Yahoo India Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: A Better Tomorrow II

Search results

  1. Jan 1, 1988 · Considered by many fans to be superior to the original, A Better Tomorrow II is the award-winning action masterpiece whose final epic gun battle is one of the most awesome sequences of John Woo's entire career.

    • DVD
  2. Movie: A Better Tomorrow II Chinese: 英雄本色续集 (Ying hung boon sik II) Director: John Woo; Writer: Tsui Hark, John Woo; Producer: Hark Tsui Cinematographer: Release Date: December 17, 1987 Runtime: 105 min Language: Cantonese Country: Hong Kong Cast. Lung Ti - Sung Tse-Ho Leslie Cheung - Sung Tse-Kit Dean Shek - Lung Si

  3. Jan 1, 1988 · Chow plays the twin brother of the character he played in the original Tomorrow, the ultraviolent, ultraromantic ultrapopular Hong Kong gangster melodrama. And the blatancy of that device is a fair indication of the sequel's shortcomings--and of its screwy charm: this is a film that knows no shame.

    • DVD
  4. A Better Tomorrow 2 not only inspired the dual gun action and looks of the Reservoir Dogs characters (although the look initially came from Le Samourai), but even the crazy dialogues which Tarantino is infamous for as seen & noted in the rice scene where Chow force-feeds an Italian New York-based mafioso to devour rice (the humourous black cop was a wonderful addition as well as Chow's comic touches - which is saying something as I was really just expecting it to be more of a serious scene ...

  5. Jan 26, 2020 · About Press Copyright Contact us Creators Advertise Developers Terms Privacy Policy & Safety How YouTube works Test new features NFL Sunday Ticket Press Copyright ...

    • 104 min
    • 5.7K
    • Sum Wai
  6. John Woo. Director, Writer. Tsui Hark. Story. A restauranteur teams up with a police officer and his ex-con brother to avenge the death of a friend's daughter.

  7. "A Better Tomorrow 2 originally ran about 160 minutes. Tsui Hark insisted that the film should be shortened to a commercially viable length (which in Hong Kong is considered under 120 minutes, so theatre owners could show the film at least 8 times a day).