Bryan Leung
The Knockabout
Brødrene og småkjeltringene Yipao og Taipao overtaler en kampsportmester til å trene dem, i håp om å bli byens fremste slåsskjemper. Men etter hvert finner Yipao ut at deres mester er en morder, og brødreparet tvinges til å velge side.
Out of the Dark
After a mysterious death from an accidental fall, an elderly woman Li in New Estate returns as an apparition on the legendary soul-returning night, causing a tumult to Security Captain Lo Hsiung and others. Ghost exorcist Leon (Stephen Chow) overpowers the ghost, winning the admiration of a young lady Chun (Karen Mok). Meanwhile, learning that the old womans own son Li (Chou Hui) and his wife are the killers, Leon promises to nab the couple to appease the spirit. In an attempt to kill Leon and the Security Captain, Li falls to his death. His wife kills herself, vowing to return on the soul-returning night to exact vengeance. When Lo and others fail to wipe out the spirits of the deceased Li couple before the 7-day deadline, Leon has to meet their challenge himself. On the hour of the duel, when Leon nearly gets knocked down, the deceased couples young son and the spirit of their late mother appear to engineer a reconciliation. The boy is then left in the custody of Leon and others.
Justice, My Foot!
Stephen Chow’s special brand of very modern, very Hong Kong screwball comedy entered a new phase with "Justice, My Foot!", a costume farce set in imperial China. Chow is a shyster with an equally eccentric kung-fu ace of a wife, hilariously played by Anita Mui Yim-fong. Accompanied by Chow’s number one screen sidekick, Ng Man-tat, he manages to bring justice to the court and laughter to the viewer. A resounding success, "Justice, My Foot!" broke box office records to become the number hit of 1992. And it’s no wonder, what with skillful direction by Johnnie To and a visual sheen provided by Peter Pao, who a few years later would become the first Chinese to win a Best Cinematography Oscar for "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon".