Aces Go Places 5: The Terracotta Hit

(Redirected from Aces Go Places 5)

Aces Go Places 5: The Terracotta Hit is a 1989 Hong Kong action comedy film directed by Lau Kar-leung with action choreography by Lau Kar-wing. This is the fifth installment in the Aces Go Places film series. It was released in the United States as Mad Mission 5: The Terracotta Hit. It is the last one to feature the same cast members, and the last to be produced by Cinema City before their shut down in 1991.

Aces Go Places 5: The Terracotta Hit
DVD cover
Traditional Chinese新最佳拍檔
Simplified Chinese新最佳拍档
Hanyu PinyinXīn Zuì Jiā Pāi Dǎng
JyutpingSan1 Zeoi4 Gaai1 Paak3 Dong3
Directed byLau Kar-leung
Written byChang Kwok-tse
Produced byKarl Maka
StarringSamuel Hui
Karl Maka
Leslie Cheung
Nina Li Chi
CinematographyPaul Chan
Joe Chan
Hung Hin-sing
Edited byWong Ming-lam
Music byRichard Lo
Teddy Robin
Distributed byCinema City Company
Release date
  • 28 January 1989 (1989-01-28)
Running time
103 minutes
CountryHong Kong
LanguageCantonese
Box officeHK$20,032,206

Plot edit

King Kong and Baldy, the "Aces," part ways in 1986 after a mission in Thailand to kidnap a woman on her way to marry her boyfriend (a rich man claiming to be her husband enlisted the Aces' services) goes sour. Three years later, figures from the famous Terracotta Army and a Qing Dynasty bronze sword called the "Chinese Excalibur" is stolen during their transport to an exhibition in Hong Kong. Based on pictures that appear in the media, the two men are accused of the heist. By this time, King Kong is running an investment company that has long since been in the red, and Baldy - who sent his wife and son to Canada - is hiding in a Sai Kung houseboat from creditors who lent him money to invest in the stock market.

When a muscular MSS operative called the Chinese Rambo separately visits Baldy and King Kong (with indirect approval from the Hong Kong Police Force command, who have long since disowned them), both men decide to find those who framed them to clear their names.

They discover that a brother-sister tandem calling themselves the "New Aces" took the pictures during the heist and wore face masks of the two men's likenesses while getting away with stealing the Chinese Excalibur. They interrogate them inside Baldy's houseboat, and as the siblings try to escape, they plunge into the water and go back to the house during which a Chinese ship tows the houseboat. All four of them are sent to Beijing and imprisoned to answer for the crime. They are forced to undergo a staged execution until the Chinese Rambo offers them a chance to get out of prison in exchange for helping the Chinese government recover the figures. The four Aces agree to help recover the figures from the White Gloves syndicate. They begin training in martial arts because Beijing specifically orders that the figures must not be damaged by any means. However, the Chinese Rambo calls off the training, explaining that the Chinese government will try to get the figures back through diplomatic means.

Despite the turn of events, the four Aces band together and proceed with the mission. A furious battle inside the White Gloves' hideout, which even involves the use of the Chinese Excalibur, results in the quartet recovering the figures. King Kong, Baldy, and the New Aces join the Hong Kong police in sending off the Chinese Rambo, who is safeguarding the shipment back to China.

Cast edit

Box office edit

This film grossed HK$20,032,206 during its theatrical run from 28 January to 22 February 1989 in Hong Kong.

See also edit

External links edit