"Yes, Madam" Puts the "POW!" in Female Empowerment
Directed by Corey Yuen
Written by Barry Wong
Produced by Samo Hung
Starring
Michelle Yeoh
Cynthia Rothrock
John Shum
Mang Hoi
Release date (Hong Kong): November 30, 1985
Synopsis
Two
unlucky thieves break into a just murdered man's hotel room and steal
his passport with a hidden microfilm wanted by a triad boss. Two hard
kicking women cops from HK and UK get the case.
Review
This is the first Michelle Yeoh film I've watched fully without Jackie Chan with it, and it did not dissapoint. The fight choreography is truly amazing and eye-catching like no other 'Girls With Guns' movie. The stunt co-ordination performed by Yeoh and Rothrock is truly epic.
Secondly, Dick Wei's performance as the scary villian is amazing. No matter what role I see this guy in, he is super intimidating. (Sorry, Urquidez)
This film is a bit of an alternative to Police Story. The opening chase is shot in the same place as it is in Police Story, there are tons of sequences with glass breaking, (the big stunts in both films involve glass) and of course, the over-confident jerk of a villian.
Now, I must talk about the ending. The ending has a bit of an annoying turning out. In NO version of the movie we get to see what happens after the ending (One of the protagonists shoots the main antagonist in a response to the main antagonist killing one of their best friends). Do Ng and Carrie go to prison? Does the antagonist dies? Who knows? Nobody!
Rothrock and Yeoh have amazing chemistry, and they're both different. One is a good madam, the other is a bad madam. One is an inspector, the other is a sergeant. One likes crumpet and teas, one likes ramen.
Who said girls never knew how to handle guns?
Rating: 9/10
WATCH YES MADAM
AT THE
https://archive.org/details/in-the-line-of-duty-1-yes-madam (Cantonese audio English subtitles)
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