Rush Hour 2

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Rush Hour 2
File:Rush Hour 2 poster.png
Theatrical release poster
Directed byBrett Ratner
Written byJeff Nathanson
Based onCharacters
by Ross LaManna
Produced byRoger Birnbaum
Jonathan Glickman
Arthur M. Sarkissian
Jay Stern
Starring
CinematographyMatthew F. Leonetti
Edited byMark Helfrich
Music byLalo Schifrin
Production
companies
Distributed byNew Line Cinema[1]
Release date
  • August 3, 2001 (2001-08-03)
Running time
90 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States[1]
Languages
  • English
  • Cantonese
  • Mandarin
Budget$90 million[2]
Box office$347.3 million[2]

Rush Hour 2 is a 2001 American buddy action comedy film directed by Brett Ratner and written by Jeff Nathanson, based on the characters created by Ross LaManna. A sequel to Rush Hour, it is the second installment in the Rush Hour franchise and stars Jackie Chan and Chris Tucker reprising their roles from the first film. The story follows Chief Inspector Lee (Chan) and LAPD Detective James Carter (Tucker), who go to Hong Kong on vacation only to be thwarted by a murder case involving two U.S. customs agents after a bombing at the American embassy. Lee suspects that the crime is linked to the Triad crime lord Ricky Tan (Lone).

Rush Hour 2 opened on August 3, 2001, to generally mixed reviews. The film was a commercial success, grossing $347.3 million worldwide, making it the highest-grossing film in the franchise. It became the year's 11th-highest-grossing film worldwide as well as the second-highest-grossing PG-13 film. A sequel, Rush Hour 3, was released on August 10, 2007.

Plot

After the events of the previous film, LAPD Detective James Carter is in Hong Kong on vacation with his partner, Hong Kong Police Force Chief Inspector Lee. Carter is inept, obnoxious, rude, unprofessional, and mildly corrupt; Lee is quiet and subtle. Their vacation is put on hold when an explosion at the US Consulate General kills two undercover US Customs agents. Lee is assigned to the case and discovers that his late father's police partner, Ricky Tan, is somehow involved. Lee and Carter visit a Triad-owned massage parlor to question Tan, now a leader of the Triads. Lee insists to Carter that police backup ambush Tan. However, Carter goes over to Tan and loudly confronts him. Tan pretends to not understand that he's resisting arrest. Carter insultingly insists, resulting in Tan quietly taking his leave. Tan leaves Carter, Lee and Tan's guards in the room together. A brawl erupts in which Carter and Lee fight Tan's guards. Lee and Carter lose the fight and their clothes. The two jog back to the police station using newspapers and garbage can lids as badly improvised shorts.

The U.S. Secret Service, led by Agent Sterling, and the Hong Kong Police Force fight over jurisdiction of the case. A bomber disguised as a courier destroys Lee's office via fiery explosion and Lee, unaware Carter has left the building, briefly mourns him. They later cross paths at a party on Tan's yacht, where Tan scolds the bomber, Hu Li. Lee and Carter confront Tan, who claims he is being framed by his enemies and asks for protection, but Hu Li shoots him and escapes. Sterling holds Lee responsible for Tan's death and orders him off the case. Carter is ordered back to Los Angeles, but convinces Lee to come with him.

Carter loudly insists to Lee that every large criminal operation has a rich white man behind it; he infers aloud that the rich white man is Steven Reign, a billionaire Los Angeles hotelier Carter thinks he saw acting "too cool" at Tan's party. Staking out Reign Towers with a high-powered telescope, Carter uses the telescope to ogle Isabella Molina, whom Carter met on Tan's yacht, receiving a delivery from Hu Li. Mistaking a package of superdollars for another bomb, Lee and Carter try to intervene, but Molina reveals she is an undercover U.S. Secret Service agent, looking into Reign's laundering of $100 million in counterfeit bills. Molina shows them how to detect the forgery: by lighting a bill on fire and noticing the red color of the flame that results. She then congratulates them on beginning work on the case with the Secret Service.

