Jackie Chan was born in Hong Kong on April 7, 1954.
(成龍(Jackie Chan),1954年4月7日出生於香港。)
Born in wuhu, anhui province, he is a Hong Kong actor, director, action director, procer, screenwriter and singer.
(祖籍安徽蕪湖,中國香港男演員、導演、動作指導、製作人、編劇、歌手。)
When Jackie chan returned to Hong Kong with his family in 1961, yu zhanyuan became his master.
(1961年,成龍隨家人返回香港後,拜於占元為師傅。)
In the same year, he entered the Chinese drama academy founded by zhan yuan to study stage makeup and stage performance skills.
(並於同年進入於占元開辦的中國戲劇學院學習舞台化妝以及舞台表演技巧。)
While studying at the China academy of drama, chan's stage name was yuanlou.
(在中國戲劇學院學習期間,成龍的藝名是元樓。)
In a Peking Opera performance, he won attention with yuan long, yuan tai, yuan hua, yuan biao and others.
(在一次京劇演出時,他與元龍、元泰、元華、元彪等人的表演獲得了關注。)
So the seven people formed the "seven little blessings".
(於是七人組成了「七小福」。)
(1)成龍著名電影英文簡介擴展閱讀
成龍主要作品:
1,《天將雄獅》飾演:霍安,導演:李仁港。
2,《警察故事2013》飾演:警察,導演:丁晟。
3,《十二生肖》飾演:JC,導演:成龍。
4,《新少林寺》飾演:悟道,導演:陳木勝。
5,《辛亥革命》飾演:黃興,導演:成龍。
6,《功夫夢》飾演:Mr. Han,導演:哈羅德·茲瓦特。
Ⅱ 成龍是一個著名的電影明星的英語
Jackie Chan is a famous movie star。
Ⅲ 成龍所有電影英文名稱
:《新警察故事》《千機變II花都大戰》《80日環游世界》《贖金之王》《燕尾服》《大佬愛美麗》《飛龍再生》《千機變》《尖峰時刻2》《贖金之王2》《尖峰時刻》《龍火》《特務迷城》《特警新人類》《成龍的特技》《玻璃樽》《我是誰》《一個好人》《成龍的傳奇》《警察故事4之簡單任務》《霹靂火》《紅番區》《醉拳II》《重案組》《城市獵人》《超級計劃》《雙龍會》《警察故事III超級警察》《火燒島》《五福星撞鬼》《金瓶雙艷》《飛鷹計劃》《奇跡》《警察故事續集》《飛龍猛將》《龍兄虎弟》《龍威天下》《A計劃續集》《夏日福星》《威龍猛探》《神勇雙響炮》《殺手壕》《師弟出馬》《奇謀妙計五福星》《炮彈飛車續集》《炮彈飛車》《迷你特攻隊》《龍騰虎躍》《龍少爺》《龍的心》《快餐車》《警察故事》《福星高照》《A計劃》《醉拳》《笑拳怪招》《新精武門》《蛇形刁手》《少林木人巷》《少林門》《蛇鶴八步》《拳精》《龍爭虎鬥》《龍拳》《劍花煙雨江南》《風雨雙流星》《飛渡卷雲山》《北派功夫》《香港過客》《女警察》《nbsp;廣東小老虎》《頂天立地》《四王一後》《碼頭龍虎鬥》《花飛滿城春》《星光龍門陣》《一招半式闖江湖》下面這個還要好看一些1nbsp;Rushnbsp;Hournbsp;3nbsp;尖峰時刻3nbsp;【2006】nbsp;2nbsp;Newnbsp;Policenbsp;Storynbsp;新警察故事nbsp;【2004】nbsp;新警察故事(港)nbsp;3nbsp;Timenbsp;Breakernbsp;時空破壞者nbsp;【2004】nbsp;Thenbsp;Myth/Titaniumnbsp;Rainnbsp;4nbsp;Aroundnbsp;thenbsp;Worldnbsp;innbsp;80nbsp;Daysnbsp;環游地球80天nbsp;【2004】nbsp;環游地球八十天nbsp;5nbsp;Enternbsp;thenbsp;Phoenixnbsp;大佬愛美麗nbsp;【2004】nbsp;6nbsp;Thenbsp;Huanbsp;Chronicles:nbsp;Bladenbsp;ofnbsp;thenbsp;Rosenbsp;千機變nbsp;2nbsp;:花都大戰nbsp;【2004】nbsp;千機變2之花都大戰/千機變2/千機變IInbsp;7nbsp;Shanghainbsp;Knightsnbsp;上海武士nbsp;【2003】nbsp;皇家威龍(台)/贖金之王2:皇廷激戰(港)/上海武士(其他)nbsp;8nbsp;Vampirenbsp;Effectnbsp;千機變nbsp;【2003】nbsp;千機變(港)nbsp;9nbsp;Tracesnbsp;ofnbsp;anbsp;Dragon:nbsp;Jackienbsp;Channbsp;amp;nbsp;Hisnbsp;Lostnbsp;Familynbsp;龍的深處—失落的拼圖nbsp;【2003】nbsp;龍的深處—失落的拼圖(台)nbsp;10nbsp;Thenbsp;Medallionnbsp;飛龍再生nbsp;【2003】nbsp;飛龍再生(中)/免死金牌(台)/飛龍再生(港)nbsp;11nbsp;Thenbsp;Tuxedonbsp;燕尾服nbsp;【2002】nbsp;神奇燕尾服(中)/燕尾服(台)/特務踢死兔(港)nbsp;12nbsp;Thenbsp;Accidentalnbsp;Spynbsp;特務迷城nbsp;【2001】nbsp;特務迷城(其他)nbsp;13nbsp;Rushnbsp;Hournbsp;2nbsp;尖峰時刻nbsp;2nbsp;【2001】nbsp;尖峰時刻nbsp;2(中)/巔峰時刻nbsp;2(台)/火拚時速nbsp;2(港)nbsp;14nbsp;Shanghainbsp;Noonnbsp;上海正午nbsp;【2000】nbsp;上海正午(中)/西域威龍(台)/龍旋風(港)/贖金之王(其他)nbsp;15nbsp;Brucenbsp;Lee:nbsp;Anbsp;Warrior『snbsp;Journeynbsp;(V)nbsp;李小龍:勇士的旅程nbsp;【2000】nbsp;李小龍:勇士的旅程(其他)nbsp;16nbsp;Tejingnbsp;xinrenleinbsp;特警新人類nbsp;【1999】nbsp;特警新人類(台)/特警新人類(港)nbsp;17nbsp;Jackienbsp;Chan:nbsp;Mynbsp;Stuntsnbsp;(V)nbsp;成龍的特技nbsp;【1999】nbsp;成龍的特技(中)/成龍的特技(台)/成龍的特技(港)nbsp;18nbsp;Kingnbsp;ofnbsp;Comedynbsp;喜劇之王nbsp;【1999】nbsp;喜劇之王(港)nbsp;19nbsp;Gorgeousnbsp;玻璃樽nbsp;【1999】nbsp;20nbsp;Rushnbsp;Hournbsp;尖峰時刻nbsp;【1998】nbsp;尖峰時刻(中)/巔峰時刻(台)/火拚時速(港)nbsp;21nbsp;Whonbsp;amnbsp;Inbsp;我是誰nbsp;【1998】nbsp;22nbsp;Mr.Nicenbsp;Guynbsp;一個好人nbsp;【1997】nbsp;義膽廚星(中)/一個好人(港)nbsp;23nbsp;Annbsp;Alannbsp;Smitheenbsp;Film:nbsp;Burnnbsp;Hollywoodnbsp;Burnnbsp;雙龍一虎闖天關nbsp;【1997】nbsp;雙龍一虎闖天關(台)/星光龍門陣(港)nbsp;24nbsp;Firstnbsp;Strikenbsp;簡單任務nbsp;【1996】nbsp;白金龍(台)/簡單任務(港)/警察故事4(其他)/警察故事四之簡單任務nbsp;25nbsp;Hongnbsp;faa
Ⅳ 求一篇關於成龍的英語資料,包括其影片風格,及作品(電影)的英文名
Jackie Chan was born in Hong Kong on April 7th, 1954. His parents, Charles and Lee-lee Chan named him Chan Kong-sang which means "born in Hong Kong." Jackie weighed 12 pounds when he was born and his mother required surgery to deliver him. Jackie's parents were so poor that they had to borrow money from friends to pay the doctor.
Although Jackie's parents were poor, they had steady jobs at the French embassy in Hong Kong. Charles was a cook and Lee-lee was a housekeeper. Together, the Chan family lived on Victoria Peak in Hong Kong. When Jackie was young, his father would wake him early in the morning and together they would practice kung fu. Charles Chan believed that learning kung fu would help build Jackie's character, teaching him patience, strength, and courage.
When Jackie was seven years old Charles took a job as the head cook at the American embassy in Australia. He felt that it would be best for Jackie to stay behind in Hong Kong to learn a skill and so enrolled him in the China Drama Academy where Jackie would live for the next 10 years of his life.
During Jackie's time at the school, he learned martial arts, acrobatics, singing, and acting. The school was meant to prepare boys for a life in the Peking Opera. Chinese opera was very different from any other kind of opera. It included singing, tumbling, and acrobatics as well as martial arts skills and acting. Students at the school were severely disciplined and were beaten if they disobeyed or made mistakes. It was a very harsh and difficult life but Jackie had nowhere else to go, so he stayed. He rarely saw his parents for many years.
While at the China Academy, Jackie made his acting debut at age eight in the Cantonese movie "Seven Little Valiant Fighters: Big and Little Wong Tin Bar." He later teamed with other opera students in a performance group called "The Seven Little Fortunes." Fellow actors Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao were also members. Years later the three would work together and become known as The Three Brothers. As Jackie got older he worked as a stuntman and an extra in the Hong Kong film instry.
When Jackie was 17, he graated from the China Drama Academy. Unfortunately the Chinese opera was no longer very popular, so Jackie and his classmates had to find other work. This was difficult because at the school they were never taught how to read or write. The only work available to them was unskilled labor or stunt work. Each year many movies were made in Hong Kong and there was always a need for young, strong stuntmen. Jackie was extraordinarily athletic and inventive, and soon gained a reputation for being fearless; Jackie Chan would try anything. Soon he was in demand.
Over the next few years, Jackie worked as a stuntman, but when the Hong Kong movie instry began to fail, he was forced to go to Australia to live with his parents. He worked in a restaurant and on a construction site. It was there that he got the name "Jackie." A worker named Jack had trouble pronouncing "Kong-sang" and started calling Jackie "little Jack." That soon became 「Jackie」 and the name stuck.
Jackie was very unhappy in Australia. The construction work was difficult and boring. His salvation came in the form of a telegram from a man named Willie Chan. Willie Chan worked in the Hong Kong movie instry and was looking for someone to star in a new movie being made by Lo Wei, a famous Hong Kong procer/director. Willie had seen Jackie at work as a stuntman and had been impressed. Jackie called Willie and they talked. Jackie didn't know it but Willie would end up becoming his best friend and manager. Soon Jackie was on his way back to Hong Kong to star in "New Fist of Fury." It was 1976 and Jackie Chan was 21 years old.
Once Jackie got back to Hong Kong, Willie Chan took control over Jackie's career. To this day Jackie is quick to point out that he owes his success to Willie. However, the movies that Jackie made for Lo Wei were not very successful. The problem was that Jackie's talents were not being used properly. It was only when Jackie was able to contribute his own ideas that he became a star. He brought humor to martial arts movies; his first success was "Snake in Eagle's Shadow." This was followed by "Drunken Master" (another blockbuster) and Jackie's first ever directing job, "Fearless Hyena." All were big hits.
Jackie was becoming a huge success in Asia. Unfortunately, it would be many years before the same could be said of his popularity in America. After a series of lukewarm receptions in the U.S., mostly e to miscasting, Jackie left the States and focused his attention on making movies in Hong Kong. It would be 10 years before he returned to make Rumble in the Bronx, the movie that introced Jackie to American audiences and secured him a place in their hearts (and their box office). Rumble was followed by the Rush Hour and Shanghai Noon series which put Jackie on the Hollywood A List.
Despite his Hollywood successes, Jackie became frustrated by the lack of varied roles for Asian actors and his own inability to control certain aspects of the filming in America. He continued to try, however, making The Tuxedo, The Medallion, and Around the World in 80 Days, none of which was the blockbuster that Rush Hour or Shanghai Noon had been.
