Box office Drunken Master II was a notable success in Hong Kong, grossing an all-time record of
HK$40,971,484 () during its theatrical run. The success was somewhat surprising, considering reports of tension on the set between Chan and Lau Kar Leung. By January 1995, the film had grossed from five other
East Asian territories. and in Taiwan, where it was one of the year's top ten highest-grossing films. In Japan, the film grossed . In South Korea, it sold 1,136,145 tickets and grossed , making it the year's top-grossing film in the country. Six years after its original release,
Drunken Master II was released in 1,345 North American theaters as
The Legend of Drunken Master by Dimension Films in 2000. This re-edited version made US$3,845,278 ($2,865 per screen) in its opening weekend, on its way to a US$11,555,430 total in the United States and Canada. Upon its 2000 release in France, the film sold 28,681 tickets, equivalent to an estimated (). Combined, the film's total estimated worldwide gross was approximately , equivalent to adjusted for inflation.
Critical response Roger Ebert, writing in the
Chicago Sun-Times, gave the film three-and-a-half stars out of a possible four:When I did a seminar at the
Hawaii Film Festival several years ago, comparing the physical comedy of Chan and
Buster Keaton, martial arts fans brought in their bootleg Hong Kong laser discs of this film and told me that I had to see the final 20-minute fight sequence. They were correct. Coming at the end of a film filled with jaw-dropping action scenes, this extended virtuoso effort sets some kind of benchmark: It may not be possible to film a better fight scene. In
Entertainment Weekly, Lisa Schwarzbaum gave the film an A− grade and wrote:A half dozen years after its Asian release, and over two decades after the original
Drunken Master made
Jackie Chan a star in Hong Kong,
The Legend of Drunken Master may be the most kick-ass demonstration yet, for the majority of American moviegoers, of what the fuss is all about: To many aficionados (who know the video as
Drunken Master II), this 1994 favorite, remastered and dubbed in "classic" bad Chinese-accented English, showcases Chan in his impish glory, dazzling in his ability to make serious, complicated fighting look like devil-may-care fun.
Time magazine listed
Drunken Master II as one of the
All-Time 100 Movies as chosen by
Time movie critics
Richard Corliss and
Richard Schickel: The most important and entertaining star of east Asian cinema, Jackie Chan survived a boyhood in a punishing
Peking Opera School, and his early screen days as "the next Bruce Lee" to create his own genre of martial-arts comedies .. Jackie starred in, and directed, many wonderful action films in his pre-Hollywood days. This one can stand at the peak.
James Berardinelli was one of the less fervent reviewers:
The Legend of Drunken Master is pretty typical Hong Kong Chan fare – five superior action sequences with a lot of failed comedy and mindless drivel padding out the running length. Most of the expository and character-building scenes fall into one of three categories: (1) inane, (2) incomprehensible, or (3) dull. The tone is also wildly inconsistent. Some sequences are laced with slapstick comedy while others are acutely uncomfortable as a result of torture and the nearly-abusive disciplining of a grown child by a parent. (Differences in culture make the latter seem more incongruous to American viewers than to Chinese movie-goers.) So it's up to the action to redeem the film – a feat it succeeds at, at least to a point.On
Rotten Tomatoes,
Drunken Master II has an aggregated review score of 85% based on 81 critic reviews, the site's critical consensus reads: "Jackie Chan sends up some amazing and entertaining fight sequences in
The Legend of Drunken Master."
Awards and nominations In 2015, the
British Film Institute (BFI) selected
Drunken Master II as one of the 10 best action movies of all time. ==See also==