Lee and Carter visit Kenny, an ex-con, now Carter’s disgruntled informant who runs a gambling den in the back of his Chinese restaurant. Carter nearly destroys the interview by arguing with Kenny, the argument ending in Kenny threatening them both. A fistfight between Kenny and Lee erupts until Lee recognizes Kenny's "Twisting Tiger" technique. Kenny tells Lee about a customer with a suspicious amount of hundred-dollar bills, which Carter confirms are Reign's counterfeits. They trace the money to a bank, where Hu Li's subordinates hold Lee and Carter at gunpoint and Molina pistol-whips Lee. Hu Li and her henchmen kidnap Lee and Carter. Later in a limousine Hu Li and one of her henchmen talk in Chinese about Hu Li's hatred and suspicion of Molina while Molina is right there in the limo with them.

Taken to Las Vegas in a Triad truck, Lee and Carter escape, realizing that Reign is laundering the $100 million through his new Red Dragon Casino. At the Red Dragon, Molina dances with Lee. Apologizing to Lee for the earlier pistol-whipping, she points Lee to the soft count room where Reign and Tan are hiding the engraving plates used to print the counterfeit money, while Carter loudly uses the race card at a roulette table as a distraction to help Lee infiltrate the soft count room. The infiltration fails and Hu Li captures Lee, shoves a remotely-operated explosive device in his mouth, tapes his mouth shut and threatens him with the detonator that will set off the grenade. She then brings him to Tan, who is still alive. When Tan departs, Molina tries to arrest Hu Li but is shot in the arm during the martial arts battle that erupts, and Lee has Carter remove his gag. Carter banters at Lee and is slow to remove the gag and restraints, though the explosive is removed from Lee's mouth and thrown just before it detonates. The casino's guests flee the explosion, which mostly evacuates the casino.

Hu Li ambushes Carter and Lee, nearly killing Carter by throwing a spear at them. Lee pursues Tan. Carter and Hu Li fight each other with various objects found in the casino, and by mostly luck Carter wins by Hu Li's sudden "death" from her own spear. In the penthouse, Reign prepares to escape with the plates. Tan meets with Reign about a conversation he had with him earlier and fatally stabs him. Lee and Carter confront Tan, who goads Lee to kill him as revenge for Lee's father's death. In the ensuing scuffle, Lee unintentionally kicks Tan out the window, and Tan meets his sudden death on a car parked far below. Hu Li enters with a time bomb. Lee and Carter escape on makeshift zip lines as Hu Li dies from the ensuing explosion.

Later at the airport, Molina thanks Lee for his work on the case, and kisses him. Planning to go their separate ways, Lee and Carter change their minds when Carter reveals the large amount of money he won at the casino, and the pair heads to New York City to indulge themselves.

Cast

  • Jackie Chan as Chief Inspector Lee of the HKPF. He invites Carter to Hong Kong for a vacation but accepts a case involving Ricky Tan, the man who killed his father.
  • Chris Tucker as LAPD Detective James Carter, who is in Hong Kong for vacation but quickly becomes entangled in an international investigation.
  • John Lone as Ricky Tan, a Triad gangster working with Steven Reign.
  • Zhang Ziyi as Hu Li, a Triad assassin and enforcer.
  • Roselyn Sánchez as Agent Isabella Molina of the Secret Service. She is working undercover, posing as a corrupt agent while also enlisting Lee and Carter to help her stop the Triads.
  • Alan King as Steven Reign, a corrupt Los Angeles businessman in league with the Triads to use his new casino to launder counterfeit money.
  • Harris Yulin as Special Agent-In-Charge Sterling
  • Kenneth Tsang as Captain Chin
  • Don Cheadle as Kenny,[3] the owner of a Chinese restaurant in L.A. that also houses an illegal gambling den.
  • Joel McKinnon Miller as Tex

Jeremy Piven,[4] Saul Rubinek,[5] and Gianni Russo[6] have cameo appearances as a Versace salesman, a casino box man, and a pit boss respectively.

Production

Filming

Filming took place between December 11, 2000 and April 30, 2001.

