With its pairing of a stern Mainland police woman and an affable Hong Kong cop, who stage a prison break to infiltrate a drug trafficker’s gang, Yuen Bun’s Tough Beauty and the Sloppy Slop (its original title refers to a kind of speedboat) is a not-too-subtle rehash of Police Story 3, with cheaper alternatives to Jackie Chan and Michelle Yeoh in the lead roles. In step Yuen Biao, a hugely underrated actor who was at the nadir of his career at the time, and Cynthia Khan, who had already stood in for Yeoh in the In The Line Of Duty series, and whose career was waning quickly by 1994. Indeed this is a cheap film, and while it flashes a lot of familiar, welcome faces besides its leads (Waise Lee, Yuen Wah, Alan Chui who directed the action, and Billy Chow all appear), it is so derivative, loosely narrated and – more damningly for this kind of production – light on action, that it’s hard not to be sorry for Yuen and Khan, who turn in game performances despite having little chemistry together, but deserved so much better. Their short final fight against Billy Chow (scored with Elliot Goldenthal’s Demolition Man score) is the only worthwhile scene in an otherwise flabby little actioner. *
TOUGH BEAUTY AND THE SLOPPY SLOP (1995) short review
Posted by LP Hugo on February 21, 2015
https://asianfilmstrike.com/2015/02/21/tough-beauty-and-the-sloppy-slop-1994-short-review/
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jameslebowski
/ September 20, 2015Skipped through parts of this today because I had it on my youtube watchlist for ages now and coincidentally ended up hearing the Hard Boiled score. Really an original piece of work, guess I won’t bother after this review. :D
LP Hugo
/ September 20, 2015Ha thank you I didn’t notice it also used the Hard Boiled score… But yeah don’t bother, a real waste of a perfectly appealing lead duo.