Jackie's lifelong devotion to fitness has served him well as he continues to do stunt work and action sequences in his films. In recent years, Jackie's focus has shifted and he is trying new genres of film – fantasy, drama, romance – and is spending more and more time on his charity work. He takes his work as Ambassador for UNICEF/UNAIDS very seriously and spends all his spare time working tirelessly for children, the elderly, and those in need. He continues to make films in Hong Kong, including the blockbuster drama New Police Story in 2004.
Jackie has been married to Lin Feng-Jiao since 1982 and has a son, actor-singer Jaycee Chan. To learn more about Jackie you can read his biography, I Am Jackie Chan.
那太難了吧還得要他電影的英文名?
Ⅳ 成龍主演電影英語有哪些
1980 殺手壕
1982 炮彈飛車 客串
1983 炮彈飛車2 客串
1985 威龍猛探 票房不佳,成龍甚至想放棄電影生涯
1986 龍兄虎弟 不錯
1991 飛鷹計劃 不錯
1992 城市獵人 部分英語
1994 醉拳二 部分英語
1995 霹靂火 大部分英語
1995 紅番區 不錯
1996 警察故事4 大部分英語
1997 一個好人
1998 火拚時速
1999 我是誰
2000 上海正午
2001 火拚時速2
2001 特務迷城 部分英語
2002 燕尾服
2003 飛龍再生
2003 上海正午2
2004 80天環游世界
2007 火拚時速3
2008 功夫之王 大部分英語
2010 鄰家特工
2010 功夫夢
希望對您有幫助!
Ⅵ 成龍的英文簡介(簡短一點的)
Jackie Chan was born in Hong Kong on April 7th, 1954. His parents, Charles and Lee-lee Chan named him Chan Kong-sang which means "born in Hong Kong." Jackie weighed 12 pounds when he was born and his mother required surgery to deliver him. Jackie's parents were so poor that they had to borrow money from friends to pay the doctor.
Although Jackie's parents were poor, they had steady jobs at the French embassy in Hong Kong. Charles was a cook and Lee-lee was a housekeeper. Together, the Chan family lived on Victoria Peak in Hong Kong. When Jackie was young, his father would wake him early in the morning and together they would practice kung fu. Charles Chan believed that learning kung fu would help build Jackie's character, teaching him patience, strength, and courage.
When Jackie was seven years old Charles took a job as the head cook at the American embassy in Australia. He felt that it would be best for Jackie to stay behind in Hong Kong to learn a skill and so enrolled him in the China Drama Academy where Jackie would live for the next 10 years of his life.
During Jackie's time at the school, he learned martial arts, acrobatics, singing, and acting. The school was meant to prepare boys for a life in the Peking Opera. Chinese opera was very different from any other kind of opera. It included singing, tumbling, and acrobatics as well as martial arts skills and acting. Students at the school were severely disciplined and were beaten if they disobeyed or made mistakes. It was a very harsh and difficult life but Jackie had nowhere else to go, so he stayed. He rarely saw his parents for many years.
While at the China Academy, Jackie made his acting debut at age eight in the Cantonese movie "Seven Little Valiant Fighters: Big and Little Wong Tin Bar." He later teamed with other opera students in a performance group called "The Seven Little Fortunes." Fellow actors Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao were also members. Years later the three would work together and become known as The Three Brothers. As Jackie got older he worked as a stuntman and an extra in the Hong Kong film instry.
When Jackie was 17, he graated from the China Drama Academy. Unfortunately the Chinese opera was no longer very popular, so Jackie and his classmates had to find other work. This was difficult because at the school they were never taught how to read or write. The only work available to them was unskilled labor or stunt work. Each year many movies were made in Hong Kong and there was always a need for young, strong stuntmen. Jackie was extraordinarily athletic and inventive, and soon gained a reputation for being fearless; Jackie Chan would try anything. Soon he was in demand.
Over the next few years, Jackie worked as a stuntman, but when the Hong Kong movie instry began to fail, he was forced to go to Australia to live with his parents. He worked in a restaurant and on a construction site. It was there that he got the name "Jackie." A worker named Jack had trouble pronouncing "Kong-sang" and started calling Jackie "little Jack." That soon became 「Jackie」 and the name stuck.
