleted scenes
- An interview gallery featuring comments from Sammo Hung (on the set of 'Moon Warriors'), Wang Yu and director Chu Yen-Ping
- The standard HKL written and spoken Jackie Chan biography
- The theatrical trailer and UK music promo for 'Island On Fire' as well as HKL trailers for 'Snake In The Eagle's Shadow', 'Drunken Master', 'New Dragon Gate Inn', 'The Blacksheep Affair', 'Legend Of A Fighter', 'Body Weapon', 'Hitman' and 'Drive'
Notes :
N/A
Island Of Fire
Island Of Fire
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