Follows the exploits of two car thieves, and the female police officer who is on their trail.Follows the exploits of two car thieves, and the female police officer who is on their trail.Follows the exploits of two car thieves, and the female police officer who is on their trail.
Michael Kiu Wai Miu
- Sergeant Tai Hwa Wang
- (as Kiu-Wai Miu)
Tao Chiang
- Gangster Hsiong
- (as Kong Do)
Ricky Wong Chun-Tong
- Tall Sum (Guest star)
- (as Fan Wei Yee)
Jeffrey Falcon
- Fan-wielding thug
- (as Jeff Falcon)
Ken Goodman
- Thug
- (as Kent Goodman)
Jonathan Isgar
- Thug
- (as Jonathan Gisger)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaBritish martial arts actor Mark Houghton spends much of the movie carrying a sword for his Japanese boss played by 'Michiko Nichiwaki', the original plan was for her to fight with the Tai Chi sword during the finale and while thats the shape of sword that Houghton carries for most of the film, during the finale when he draws the sword, it has now changed to a Chinese broadsword.
- GoofsAt the beginning of the climactic fight in the warehouse, Miego (Michiko Nishiwaki) is wearing flat shoes, but when she's hogtied by Yukari at the end of the fight, she's wearing red heels.
- Alternate versionsThe UK VHS release from 1997 lost various shots of illegal activities (details of how to break into cars, plus a close-up of a house door being opened with a lock-picking kit -- fear of people copying these acts lead to their exclusion), a banned weapon (the balisong knife) and real cruelty to chickens. The DVD release of 2005 had all cuts waived except the cruelty to chickens, which is a compulsory cut to comply with the UK's Cinematograph Films (Animals) Act 1937.
Featured review
OUTLAW BROTHERS (UK) had all the ingredients to be a top-notch contemporary Hong Kong action fest. Frankie Chan, Yukari Oshima, a gaggle of "gwei-loh" thugs led by Hung Gar exponent Mark Houghton. It even has the incredible Michiko Nishiwaki, though she's completely wasted here. So what went wrong?
The chief liability is the script. Though it finds room for the required 6.5 kung fu fights and a couple of so-so gun battles, the characters are unfocused. I could see Chow Yun Fat as the car thief romancing police-woman Yukari Oshima (you'd think she would have gotten her teeth fixed, wouldn't you?), but somehow Frankie Chan just doesn't have the charm to be convincing.
It's a real shame because Chan is a major talent, who just seems to make unfortunate choices. He's never really reached the 1982 pinnacle of PRODIGAL SON, under Sammo Hung's direction.
If you want to see Michiko Nishiwaki in a better showcase, try MY LUCKY STARS, where she has a (brief) bout with Sammo Hung, or MAGIC COP where she's really impressive as a weird witch.
Yukari Oshima comes out of this with the most credibility. Her martial arts skills are extraordinary, though I'm not mad on that 1990s "one-style-fits-all" generic martial arts that every choreographer seemed to use at the time. How much more interesting would it have been if some of these characters used real kung fu?
If it shows up on TV, fine, but I wouldn't go out and buy this on DVD ...
The chief liability is the script. Though it finds room for the required 6.5 kung fu fights and a couple of so-so gun battles, the characters are unfocused. I could see Chow Yun Fat as the car thief romancing police-woman Yukari Oshima (you'd think she would have gotten her teeth fixed, wouldn't you?), but somehow Frankie Chan just doesn't have the charm to be convincing.
It's a real shame because Chan is a major talent, who just seems to make unfortunate choices. He's never really reached the 1982 pinnacle of PRODIGAL SON, under Sammo Hung's direction.
If you want to see Michiko Nishiwaki in a better showcase, try MY LUCKY STARS, where she has a (brief) bout with Sammo Hung, or MAGIC COP where she's really impressive as a weird witch.
Yukari Oshima comes out of this with the most credibility. Her martial arts skills are extraordinary, though I'm not mad on that 1990s "one-style-fits-all" generic martial arts that every choreographer seemed to use at the time. How much more interesting would it have been if some of these characters used real kung fu?
If it shows up on TV, fine, but I wouldn't go out and buy this on DVD ...
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