Fong Sai-yuk II

Fong Sai-yuk II
Promotional artwork
方世玉續集
Directed byCorey Yuen
Written by
Produced byJet Li
Starring
CinematographyMark Lee
Edited byAngie Lam
Music by
  • Lowell Lo
  • Stephen Shing
Production
company
Distributed byGala Film Distribution
Release date
  • 30 July 1993 (1993-07-30)
Running time
96 minutes
CountryHong Kong
LanguageCantonese
Box officeHK$23,013,797

Fong Sai-yuk II (方世玉續集), also known as The Legend II, The Legend of Fong Sai-yuk II, and Once Upon a Time in China 6, is a 1993 Hong Kong action-comedy film directed by Corey Yuen, starring Jet Li as Chinese folk hero Fong Sai-yuk (Fang Shiyu). The film is a sequel to Fong Sai-yuk, which was released earlier in the same year. Two former Miss Hong Kong Pageant winners, Michele Reis and Amy Kwok, portrayed Fang Shiyu's wives.

Synopsis

Fang Shiyu and Lei Tingting are now members of the Red Flower Society, an underground movement seeking to overthrow the ruling Qing dynasty. Fang's godfather, Chen Jialuo, leads the society and hopes to groom Fang to succeed him. Yu Zhenhai, Chen's ruthless deputy, is jealous of Fang and tries to harm him. Unknown to most of the society's members, Chen is a long-lost brother of the Qianlong Emperor and he is worried that they might question his loyalty to their cause if they discover his true identity. Meanwhile, some rōnin discover evidence of Chen's background and attempt to pass it to the emperor in a red box.

Chen sends Fang and others to intercept the rōnin and retrieve the evidence, but Fang gets distracted along the way and focuses on rescuing Sun An'er, a woman in distress. Fang is nearly killed by the rōnin until his mother, Miao Cuihua, shows up and saves him. Nevertheless, the rōnin escape and pass the box to Sun Shiyi, the Viceroy of Guangdong. The woman whom Fang rescued earlier is Sun An'er, the viceroy's daughter. Fang then enters a martial arts contest to win Sun An'er's hand-in-marriage as part of a plan to steal the box from the viceroy, but the viceroy is aware and sets a trap for Fang. However, Sun An'er has fallen in love with Fang and married him genuinely, so she forces her father to release Fang by threatening to commit suicide.

Fang returns to his godfather and lies that he has failed to retrieve the box. Yu uses the chance to remind Chen that Fang had promised earlier that he would permanently disable himself if he fails the mission, so Chen is forced to cripple Fang, rendering him unable to practise martial arts again. Meanwhile, Yu incites the society to turn against Chen, imprisoning Chen and seizing the leadership position. When Yu captures Miao, Fang goes to confront Yu and blindfolds himself so that he would not see his fellow society members spilling blood while fighting them. Eventually, Fang defeats Yu and saves his godfather and restores him to the leadership position. Fang's two wives come to terms with each other, while Fang announces that he is retiring from the jianghu to lead a peaceful life with his family.

Cast

Release

Fong Sai-yuk II was released on 30 July 1993. In the Philippines, the film was released Solar Films as Once Upon a Time in China 6 on 30 August 1995,[1] connecting the film to Jet Li's unrelated Once Upon a Time in China film series.

Home media

In the United Kingdom, the film, released as The Legend II, was watched by 1.5 million viewers on television in 2004, making it the year's third most-watched foreign-language film on television after Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and First Strike. The original Fong Sai-yuk (released as Jet Li's The Legend) drew 1 million viewers in the United Kingdom in the same year, adding up to a combined 2.5 million viewership for both films in 2004.[2]

Alternate versions

American version

The DVD release published by Dimension is dubbed in English and contains different music cues compared to the original Hong Kong Universe version. The Hong Kong prints come in different releases such as Universe Old version DVD (embedded subtitles), Universe Remastered DVD (optional subs), Universe VCD (embedded subtitles, based on the old release), and the Tai Seng VHS (also based on the old release). The American version, released as The Legend II, cuts out a scene where Corey Yuen is naked while leaving the rest of the film intact. The remastered Universe DVD maintains a red tint throughout the entire film except in night scenes.

Taiwanese version

The Taiwanese version, released as Kungfu Emperor 2 (功夫皇帝2) and dubbed in Mandarin, is distributed by Scholar/Taiwan and runs longer than all other versions, including some scenes that were cut out from other releases. The opening sequence of the film shows a white screen with red Chinese credits. The Hong Kong version has English credits while the Taiwanese version does not. The Taiwanese version includes some scenes that were omitted in other versions.

The Taiwanese version also uses Jet Li's original voice in Mandarin. The up and down black bars move up and down because of film transfer and does not feature the red tint featured in the Hong Kong remastered DVD.

References

  1. ^ "Grand Opening Today Simultaneously". Manila Standard. Kamahalan Publishing Corp. 30 August 1995. p. 23. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
  2. ^ "UK Film Council Statistical Yearbook: Annual Review 2004/05" (PDF). UK Film Council. p. 74. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 21 April 2022 – via British Film Institute.