Jackie was very unhappy in Australia. The construction work was difficult and boring. His salvation came in the form of a telegram from a man named Willie Chan. Willie Chan worked in the Hong Kong movie instry and was looking for someone to star in a new movie being made by Lo Wei, a famous Hong Kong procer/director. Willie had seen Jackie at work as a stuntman and had been impressed. Jackie called Willie and they talked. Jackie didn't know it but Willie would end up becoming his best friend and manager. Soon Jackie was on his way back to Hong Kong to star in "New Fist of Fury." It was 1976 and Jackie Chan was 21 years old.
Once Jackie got back to Hong Kong, Willie Chan took control over Jackie's career. To this day Jackie is quick to point out that he owes his success to Willie. However, the movies that Jackie made for Lo Wei were not very successful. The problem was that Jackie's talents were not being used properly. It was only when Jackie was able to contribute his own ideas that he became a star. He brought humor to martial arts movies; his first success was "Snake in Eagle's Shadow." This was followed by "Drunken Master" (another blockbuster) and Jackie's first ever directing job, "Fearless Hyena." All were big hits.
Jackie was becoming a huge success in Asia. Unfortunately, it would be many years before the same could be said of his popularity in America. After a series of lukewarm receptions in the U.S., mostly e to miscasting, Jackie left the States and focused his attention on making movies in Hong Kong. It would be 10 years before he returned to make Rumble in the Bronx, the movie that introced Jackie to American audiences and secured him a place in their hearts (and their box office). Rumble was followed by the Rush Hour and Shanghai Noon series which put Jackie on the Hollywood A List.
Despite his Hollywood successes, Jackie became frustrated by the lack of varied roles for Asian actors and his own inability to control certain aspects of the filming in America. He continued to try, however, making The Tuxedo, The Medallion, and Around the World in 80 Days, none of which was the blockbuster that Rush Hour or Shanghai Noon had been.
Jackie's lifelong devotion to fitness has served him well as he continues to do stunt work and action sequences in his films. In recent years, Jackie's focus has shifted and he is trying new genres of film – fantasy, drama, romance – and is spending more and more time on his charity work. He takes his work as Ambassador for UNICEF/UNAIDS very seriously and spends all his spare time working tirelessly for children, the elderly, and those in need. He continues to make films in Hong Kong, including the blockbuster drama New Police Story in 2004.
Jackie has been married to Lin Feng-Jiao since 1982 and has a son, actor-singer Jaycee Chan. To learn more about Jackie you can read his biography, I Am Jackie Chan.
這是網路里的答案
Ⅶ 功夫小子英語電影介紹
Storyline
12-year-old Dre Parker could've been the most popular kid in Detroit, but his mother's latest career move has landed him in China. Dre immediately falls for his classmate Mei Ying - and the feeling is mutual - but cultural differences make such a friendship impossible. Even worse, Dre's feelings make an enemy of the class bully, Cheng. In the land of kung fu, Dre knows only a little karate, and Cheng puts "the karate kid" on the floor with ease. With no friends in a strange land, Dre has nowhere to turn but maintenance man Mr. Han, who is secretly a master of kung fu. As Han teaches Dre that kung fu is not about punches and parries, but maturity and calm, Dre realizes that facing down the bullies will be the fight of his life.
Ⅷ 誰知道關於成龍的英文簡介
Jackie Chan was born in Hong Kong on April 7th, 1954. His parents, Charles and Lee-lee Chan named him Chan Kong-sang which means "born in Hong Kong." Jackie weighed 12 pounds when he was born and his mother required surgery to deliver him. Jackie's parents were so poor that they had to borrow money from friends to pay the doctor.
Although Jackie's parents were poor, they had steady jobs at the French embassy in Hong Kong. Charles was a cook and Lee-lee was a housekeeper. Together, the Chan family lived on Victoria Peak in Hong Kong. When Jackie was young, his father would wake him early in the morning and together they would practice kung fu. Charles Chan believed that learning kung fu would help build Jackie's character, teaching him patience, strength, and courage.
When Jackie was seven years old Charles took a job as the head cook at the American embassy in Australia. He felt that it would be best for Jackie to stay behind in Hong Kong to learn a skill and so enrolled him in the China Drama Academy where Jackie would live for the next 10 years of his life.
