Big Trouble in Little China (DVD)
Other Marketplace Price: $17.99Sale Price:$10.49
- Ships Same Day.
- FREE Shipping (U.S. Delivery).
- International Shipping (See Shipping Chart Below).
Out of stock
Shipping US FREE SHIPPING |
FREE Shipping! |
---|---|
Shipping US Expedited 2-3 Day |
US Shipping: $14.99 Unlimited Items. |
Shipping Canada |
Canada Shipping: Flat $34.99. |
Shipping Int'l Standard | International Shipping: $64.99 Worldwide. |
Shipping Local Pick Up |
FREE Local Pick Up in Store |
This section needs additional citations for verification. (February 2022) |
Marvel supervillain The Mandarin in the 1990s Iron Man comic run by John Byrne and John Romita Jr. was modeled in appearance after Lo Pan.
The film s portrayal of the lightning sorcerer/demigod character has been occasionally described as an inspiration for the character of Raiden from Mortal Kombat, introducing the archetype of a straw hat–wearing monk able to control lightning with his hands to Western audiences. (In traditional Chinese and Japanese culture, the lightning god is represented more akin to a traditional Asian creature.) Additionally, the character David Lo Pan has been credited as the original inspiration for the soul-stealing Mortal Kombat villain Shang Tsung.
The twenty-third episode of the second season of the 2012 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles TV series, called A Chinatown Ghost Story , uses concepts from the film, but renames the antagonist Lo Pan to Ho Chan, and the Storm figure Rain is replaced by Wind. In addition, James Hong (Lo Pan) reprises his Little China performance as the principal villain character.
The song We Have Candy by the South African rap-rave group Die Antwoord features lead singer Ninja reciting some of Jack Burton s dialogue from the film.
In 2006, American experimental rock band Man Man released an album with the title Six Demon Bag, which is a reference to a line in the film.
A 2012 parody music video of the song Gangnam Style was entitled Lo Pan Style and featured the storyline and characters from the movie, including a cameo by James Hong.
New Zealand director Taika Waititi cited the film as an influence on Thor: Ragnarok (2017).
The Regular Show Season 3 episode Fortune Cookie The villain is The Warlock who has a Resemblance to Lo Pan. In fact the character was played by James Hong who played the same character.
The season 2 episode of Rick and Morty Titled Big Trouble in Little Sanchez is a reference title of the movie.
The Ninety-seven episode of Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade Ninja episode Titled Big Trouble in Little Norrisville The episode has a place name Little Norrisville and the Shopkeeper also played by James Hong who played the Shopkeeper
New
20Th Century Studios
2002
Adult
Pg-13
20Th Century Studios
DVD
Fox
B000QUCQX8
024543044765
7.5" x 5.25" x .50"
1986
1986-07-02
99
1h 39min
Awards, 1 win & 1 nomination
John Carpenter
Gary Goldman, David Z. Weinstein, W.D. Richter
Kurt Russell, Kim Cattrall, Dennis Dun
Keith Barish, Larry Franco, Jim Lau, James Lew, Paul Monash
John Carpenter, Alan Howarth
Dean Cundey
Steve Mirkovich, Mark Warner, Edward A. Warschilka
Joanna Merlin
John J. Lloyd
Les Gobruegge
George R. Nelson, Rick Simpson
April Ferry
Ken Chase, Steve Johnson, Susan V. Kalinowski
James Herbert, George E. Mather
Matt Earl Beesley, Larry Franco, Tommy Lee Wallace
Brent Boates, Richard L. Cowitt, James M. Davis, Craig Edgar, David Evans, Serge Genitempo, Kent H. Johnson, David Jonas, Donald Krafft, Johnny Lattanzio, James Lew, Patrick J. Marchese, Larry McGuire, Richard Morgan, Ken Scaife, Robert Scaife, Steven Schwartz, Mark Siegel, Ed Verreaux, John Villarino, Ron Ashmore, William 'W' Gilpin, Jaymes Hinkle, Steven Kerlagon, Dave Margolin, Brieann Rich, Mark Sparks, Drew Struzan, Mike Villarino, Frank White, Christopher Windisch
Don J. Bassman, Joseph F. Brennan, Thomas Causey, Kevin F. Cleary, Monika Dorfman-Lightstone, Dean Drabin, Martin Dreffke, David Fechtor, William Hartman, Gary A. Hecker, Laja Holland, Pieter Hubbard, David M. Ice, Lenny Jennings, Eric Lindemann, Gary Macheel, Anthony Milch, Richard Overton, Glad Pickering, David A. Poole, Robert Renga, Steve Rice, Hank Salerno, Hal Sanders, Alicia Stevenson, Darcy Vebber, Bill Voigtlander, David Williams, Ellis Burman III
Stanley Amborn, Randy Cabral, James Fredburg, Adam Gelbart, Cathe Jones, James Kagel, Thaine Morris, Joseph A. Unsinn, Greg C. Jensen Sr., Crit Killen, Olov Nylander, Jeff Rand
