Railroad Tigers Explained

Railroad Tigers
Native Name:
Child:yes
Hide:no
Header:none
T:鐵道飛虎
P:tiědào fēi hǔ
L:railroad flying tigers
S:铁道飞虎
Director:Ding Sheng
Producer:Zhou Mao Fei
Zhao Lei
Writers:-->
Starring:Jackie Chan
Huang Zi Tao
Jaycee Chan
Wang Kai
Wang Ta Lu
Narrators:-->
Distributor:Yuyue Film Company[1]
Runtime:124 minutes
Country:China
Language:Mandarin
Japanese
Gross:US$103 million
Production Companies:Shanghai Film Group
Yaolai Entertainment Media
Shanghai New Culture Media Group
Beijing Motianlun Media[2]

Railroad Tigers is a 2016 Chinese action comedy film directed by Ding Sheng and starring Jackie Chan.[3] It was released in China on December 23, 2016.[2] The film is about a railroad worker who leads a team of freedom fighters to oppose the Japanese during the occupation in World War II. The film performed well at the box office.[4]

Plot

In December 1941, Japan expands the occupation of its neighbouring countries to Southeast Asia. The railway from Tianjin to Nanjing in East China became a key military transportation route, heavily guarded by Japanese soldiers. Railroad worker Ma Yuan (Jackie Chan) leads a team of freedom fighters. Using his deep knowledge of the train network, he and his men sabotage it, ambushing Japanese soldiers and stealing supplies to feed the starving Chinese. Although the freedom fighters have no weapons of their own, they employ whatever tools are at hand, including a hammer and shovels, loose railway track planks and diverted trains. The local Chinese call the unlikely heroes the “Railroad Tigers”. The freedom fighters find themselves on the wrong side of the tracks when the Japanese send reinforcements to Shandong. In an act of defiance, Ma Yuan launches his most dangerous mission yet, blowing up a heavily guarded railroad bridge. When the Japanese learn of the crippling plan, which will derail the war effort, the stakes are raised even higher. After many missed opportunities and missed shots, the bridge is blown up by the ragtag Chinese railroad tigers.

Cast

Production

The budget of the film is .[3] The film had railway sequences shot in Diaobingshan using steam trains.

Release

On September 1, 2016, Well Go Entertainment announced the acquisition of Railroad Tigers for distribution in English-language territories including North America, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand. The film opened in December to coincide with its release in China.[6]

Reception

The film grossed on its opening weekend in China.[7] It has grossed in China.[2], the film holds a 38% approval rating on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 34 reviews with an average rating of 5.49/10. The site's critical consensus reads: "Railroad Tigers throws a few sparks hearkening back to Jackie Chan's glory days as an action comedy star, but they're smothered by an unfocused story and jarring shifts in tone."[8]

Peter DeBruge of Variety criticized Railroad Tigers as "instantly forgettable" and "a tired, often incomprehensible mess".[9] Nick Allen of RogerEbert.com gave the film one and a half out of four stars, criticizing it as unengaging with both the lack of tension and mishandled tonal combination of slapstick comedy with seriousness, stating that "[''Railroad Tigers''] doesn’t have the finesse to pull off a more innocent riff on [''[[Inglourious Basterds]]]."[10] Fellow RogerEbert.com critic Simon Abrams, however, considered the film to be superior to Chan's later film The Foreigner.[11]

Clarence Tsui of The Hollywood Reporter gave the film a positive review, considering it to be a "pretty effective" action comedy; he wrote that despite it not being one of Chan's best films, "at least it accomplishes the film's modest mission."[12]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: On Screen China: 'Tigers' and 'Tomorrow' Look to Scale 'The Great Wall'. Jonathan. Papish. December 22, 2016. December 23, 2016. China Film Insider.
  2. Web site: 铁道飞虎(2016). January 28, 2017. Cbooo.cn. Chinese.
  3. Web site: Cannes: Jackie Chan's Action Comedy 'Railroad Tigers' Goes to Golden Network Asia. Clifford. Coonan. May 13, 2015. May 28, 2016. The Hollywood Reporter.
  4. Web site: Verhoeven . Beatrice . Jackie Chan's 'Railroad Tigers' Earns $127,600 at Indie Box Office . TheWrap . Jan 8, 2017 . Jul 26, 2021.
  5. Web site: 铁道飞虎 (2016). May 29, 2016. movie.douban.com. douban.com. Chinese.
  6. Web site: Jackie Chan's World War II Comedy 'Railroad Tigers' Bought by Well Go. McNary. Dave. September 1, 2016. en-US. Variety.com. September 1, 2016.
  7. Web site: China Box Office: 'The Great Wall' Adds $26.5 Million in Second Weekend. Jonathan. Papish. December 25, 2016. December 26, 2016. China Film Insider.
  8. Web site: Railroad Tigers. Rotten Tomatoes. June 3, 2020.
  9. Web site: DeBruge. Peter. Film Review: 'Railroad Tigers'. Variety. Variety Media, LLC. December 10, 2020. December 28, 2016.
  10. Web site: Allen. Nick. Railroad Tigers movie review & film summary (2017). RogerEbert.com. Ebert Digital LLC. December 10, 2020. January 6, 2017.
  11. Web site: Abrams. Simon. The Foreigner movie review & film summary (2017). RogerEbert.com. Ebert Digital LLC. December 10, 2020. October 13, 2017.
  12. News: Tsui. Clarence. 'Railroad Tigers' ('Tie Dao Fei Hu'): Film Review. December 10, 2020. The Hollywood Reporter. MRC Media & Info. December 28, 2016.