Future X-Cops | Future X-Cops Online Watch | Future X-Cops Hong Kong Movie Watch Online Free | Future X-Cops (2010) Online | Future X-Cops Watch Online | Future X-Cops Cantonese Movie Watch Online Free | Future X-Cops (2010) Free Movie Online Watch Online | Future X-Cops Cantonese Movie Watch Online Free | Online Future X-Cops (2010) | Future X-Cops Watch Online | Future X-Cops Hong Kong Movie Watch Online Free | Free Movie Online Future X-Cops (2010)



Cast:Andy Lau Tak-Wah, Barbie Hsu,
Fan Bing-Bing, Xu Jiao, Louis Fan Siu-Wong,
Mike He, Tang Yi-Fei, Shi Yun-Peng, Liu Yang,
Ma Jing-Wu, Blackie Chen Chien-Chou,
Law Kar-Ying, Lee Kin-Yan, Natalie Meng Yao,
Liu Yiwei, Zhang Li, Ian Powers,
Andrew Chou, Jeffrey Haung
Director: Wong Jing
Writer: Wong Jing
Genre: Sci-Fi,Action
Singapore: 8 April 2010
Hong Kong: 15 April 2010
Action: Ching Siu-Tung
Year: 2010
Country: Hong Kong | Taiwan
Language: Cantonese
Sound Mix: Dolby Digital
Company: China Film Group
AKA:Mei loi ging chaat
Hollywood movie online English movie online Drama movie Romantic movie online movie Review movie story Fantasy Movie Adventure Movie Action Movie Cantonese Movie Future X-Cops Directed By Wong Jing

A cop travels back in time to take on a corporation that's out to eliminate a doctor who has created a new technology which can break up the monopoly on a energy resources.
Who were the ad wizards who came up with this one? Wong Jing's Future X-Cops is as bad as it looks, which means its both awful and pretty damn funny. You must be able to enjoy crap if you're going to get even an ounce of pleasure from this mess. Why this wasn't released on April 1st is a mystery.

Wong Jing, you make this too easy. Hong Kong's most infamous filmmaker returns to his own vomit with Future X-Cops, a remake of his 1993 cringe-fest Future Cops. Actually, calling Future X-Cops a remake is unfair because the original Future Cops lifted from The Terminator, Fight Back to School and the Capcom video game Street Fighter II, among others. Thankfully, Future X-Cops isn't dumb enough to steal from a questionably adaptable video game, but it more than compensates with its lousy visual effects and general crappiness. Add in Wong Jing's substandard screenwriting and direction and you get an obvious result: a bad movie. The big mystery: is Future X-Cops so bad that it's good?



When you make a movie like Future X-Cops, it should be edgy sci-fi action like Robocop. Well, this movie follows suit, adding hard sci-fi concepts and epic action sequences – OH WAIT SORRY NOT THE CASE HERE. This is a Wong Jing movie, so naturally the whole thing devolves into an illogical sitcom mess about a smarmy robot who acts like Andy Lau. Kidd is not supposed to screw with the past to prevent time paradoxes, but Wong Jing only applies that sci-fi concept to Kidd's potential romance. Ergo, Kidd can't date Miss Holly (Barbie Hsu, in the film's only good performance), but he's free to reveal his identity to whomever he wants, plus zip around in his Megaman alter ego saving people he shouldn't have been around to save in the first place. Also, Kidd and Talon go through secondary transformations when battling, the result of which makes them…taller! Maybe extending their legs makes for some cool-looking CGI, but it means absolutely nothing to the story. Few things here do.

Long story short, Future X-Cops is insanely terrible and should only be viewed by people willing to table quality in the name of inanity. Who are those people? Children under the age of six, plus people who love deliciously terrible moviemaking. There's laughs to be had from the ridiculous action sequences, which includes scenes of mutated animal bad guys posing for no apparent reason except to delight children looking for a live-action cross between Power Rangers and Pokemon. Fans of lousy acting can enjoy the crazy performance from Tang Yi-Fei, who so enthusiastically plays the evil catgirl that it becomes genuinely frightening. Also, the visual effects by Korean VFX house Kinomotive are hilariously awful, managing the same effectiveness as Wong Jing's The Wesley's Mysterious File, which came out a full eight years ago. It's sad to think that Wong Jing's skills with CGI have not improved in eight years, but they haven't. Neither has his storytelling, direction, or utter lack of shame. If Future X-Cops teaches us anything, it's that you can always count on Wong Jing. For crap. (Kozo 2010)
No comments:
Post a Comment