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Shanghai Noon

Shanghai Noon

  • Status: Released
  • 26-05-2000
  • Runtime: 110 min
  • Score: 6.417
  • Vote count: 2659

Chon Wang, a clumsy imperial guard, trails Princess Pei Pei when she's kidnapped from the Forbidden City and transported to America. Wang follows her captors to Nevada, where he teams up with an unlikely partner, outcast outlaw Roy O'Bannon, and tries to spring the princess from her imprisonment.

Jackie Chan

Chon Wang

Owen Wilson

Roy O'Bannon

Lucy Liu

Princess Pei Pei

Xander Berkeley

Nathan Van Cleef

Roger Yuan

Lo Fong

Yu Rongguang

Imperial Guard

Walton Goggins

Wallace

Brandon Merrill

Indian Wife

Jason Connery

Andrews

Adrien Dorval

Blue

Stacy Grant

Hooker in Distress

Kate Luyben

Fifi

Henry O

Royal Interpreter

Simon Baker

Little Feather

A.C. Peterson

Saddle Rock Sheriff

Rad Daly

Saddle Rock Deputy

Eliza Norbury

Dream Sequence Hooker

Eric Chen

Imperial Guard

Cui Ya Hui

Imperial Guard

Rafael Báez

Vasquez

Russell Badger

Sioux Chief

Jody Thompson

Margie

Kendall Saunders

Dream Sequence Hooker

Christy Greene

Train Passenger

Sam Simon

Chief's Sidekick

Olivia Cheng

Dim Sum Girl #1

Christopher Hunt

Apothecary Shopkeeper

Shayne Wyler

Saloon Gambler

Yuen Biao

Indian With the Axe / Saloon Fighter (uncredited)

Larry Lam

Railway Worker (uncredited)

Wuchak

_**Entertaining action/comedy Western**_ Released in 2000, "Shanghai Noon" features Jackie Chan as Chon Wang (the Chinese spelling of John Wayne) who teams up with good bad-guy Roy O'Bannon (Owen Wilson). They're pursuing the Empress of China or a load of gold -- whatever -- and have many misadventures. It didn't dawn on me until the end that the title "Shanghai Noon" is a comical take on "High Noon" (aduh). Anyway, this is a good flick to watch if you're in the mood for an Indiana Jones-type movie, like 1999's "The Mummy." It's not as good as "Raiders of the Lost Ark", but it's better than its sequels. Chan and Wilson have great chemistry and the humor is amusing, like the Wyatt Earp line at the end. Of course, with Jackie Chan the action is great as well, but it goes a bit overboard towards the end, which is typical of Hollywood, as well as overlong. The film runs 110 minutes and was shot in Alberta, Canada, and the Forbidden City, Beijing. GRADE: B