During Jackie's time at the school, he learned martial arts, acrobatics, singing, and acting. The school was meant to prepare boys for a life in the Peking Opera. Chinese opera was very different from any other kind of opera. It included singing, tumbling, and acrobatics as well as martial arts skills and acting. Students at the school were severely disciplined and were beaten if they disobeyed or made mistakes. It was a very harsh and difficult life but Jackie had nowhere else to go, so he stayed. He rarely saw his parents for many years.
While at the China Academy, Jackie made his acting debut at age eight in the Cantonese movie "Seven Little Valiant Fighters: Big and Little Wong Tin Bar." He later teamed with other opera students in a performance group called "The Seven Little Fortunes." Fellow actors Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao were also members. Years later the three would work together and become known as The Three Brothers. As Jackie got older he worked as a stuntman and an extra in the Hong Kong film instry.
When Jackie was 17, he graated from the China Drama Academy. Unfortunately the Chinese opera was no longer very popular, so Jackie and his classmates had to find other work. This was difficult because at the school they were never taught how to read or write. The only work available to them was unskilled labor or stunt work. Each year many movies were made in Hong Kong and there was always a need for young, strong stuntmen. Jackie was extraordinarily athletic and inventive, and soon gained a reputation for being fearless; Jackie Chan would try anything. Soon he was in demand.
Over the next few years, Jackie worked as a stuntman, but when the Hong Kong movie instry began to fail, he was forced to go to Australia to live with his parents. He worked in a restaurant and on a construction site. It was there that he got the name "Jackie." A worker named Jack had trouble pronouncing "Kong-sang" and started calling Jackie "little Jack." That soon became 「Jackie」 and the name stuck.
Jackie was very unhappy in Australia. The construction work was difficult and boring. His salvation came in the form of a telegram from a man named Willie Chan. Willie Chan worked in the Hong Kong movie instry and was looking for someone to star in a new movie being made by Lo Wei, a famous Hong Kong procer/director. Willie had seen Jackie at work as a stuntman and had been impressed. Jackie called Willie and they talked. Jackie didn't know it but Willie would end up becoming his best friend and manager. Soon Jackie was on his way back to Hong Kong to star in "New Fist of Fury." It was 1976 and Jackie Chan was 21 years old.
Once Jackie got back to Hong Kong, Willie Chan took control over Jackie's career. To this day Jackie is quick to point out that he owes his success to Willie. However, the movies that Jackie made for Lo Wei were not very successful. The problem was that Jackie's talents were not being used properly. It was only when Jackie was able to contribute his own ideas that he became a star. He brought humor to martial arts movies; his first success was "Snake in Eagle's Shadow." This was followed by "Drunken Master" (another blockbuster) and Jackie's first ever directing job, "Fearless Hyena." All were big hits.
Jackie was becoming a huge success in Asia. Unfortunately, it would be many years before the same could be said of his popularity in America. After a series of lukewarm receptions in the U.S., mostly e to miscasting, Jackie left the States and focused his attention on making movies in Hong Kong. It would be 10 years before he returned to make Rumble in the Bronx, the movie that introced Jackie to American audiences and secured him a place in their hearts (and their box office). Rumble was followed by the Rush Hour and Shanghai Noon series which put Jackie on the Hollywood A List.
Despite his Hollywood successes, Jackie became frustrated by the lack of varied roles for Asian actors and his own inability to control certain aspects of the filming in America. He continued to try, however, making The Tuxedo, The Medallion, and Around the World in 80 Days, none of which was the blockbuster that Rush Hour or Shanghai Noon had been.
Jackie's lifelong devotion to fitness has served him well as he continues to do stunt work and action sequences in his films. In recent years, Jackie's focus has shifted and he is trying new genres of film – fantasy, drama, romance – and is spending more and more time on his charity work. He takes his work as Ambassador for UNICEF/UNAIDS very seriously and spends all his spare time working tirelessly for children, the elderly, and those in need. He continues to make films in Hong Kong, including the blockbuster drama New Police Story in 2004.
Jackie has been married to Lin Feng-Jiao since 1982 and has a son, actor-singer Jaycee Chan. To learn more about Jackie you can read his biography, I Am Jackie Chan.
Ⅸ 成龍的電影《我是誰》的英文介紹
Who Am I? (traditional Chinese: 我是誰; simplified Chinese: 我是誰; pinyin: Wǒ Shì Shéi; Cantonese Yale: Ngo Si Sui) is a 1998 Hong Kong martial arts-action film, released by Golden Harvest. It was co-directed by and starred Jackie Chan, who also performed the song that plays over the end credits.
