| | | The classic western gets a kick in the pants. Features: DVD, Aspect Ratio 2.35:1, Dolby Digital (5.1), French, Dubbed, Spanish, Subtitled Two cultures collide when East meets West in Shanghai Noon, a wildly hilarious, stunt-filled action-adventure-comedy starring the death-defying action hero Jackie Chan (Rush Hour), Owen Wilson (Armageddon, The Haunting) and Lucy Liu (Payback, TV’s Ally McBeal). Chan plays Chinese Imperial Guard Chon Wang (say it out loud) who hightails it to the wild and woolly West to rescue the beautiful kidnapped Princess Pei Pei (Liu). When he meets up with laid-back outlaw cowboy dude Roy O'Bannon (Wilson) – the best mismatch ever made in the rough and tumble Old West - the two face jail, brawls, bordellos and the vilest villains this side of the Great Wall! Spectacular stunts, outrageous irreverence and epic vistas reign as East meets West in a battle for honor, royalty and a fortune in gold! It’s a real kick.
"Two thumbs up!" Roger Ebert At The Movies
 Editor's Note
 An action-comedy with a decidedly Western twist, SHANGHAI NOON features more acrobatics from superstar Jackie Chan. Chon Wang (Chan) is a dedicated member of the Chinese Imperial Guard. When the emperor's former captain, Lo Fong (Yuan), oversees an illegal operation that involves kidnapping Princess Pei Pei (Liu) and bringing her to America's wild West, it's up to Chong to save the day. Eventually partnering with the wise-cracking bandit Roy O'Bannon (Wilson), Chong uses his Eastern skills to tackle the wild West. SHANGHAI NOON is an high-kicking adventure with great comic chemistry between stars Chan and Wilson.
 Plot Summary
 Jackie Chan takes on the Old West in this campy sendup of some of the greatest Westerns ever made. When Princess Pei-Pei (Lucy Liu) is kidnapped from the Forbidden City in 1881 China, Chon Wang accompanies the three bravest Imperial Guardsmen on a journey to Carson City to rescue her. Along the way he cannot shake train robber Roy O'Bannon (an eminently likable Owen Wilson), who is after the pot of gold the Guardsmen have brought from China to ransom the princess. The film pays direct homage to such classic Westerns as HIGH NOON, HANG 'EM HIGH, THE GOOD THE BAD AND THE UGLY, BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID, BLAZING SADDLES, and, primarily, John Ford's THE SEARCHERS in ways that are charmingly familiar. The film is chock-full of saloon brawls and shootouts that are turned upside down by Chan's martial artistry as he battles gun-toting baddies with his trademark chops and kicks as well as makeshift weapons (including a fabulous horseshoe slingshot). Cowriters Alfred Gough and Miles Millar and director Tom Dey don't leave out a thing--trains are robbed, brothels are visited, whiskey bottles are shattered, horses are jumped onto from balconies, tin cans are shot at, townspeople cheer for a hanging--and our heroes even take a bath that would make Mel Brooks proud.
| Features | English 5.1 Surround Dolby Digital |  | Photo Gallery |  | Scene Access |  | Enhanced For 16X9 TV |  | Deleted Scenes |  | Featurette |  | Interactive Menus |  | Audio Commentary |  | Theatrical Trailer |  | Music Video |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Buena Vista Home Video |
 | Release Date: 5/11/2007 |
 | Running Time: 110 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 2000 |  | Catalog ID: 2077103 |  | UPC: 00717951010605 |  | Number of Discs: 1 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English [CC], English, French Dubbed |  | Available Subtitles: Spanish |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | 2.35:1 |
| Cast & Crew
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| | Professional Reviews | New York Times "...The movie benefits from an unusually witty, high-spirited script....it's giddily, effervescently funny..." 05/26/2000 p.E12USA Today "...[A] smoothly filmed, generally funny and brilliantly titled Western..." 06/02/2000 p.13E Rolling Stone "...Wilson is flat-out hilarious....A slap-happy treat..." 06/22/2000 p.140 Box Office "...[Chan and Wilson are] perfectly matched in temperament and timing, they make for a classic duo whose cinematic exploits have surely only begun..." 07/01/2000 p.102 Los Angeles Times "...The hilarious, knockabout SHANGHAI NOON, Jackie Chan's best American picture to date, breathes fresh life into the virtually dormant comedy-western..." 05/26/2000 p.C1 Chicago Sun-Times "...A wink at Westerns, martial arts and buddy movies -- enriched by a goofy performance by Owen Wilson, who would steal the movie if Chan were not so clever at sharing it with him..." 05/26/2000 p.25 Chicago Sun-Times 8 of 10 ...a wink at Westerns, martial arts and buddy movies--enriched by a goofy performance by Owen Wilson, who would steal the movie if Chan were not so clever at sharing it with him... Chan, who does his own stunts, creates moments of physical comedy so pure, it's no wonder he has been compared with Buster Keaton... If you see only one martial arts Western this year, this is the one. - Roger Ebert San Francisco Chronicle 8 of 10 ...Playful high jinks, buddy bonding make Jackie Chan's Shanghai Noon a real kick...[it is] screwball kung fu... All the Wild West types in Shanghai Noon are stock comic figures but with an ethnic twist. This is almost Mel Brooks territory... - Bob Graham
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