Michael Backauskas, Mat Beck, Peter Berman, Dale Brady, Kevin Brennan, Theresa Burkett, Roberto Carlos, Craig Caton, Craig Clark, Charles Cowles, Ken Diaz, Richard Edlund, Robert Eyslee, Alex R. Felix III, Ed Felix, Eric Fiedler, Eddie Garcia, Screaming Mad George, Alan Harding, Rebecca Heskes, George Jenson, Steve Johnson, Ed Jones, James Kagel, Dave Kesley, Makio Kida, Neil Krepela, Brad Kuehn, Ron MacInnes, Mary Mason, Dave Matherly, Dennis Michelson, Virgil Mirano, Bill Neil, James Nelson, Lisa Nielsen, Roberto Olivas, Chris Regan, Richard Ruiz, Wayne Strong, Annick Therrien, Lynda Thompson, Patrick Van Auken, Paul Van Camp, Garry Waller, Mary E. Walter, Mark Bryan Wilson, Randy Algoe, Crit Killen, Sam Longoria
Kelly Akai, T.K. Anthony, Simone Boisseree, Janet Brady, Thomas Bruggemann, David Cadiente, Phil Chong, Chuck Clarke, Bob K. Cummings, Debbi A. Davison, Eddy Donno, Ellarye, George Endoso, Kenny Endoso, Ken Fritz, Mark Giardino, Kent Hays, Jeff Imada, Bobby Itaya, Denise Kellogg, Conan Lee, James Lew, Gary McLarty, Ginger K. Miyazaki, Jimmy Nickerson, Sherri Nickerson, Beth Nufer, Bill Saito, Steve Santo, Dennis Scott, Hayward Soo Hoo, Leland Sun, Tamiko, Joe Tornatore, Dick Warlock, Michael Washlake, Dean Wein, Jack West, Eddie Wong, Harry Wong, Joseph K. Wong, Tommy J. Huff, Master Ho Sik Pak, Dick Warlock
Clyde E. Bryan, Ron Cardarelli, Jack Cooperman, Larry D. Davis, John Donnelly, J. Barry Herron, Gary B. Kibbe, George La Fountaine Jr., Thomas Marshall, Steven Poster, John R. Shannon, Raymond Stella, Steve Tate, Mark Walthour, Charles Williams, Stefanie Wiseman, Billy Craft
Glenn Chaika, Margaret Craig-Chang, Deborah Gaydos, Renee Holt, Jeff Howard, Mauro Maressa, Samuel E. Recinos, Peggy Regan, Eusebio Torres, Kevin Kutchaver
Pamela Guest
Oda Groeschel, Paul Lopez, Michele Neely, Lois DeArmond, Muto-Little
Nancy Froelich, David Jansen, J.W. Kompare, Ronald B. Moore, Steven Ramirez, Ed Stabile
John Bush, Steven Shkolnik
Scott Grusin
Sandy King
Steve Duncan, James Nordberg, Eddie Lee Voelker, Rick Braverman, Dean E. Mason, Julio Salazar
Susan Alpert, Christine Baer, Linda Brachman, Dale Brady, Kevin Brennan, Theresa Burkett, Allen Cappuccilli, Roberto Carlos, Craig Caton, Kim-Kasey Costello, Dan Curry, Theresa Curtin, Ken Diaz, Ken Dudderar, Al Ebner, Alex R. Felix III, Ed Felix, Eric Fiedler, Paulette C. Fine, Eddie Garcia, Mary Sutton Hallmann, Adam Hill, Sandra Holden, Jerry Jeffress, Steve Johnson, David P. Kelsey, Makio Kida, Harry Kohoyda Jr., Daniel Kwan, Jim Lau, Robin Dean Leyden, Ron MacInnes, Dave Matherly, Mark Matthews, Lesa Nielsen, Roberto Olivas, Pat Repola, Artist W. Robinson, Mindy Rothstein, Richard Ruiz, Dana Miller Schornstein, Jon Schreiber, Mark Siegel, Peter J. Silbermann, Wayne Strong, Gary Weddington, Mark West, Charles Whiteman, Robert Wilcox, Claire Wilson, Mark Bryan Wilson, Tyler Atkinson, Adam Hill, Michael Parkhurst
Action, Adventure, Comedy
Twentieth Century Fox, TAFT Entertainment Pictures, SLM Production Group
USA
English, Cantonese
PG-13
7.2
140198
53
Big Trouble in Little China (also known as John Carpenter s Big Trouble in Little China) is a 1986 American fantasy martial arts action black comedy film directed by John Carpenter and starring Kurt Russell, Kim Cattrall, Dennis Dun and James Hong. The film tells the story of Jack Burton, who helps his friend Wang Chi rescue Wang s green-eyed fiancée from bandits in San Francisco s Chinatown. They go into the mysterious underworld beneath Chinatown, where they face an ancient sorcerer named David Lo Pan, who requires a woman with green eyes to marry him in order to release him from a centuries-old curse.
Although the original screenplay by first-time screenwriters Gary Goldman and David Z. Weinstein was envisioned as a Western set in the 1880s, screenwriter W. D. Richter was hired to rewrite the script extensively and modernize it. The studio hired Carpenter to direct the film and rushed Big Trouble in Little China into production so that it would be released before a similarly themed Eddie Murphy film, The Golden Child, which was slated to come out around the same time. The project fulfilled Carpenter s long-standing desire to make a martial arts film.
The film was a commercial failure, grossing $11.1 million in North America, below its estimated $19 to $25 million budget. It received generally positive reviews, but left Carpenter disillusioned with Hollywood and influenced his decision to return to independent filmmaking. It gained a steady audience on home video and has become a cult classic.
$25,000,000 (estimated)
$2,723,211
$11,100,000
$11,100,577
Truck driver,green eyes,chinatown,1980s,chinese