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Revenge of the Green Dragons

✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Hong Kong, United States · 2014
1h 35m
Director Andrew Lau, Andrew Loo
Starring Justin Chon, Ray Liotta, Kevin Wu, Harry Shum Jr.
Genre Drama, Action, Crime

A true immigrant story set against the vibrant backdrop of Flushing, N.Y. in the 1980s and 1990s.

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What are critics saying?

20

New York Daily News by

The local angle offers a degree of flavor, but this is a dull tale, reminiscent of a hundred others. The dialogue is ludicrous, the video stock looks cheap.

38

Slant Magazine by Chuck Bowen

Like Better Luck Tomorrow, it tries to cut cool-movie poses under the pretense of providing an alternative racial viewpoint to typical genre tropes.

40

The Hollywood Reporter by Deborah Young

In the end the taste of H.K. filmmaking dominates in the film's deliberately chaotic visual style, a circular narrative that heads nowhere, and lyrical song interludes that abruptly interrupt the non-stop action and camera movement.

30

Variety by Justin Chang

This crudely made thriller plays like a stilted Cantonese riff on organized-crime cliches, substituting blood and brutality for novelty or insight.

50

Los Angeles Times by Martin Tsai

Fredric Dannen's reportage, which appeared in a 1992 issue of the New Yorker and serves as the film's basis, contains lurid details that leap off the page in a cinematic way. The "Dragons" script by Michael Di Jiacomo and co-director Andrew Loo preserves many, but few register on-screen.

58

The A.V. Club by Mike D'Angelo

Most of the pleasure in Green Dragons comes simply from the opportunity to watch some underused actors dig into meatier parts than they’re usually offered.

16

The Playlist by Nikola Grozdanovic

Loo and Lau’s Dragons is too busy reveling in tilted angles, music video editing, mind-numbingly clichéd dialogue, wooden acting and a one-dimensional story about brotherhood.

40

The Dissolve by Scott Tobias

In Lau and Loo’s telling, the off-the-boat indoctrination of young, undocumented Chinese families into vicious gangsterism is overstated and cartoonish, like The Warriors trying to pass itself off as a docudrama.

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