Home
  Movies
  Celebrities
  Feedback
Search for your favorite Celebrity / Movie
top_movies
Top Movies
Eight Below
Date Movie
The Pink Panther
Curious George
Final Destination 3
Firewall
Freedomland
When a Stranger Calls
Big Momma's House 2
Nanny McPhee

new_releases
New Releases
Curious George
Final Destination 3
Firewall
The Pink Panther
Date Movie
Eight Below
Freedomland
Something New
Failure to Launch
When a Stranger Calls

top_celebs
Top Celebs
Reese Witherspoon
Brad Pitt
Paris Hilton
Mariah Carey
Lindsay Lohan
Scarlett Johansson
Phil Collins
Britney Spears
Angelina Jolie
Jodie Marsh

 The Tuxedo
 Release Date - September 27th, 2002.
 Distributor - Dreamworks
 Duration - 1 hr. 36 min.
 Type - PG-13 for action violence, sexual content and language.
 Writer : Philip Hay, Matt Manfredi, Michael Wilson (II), Michael Leeson, Michael Wilson, Phil Hay
 Producer : John H. Williams, Adam Schroeder, Walter F. Parkes, Brian Gersh
 Director : Kevin Donovan
 Starring : Jackie Chan, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Jason Isaacs, Ritchie Coster, Debi Mazar
 Synopsis
Cabbie-turned-chauffer Jimmy Tong (Jackie Chan) learns there is really only one rule when you work for playboy millionaire Clark Devlin (Jason Isaacs): Never touch Devlin's prized tuxedo. But when Devlin is temporarily put out of commission in an explosive "accident," Jimmy can't resist trying on the tux and soon discovers that this extraordinary suit may be more black belt than black tie. Suddenly thrust into a dangerous world of espionage, paired with a rookie partner (Jennifer Love Hewitt) even less experienced than he is, Jimmy becomes an unwitting - if impeccably dressed - secret agent.
 Critic Reviews
Don't believe the clothes make the man? Just ask Jimmy Tong. He is the mild-mannered chauffeur played by Jackie Chan who gains super-hero powers when he dons the title garment in The Tuxedo, a slapstick spy comedy from the king of comic martial arts. When we meet him, Jimmy is a cab driver known for his good manners and high-speed driving skill. It is the latter that earns him a job chauffeuring the 007-like Clark Devlin (Jason Isaacs). When Devlin is hospitalized after an assassination attempt, he sends Jimmy to put on his super-spy suit and take up the battle against a plot to poison the world's water supply. Arch-villain Diedrich Banning (Ritchie Coster) has cornered the market on safe bottled water. Rookie spy Del Blaine (Jennifer Love Hewitt), thinking Jimmy is Devlin, volunteers to help him. Her expertise in science is supposed to be why she got the job, but any idiot can see she's really there to be Jimmy's action foil, as they fight, dance, climb, fall and make faces together. Ms. Hewitt gleefully performs the wild stunts and pratfalls with uninhibited comic gusto. Mr. Chan still amazes, not only with his agility (here sweetened a bit with special effects), but also with his imagination. There is hardly a condition in which he has not battled on screen - drunk, hobbled, blind, even naked - but here he comes up with a new twist - fighting while getting dressed. The scene in which he struggles to put on the magic pants - then fight off the bad guys using only his legs - is a wonder of physical virtuosity. First-time director Kevin Donovan, a TV-ad veteran, keeps up a break-neck - and not always appropriate - pace. People go to Jackie Chan movies to see him do the impossible; cuting to a near blur makes the movie look like any other action flick and dilutes the thrill of seeing the master at work. Nonetheless, The Tuxedo is a keeper, for its humor, its action, its hint of romance - and its too-brief cameo by the great James Brown.
  For rating reasons : filmrating.com, mpaa.com                                    For Parents : Parentalguide.com