Fake-money controversy

The prop masters for the film created approximately $1 trillion in fake money to be used as props in the film. The money was realistic enough that some of the film's extras pocketed it and attempted to spend it illegally outside of the production, which led to said fake money being confiscated and destroyed by the United States Secret Service.[7]

Music

Lalo Schifrin returned to compose the score for the film. According to him, "The music for Rush Hour 2 is completely different from Rush Hour. The first 20–30 seconds of the main title is a reprise of the music from Rush Hour – but that's it."[8] He said that Ratner had requested a "symphonic score", which he incidentally found suitable for Rush Hour 2:

For the sequel, he asked me to do a symphonic score. It was bigger than life – like an epic score. I ignored the comedy – the actors took care of that. I played to the chases and the danger. It's a serious score in the sense of an "epic" score, like Raiders of the Lost Ark or an Errol Flynn film. Also, you must realize that the symphony orchestra allows many more possibilities. Mozart didn't need a rhythm section to "drive". I was able to create a lot of energy without the use of drums and electric guitars and all that.[8]

Schifrin performed the Rush Hour 2 score with the Hollywood Studio Symphony. Varèse Sarabande released its album on compact disc in August 2001.[9] In a 2001 interview with Dan Goldwasser for Soundtrack.Net, Schifrin was asked whether he would score Rush Hour 3, and he stated: "Oh, I'm not a prophet!"[8] By 2007, Schifrin began composing the score for Rush Hour 3,[10] which, as of 2018, is his last motion picture score.[11]

Release

Before its August 3 release, Rush Hour 2 premiered on July 26, 2001, on-board the United Airlines Flight 1 from Los Angeles to Hong Kong renamed, "The Rush Hour Express".[12] The Hong Kong Board of Tourism teamed up with United Airlines and New Line Cinema in a campaign that offered both trailers for the movie for passengers on all domestic United flights during July and August reaching an expected three million people, as well as Hong Kong travel videos to inspire tourists to visit the country where the film was set.[12]

Box office

Rush Hour 2 earned $226.2 million in North America and an estimated $121.2 million in other countries, for a worldwide total of $347.3 million (surpassing Rush Hour and Rush Hour 3's worldwide box-office receipts).[2][13] The film went at number one during its opening weekend, grossing $67.4 million at 3,118 locations.[2] The film stayed in the Top 10 until October 11 (10 weeks total).[14] It became one of the four 2001 films to generate $60 million in their first three days of release, with the others being Monsters, Inc., The Mummy Returns and Planet of the Apes.[15] The film also had the fourth-highest opening weekend of all time, behind the latter two films and The Lost World: Jurassic Park. Additionally, Rush Hour 2 achieved two other records during its opening weekend, beating The Sixth Sense for having the biggest August opening weekend and Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me for scoring the largest opening weekend for a New Line Cinema film.[16] The August opening weekend record would be held for six years before getting surpassed by The Bourne Ultimatum in 2007.[17] It was 2001's second-highest-grossing PG-13 film and the 11th highest-grossing film worldwide.[18][19] Rush Hour 2 surpassed the 1984 film The Karate Kid as the highest-grossing martial arts action film, and was ranked as the second-highest-grossing buddy comedy film behind the 1997 film Men in Black.[20][21] The film was also ranked as the third-highest-grossing second installments in live action comedy film franchises (behind the 2004 film Meet the Fockers and the 2011 film The Hangover Part II).[22]

Home media

In the United Kingdom, it was watched by 3.4 million viewers on television during the first half of 2005, making it the fifth most-watched film on Channel 4 during that period.[23]

Reception

Reviews for Rush Hour 2 were mixed.[24][25] On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 52% based on 128 reviews, with an average rating of 5.4/10. The website's critical consensus states that the film "doesn't feel as fresh or funny as the first, and the stunts lack some of the intricacy normally seen in Chan's films."[26] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 48 out of 100 based on 28 reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews."[27] Audiences polled by CinemaScore during Rush Hour 2's opening weekend gave the film an average grade of A on an A+ to F scale.[28]

Roger Ebert gave it one and half stars out of a possible four and called Chris Tucker "an anchor around the ankles of the humor".[29] Conversely, Robert Koehler of Variety called it a "superior sequel" and "the very model of the limber, transnational Hollywood action comedy".[30]

Awards

Rush Hour 2 earned a total of 27 award nominations and 10 wins, including an MTV Movie Award for Best Fight, a Teen Choice Award for Film-Choice Actor, Comedy, and 3 Kids' Choice Awards; Favorite Movie Actor for Tucker, Favorite Male Butt Kicker for Chan, and Favorite Movie.