The film is also known under the following alternative titles in some international releases:
Jackie Chan's Who Am I? (USA)
Amnesia (Norway)
Jackie Chan Is Nobody (Germany)
Plot
A member of a CIA-sponsored multinational black ops special forces unit is on a mission to kidnap several South African scientists working on a highly volatile extraterrestrial compound brought to Earth in a meteorite. According to the computer data showing the names of the participants of the operation, one of them was 'Jackie Chan' (Chan). He falls victim to a staged "incident" which results in the death of his colleagues. He survives, but is subsequently stranded in the African veldt with massive amnesia. When asked by natives for his name, he replies "Who am I?", which they take to be his real name. Experiencing flashbacks hinting at his true identity, 'Who am I?' proceeds to befriend two beautiful women - Christine (Michelle Ferre), a CIA agent working undercover as a journalist, and Yuki (Yamamoto Mirai).
Renegade ex-US Army officers and black market arms dealers are illegally exporting the extraterrestrial compound, and 'Who am I?' is the only potential threat to their operations. Agents are sent out to stop 'Who am I?' before he can expose their criminal activities. He defeats numerous ex-renegade agents, and ultimately engages in a tightly choreographed roof-top fight scene in Rotterdam against Morgan's two top hitmen, and performing the film's signature stunt, sliding down the steeply-pitched glass roof. The CIA secures the villains' arrests, and 'Who am I?' comes to terms with his identity.
[edit] Proction Notes
Willemswerf buildingThe film was shot between February and March 1997.
The film contains one of Chan's largest all-car chase scenes, in which his Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IV flips onto its side, hurls enormous amounts of gravel at pursuers, crashes through fruit stands, bounds down stairs, and causes another car to go sailing off the side of a 4-story parking garage.
During a scene in the movie, there is a wanted poster depicting Chan's character, noting his height as 5'10". Chan's real height is 5'8".
The hotel room number Chan's character stays in is 1954, the year of Chan's birth.
The movie features several Rotterdam landmarks such as the Erasmus Bridge, the Beurstraverse (which was portrayed by the film makers as being in Johannesburg), the Cube houses and the Willemswerf building (which served as the headquarters of the villains and from the side of which, 'Who am I?' escaped by sliding to the ground).
[edit] DVD releases
UK DVD coverThe US DVD release is cut by 9 minutes with the following changes and omissions:
A scene in which 'Who am I?'s special forces unit is double-crossed appears as a black-and-white flashback in the middle of the original film. For the US release, that scene is placed immediately after Chan's unit completes their mission.
'Who am I?'s interaction with the African tribe has been reced dramatically. Cuts include a scene in which he asks the tribal boy, Baba, how many days it takes to walk to civilization; a scene showing the tribe's farewell ceremony for 'Who am I?'s journey; and a his scene in which he performs an interpretation of the tribal dance.
The rally race scene has been shortened.
A scene where 'Who am I?' recovers feeling in his mouth and explains his situation to Yuki has been cut.
All but two instant replay shots (wherein 'Who am I?' drives through a fruit stand, and where he narrowly escapes falling furniture in Rotterdam) have been deleted.
[edit] Box office
Who Am I? grossed HK $38,852,845 in its Hong Kong theatrical run.
[edit] Awards and nominations
1999 Hong Kong Film Awards
Winner: Best Action Choreography (Jackie Chan)
Nomination: Best Actor (Jackie Chan)
Nomination: Best Film Editing (Peter Cheung, Chi Wai Yau)
Nomination: Best Picture (Barbie Tung) (executive procer)
Nomination: Best Sound Design
Ⅹ 用英語介紹成龍主演電影
rush hour 《尖峰時刻》
police story 《警察故事》
drunken master 《醉拳》
who im i 《我是誰》
the protector 《威龍猛探》
heart of dragon 《龍的心》
thunderbolt 《霹靂火》
around the world in 80 days 《80天環游世界》
city hunter 《城市獵人》
project a 《a計劃》
operation codor 《飛鷹計劃》
new police story 《新警察故事》
tuxedo《燕尾服》
rob b hood 《寶貝計劃》
可以了吧?手寫很累的。如果還想知道別的電影英文名!找我哦!