"Shanghai
Noon"
Starring Jackie Chan and Owen Wilson

Photo
credit: Douglas Curran
|

Photo credit: Douglas Curran
|
Exclusive!
Superstar Jackie Chan wows the crowds and chats with AsianConnections.com
team members at the World
Premiere!
Official
website:
http://studio.go.com/movies/shanghainoon
The
story line:
The Wild West meets the East in a battle for honor, royalty and
a trunk full of gold when acrobatic Chinese Imperial Guard Chon
Wang (Jackie Chan) comes to America to rescue beautiful Princess
Pei Pei (Lucy Liu) who has been kidnapped from The Forbidden City.
With
the help of a partner he doesn't trust (Owen Wilson), a wife he
doesn't trust (Brandon Merrill), a horse with a personality all
its own and martial arts moves no one can believe, Chon finds
himself facing the meanest gunslingers in the West, in Touchstone
Pictures'/Spyglass Entertainment's comedy/action/adventure, "Shanghai
Noon."
Touchstone
Pictures and Spyglass Entertainment present A Birnbaum/Barber
Production in association with A Jackie Chan Films Limited Production,
"Shanghai Noon." Directed by Tom Dey, the screenplay is written
by Alfred Gough and Miles Millar. Producers are Roger Birnbaum,
Gary Barber and Jonathan Glickman. Executive producers are Jackie
Chan, Willie Chan and Solon So. The film is distributed by Buena
Vista Pictures Distribution.
When
the lovely princess Pei Pei (Lucy Liu) is kidnapped from China,
the Emperor dispatches three of his most fierce and noble Imperial
Guards to deliver the ransom in gold to her kidnappers in America's
Wild West. Chon Wang (Jackie Chan) isn't among the chosen. However,
he manages to tag along anyway by offering to carry the luggage
for his uncle, the Interpreter.

Photo
credit: Douglas Curran
|

Photo credit: Douglas Curran
|
Heading
through the Nevada desert by train, the Imperial entourage is
hijacked by a motley crew of would-be train robbers calling themselves
the Roy O'Bannon gang. Its eponymous leader spends more time self-promoting
than pulling off the heist. Some quick martial arts moves by Chon
mean the thieves lose the loot, but they also leave Chon alone
in the desert.
In
the meantime, because of the bungled train robbery, Roy (Owen
Wilson) has been abandoned by his former partner in crime and
buried up to his neck in the desert sand. He's to be a feast for
a flock of ravenous vultures, a gathering of which is already
sampling the banquet.
Trekking
through the wilderness, Chon serendipitously comes across the
helpless Roy who begs to be extricated from his dire situation.
Chon obliges by providing a set of chopsticks and suggests Roy
dig himself out - no hands!
Chon
continues his journey and takes on a party of Crow warriors to
save a small Native American boy and finds himself a hero with
the boy's Sious tribe. Fringe benefits include a peace pipe smoke-up,
a horse with some bizarre habits and a beautiful wife named Falling
Leaves. When Chon set off again to rescue the priness, all but
the peace pipe come with him.
An
unexpected run-in with Roy in a saloon lands the two in jail.
But, hearing that Chon's mission involves not only a beautiful
princess but also a trunk of gold coins, Roy becomes his new best
friend. Chon engineers a brilliant jail break and the unlikely
partners head to Carson City where they face brawls, bordellos,
treachery and plenty of what Roy calls "crazy, girlie, kick-fightin"
as East meets West in a battle for honor, royalty and a fortune
in gold.
- Touchstone Pictures and Spyglass
Entertainment