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Kung Phooey!

Kung Phooey! (2003)

March. 11,2003
|
5.1
|
PG-13
| Action Comedy

The plot follows Art Chew's (a pun of the sound one makes when sneezing) quest to retrieve the ancient peach. The movie starts with Art Chew traveling to America, as well as showing Art's training at the Shur-li temple (a play on words with the child actor Shirley Temple), showing many kung-fu clichés such as grabbing the pebble from the masters hand (which Art succeeds without effort), fighting on trees in this case small potted palms and "listing" for elements (Earth, Wind and Fire play a funky tune). After the montage is shown Art meets up with his cousin Wayman (A parody on the way Chinese pronounce r as w) a Chinese adult who tries to act American so he isn't embarrassed by stereotypes and foster cousin Roy Lee, an African American who sincerely believes he is a reincarnation of Bruce Lee.

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Reviews

SnoReptilePlenty
2003/03/11

Memorable, crazy movie

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MoPoshy
2003/03/12

Absolutely brilliant

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TaryBiggBall
2003/03/13

It was OK. I don't see why everyone loves it so much. It wasn't very smart or deep or well-directed.

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Juana
2003/03/14

what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.

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Warwick Gaetjens
2003/03/15

Kung Phooey is for anyone who has deliberately forced themselves to watch every eastern and western martial arts chop-socky schlock flick known to man, although only a few of these genre fans will truly appreciate where KP is coming from (and ultimately going to). As bad as this film is to any sensible movie critic, the first few minutes alone will have you spurting out your favourite beverage through your nose - the intro recreates the "Kung Fu sanddune walkabout" Zucker-style with many of those bizarrely unrelated visual tidbits to keep you guessing every few seconds. The rest of this film however takes itself about as seriously as a secondary school stage play and is probably just about as interesting, at least on the surface. The seemingly $2.50 budget does not give one much expectation for world-class fight choreography or acting for that matter, but if you are willing to forgo these "small graces" then there are many mildly amusing filmic, cultural and (the all-important) stereotypical send ups to be savoured here. Basically, Kung Phooey is the martial arts spoof home-movie that you and your mates have always wanted to make but were truly afraid to see through to fruition.As far as sustaining this one-joke-wonder into a 90 minute foray it inevitably falls short of the mark, well below that of the joke-per-minute classics like Flying High (er, Airplane). Instead, the filmmakers decided that if they couldn't be overtly hilarious, then they should at least try and be clever about the self-contained universe that all martial arts films seem to live in. The humour is thence derived from the characters often using real-world logic to dismantle their own movie-world actions and motivations that occur around them (and vice versa if that's possible). If you can, grab the DVD to watch the making-of featurette which shows all the heavenly glory of Z-budget film-making as well as the fun you can have when you really put your mind to it (you can't make a dream come true unless you have a dream). The deleted scenes also go further into a couple of other characters who should have had equal screen time with the Muscles from Brussels when he finally gets his comeuppance in the most painful way imaginable. And of course, don't forget the outtakes! If you have watched (but not necessarily enjoyed) Kung Pow: Enter The Fist for its unique take on this undervalued film genre, who knows if you will get into Kung Phooey or not ... maybe having a bottle of the cheapest booze on hand will help. But one thing is almost certain with this movie ... it will not have a sequel!

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Italianhitman86
2003/03/16

This movie was a lot better than Kung Pow I thought! Honestly, "This junk almost messed up my mood for the weekend." stated by: Bietscher from The Netherlands. Come on, get a life ya freak. Unlike Kung Pow, these guys actually made a movie from scratch. Kung Pow was a movie already made, all they did was take the characters from the original movie and replace them with our actors from today. This movie was also a "cheaply made" movie and never made it to movies. Kung Pow wasn't a "cheaply made" movie and it made it to movies, and all they did was trade the places of the characters. THIS MOVIE WAS A LOT BETTER THAN KUNG POW AND IT ALWAYS WILL BE!!!!!!!

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Bietscher
2003/03/17

By accident I stumbled upon this piece of trash. Thank God I didn't spend any money on it. I really tried to laugh, because that's what I expect from a comedy, but it just wasn't possible throughout the entire movie. The "jokes" were rip-offs and executed in a very terrible and predictable way. Worst of all, the name of the main character, Art Chew; Gesundheit ha ha ha. It wasn't funny the first time and they repeated that joke for another 5 times or so. The camera was very unstable making it a tiresome experience to watch and the acting was quite abominable. Don't even try comparing this to Kung Pow. Kung Pow had me laughing the whole 90 minutes. This crapheap almost messed up my mood for the weekend.

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crimson_star75
2003/03/18

I just rented Kung Phooey. Did I like it? I normally return movies I rent the next day so that I can get an early return credit, instead of keeping them for the full rental period. I rent 2-3 movies a week and I've only kept 2 movies past the first day. Kung Phooey was one of them. I wound up watching it almost daily. The comedy worked on all levels. From stuff my kids laughed at (and me, too), to higher brow stuff that had me rolling on the floor. I especially like the scene with the Jean Claude-esque character. I find myself quoting their fight scene at random moments throughout the day. Many 'indie' films tend to be 'serious' and wind up being melodramatic. I haven't seen many indie comedies, much less ones that made me laugh as much as this film. Come to think of it, most big-budget Hollywood comedies don't make me laugh as much as this film. Great work all around!

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