Sequel

Because of various issues during development hell and production, Rush Hour 3 wasn't released until August 10, 2007; six years after Rush Hour 2. Rush Hour 3 failed to receive the critical and commercial acclaim of predecessors.[31]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "Rush Hour 2". American Film Institute. Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d "Rush Hour 2". Box Office Mojo. IMDb (Amazon). Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  3. ^ Lockett, Dee. "Don Cheadle Didn't Realize His Rush Hour 2 Character Inspired Kendrick Lamar". Vulture. Retrieved 2017-12-08.
  4. ^ "Watch Jeremy Piven recall meeting Mike Tyson on the set of 'Rush Hour 2'". EW.com. Retrieved 2017-12-08.
  5. ^ "Rush Hour 2". TVGuide.com. Retrieved 2017-12-08.
  6. ^ "Bio | Gianni Russo". www.giannirusso.com. Retrieved 2017-12-08.
  7. ^ "How Fake Money Is Made For Movies And TV". Movies Insider. October 10, 2020. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved September 20, 2021 – via YouTube.
  8. ^ a b c Goldwasser, Dan. "Schifrin's Latest Rush". Soundtrack.Net. Archived from the original on October 4, 2017. Retrieved May 10, 2018.
  9. ^ "Rush Hour 2 [Original Motion Picture Score]". AllMusic. Archived from the original on October 16, 2017. Retrieved May 10, 2018.
  10. ^ Goldwasser, Dan (10 July 2007). "Lalo Schifrin turns 75, and scores Rush Hour 3". ScoringSession.com. Archived from the original on May 10, 2018. Retrieved May 10, 2018.
  11. ^ "Lalo Schifrin". Soundtrack.Net. Archived from the original on May 10, 2018. Retrieved May 10, 2018.
  12. ^ a b "New Line Cinema and United Airlines Team with Hong Kong Tourism Board for In Flight 'Rush Hour 2' Promotion". Time Warner. July 12, 2001. Archived from the original on May 11, 2018. Retrieved May 11, 2018.
  13. ^ "Rush Hour". Box Office Mojo. IMDb (Amazon). Retrieved May 11, 2018.
  14. ^ "Rush Hour 2 (2001) - Financial Information".
  15. ^ "'Monsters' scares up win at box office". United Press International. 4 November 2001. Archived from the original on February 11, 2022. Retrieved 11 February 2022.
  16. ^ Linder, Brian (August 7, 2001). "Weekend Box Office: Rush Hour Jams Theaters". IGN. Retrieved July 13, 2022.
  17. ^ "Bourne Ultimatum Breaks August Box Office Record!".
  18. ^ "2001 Yearly Box Office for PG-13 Rated Movies". Box Office Mojo. IMDb (Amazon). Retrieved May 11, 2018.
  19. ^ "2001 Worldwide Grosses". Box Office Mojo. IMDb (Amazon). Retrieved May 11, 2018.
  20. ^ "Action - Martial Arts (1980–present)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb (Amazon). Retrieved May 11, 2018.
  21. ^ "Action - Buddy Comedy". Box Office Mojo. IMDb (Amazon). Retrieved May 11, 2018.
  22. ^ "Comedy - Sequel (Live Action)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb (Amazon). Retrieved May 11, 2018.
  23. ^ "4. Film on UK Television in the First Half of 2005". Research and Statistics Bulletin. British Film Institute, UK Film Council. 3 (1): 20-34 (30-1). September 2005. Retrieved 21 April 2022 – via Yumpu.
  24. ^ Passafiume, Andrea. "Rush Hour 2". Turner Classic Movies. Turner Broadcasting System (Time Warner). Archived from the original on May 11, 2018. Retrieved May 11, 2018.
  25. ^ "Rush Hour 2 rumbles to top". BBC. 6 August 2001. Archived from the original on May 12, 2018. Retrieved May 12, 2018.
  26. ^ "Rush Hour 2 (2001)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved March 2, 2019.
  27. ^ "Rush Hour 2". Metacritic. CBS Interactive (CBS Corporation). Archived from the original on May 10, 2018. Retrieved May 10, 2018.
  28. ^ "Official website". CinemaScore. Retrieved October 28, 2017.
  29. ^ Roger Ebert (August 3, 2001). "Rush Hour 2". Chicago Sun-Times.
  30. ^ Robert Koehler (July 27, 2001). "Rush Hour 2". Variety.
  31. ^ "Rush Hour 3". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-03-13.

External links