Chinatown: Sa Kuko ng Dragon

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Directed byPepe Marcos
Written byHumilde Meek Roxas
Produced byNiki Rose Nuqui
Chinatown: Sa Kuko ng Dragon
Directed byPepe Marcos
Written byHumilde Meek Roxas
Produced byNiki Rose Nuqui
StarringRamon 'Bong' Revilla Jr.
CinematographyBaby Cabrales Jr.
Edited byBas Santos
Music byNonoy Tan
Production
company
Four-N Films
Distributed byFour-N Films
Release date
  • December 8, 1988 (1988-12-08)[1]
CountryPhilippines
LanguageFilipino

Chinatown: Sa Kuko ng Dragon (lit.'Chinatown: In the Claws of the Dragon') is a 1988 Filipino action film directed by Pepe Marcos and written by Humilde 'Meek' Roxas. It stars Ramon 'Bong' Revilla Jr., Tony Ferrer, Eddie Garcia, Aurora Sevilla, Mia Pratts, Rez Cortez, Christopher Paloma, Rommel Valdez, Baldo Marro, and Ruben Rustia. Produced and distributed by Four-N Films, the film was released on December 8, 1988.

Critic Lav Diaz noted Chinatown's intense violence, which he thought was influenced by the films of Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sylvester Stallone, and he expressed mixed feelings over the varying quality of the film's action scenes. The film received four FAMAS Award nominations, winning Best Picture - Action and Best Sound (Rolly Ruta).

A policeman named Daniel Moreno (Revilla) tries to singlehandedly defeat a syndicate involved in arms trafficking and drug smuggling as revenge for the murder of his sister and girlfriend.[2]

Cast

Release

Chinatown was given a "P-15" rating by the Movie and Television Review and Classification Board (MTRCB),[2] and was released on December 8, 1988.[2]

Critical response

Lav Diaz, writing for the Manila Standard, saw the film as another Filipino work influenced by the intense violence of films starring Sylvester Stallone or Arnold Schwarzenegger, stating that "Children too, [are] riddled with bullets." He gave mixed feelings for the action sequences, praising the chase scene involving a car and the action scenes at the start and the end of the film, but criticizing others for being basically filler. Diaz considers the love scene between Revilla's character and his lover to be the film's most memorable moment.[4]

Accolades

References

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