A Better Tomorrow 3
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| A Better Tomorrow 3: Love & Death in Saigon | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Tsui Hark |
| Produced by | Tsui Hark John Woo |
| Written by | Yiu Ming Leung Foo Ho Tai Tsui Hark (novel) |
| Starring | Chow Yun Fat |
| Music by | Lowell Lo |
| Cinematography | Wing-Hung Wong |
| Editing by | Marco Mak Tsui Hark David Wu |
| Distributed by | Golden Princess |
| Release date(s) | |
| Running time | 145 min. |
| Country | |
| Language | English Vietnamese Cantonese |
| Followed by | A Better Tomorrow |
| IMDb profile | |
A Better Tomorrow 3: Love & Death in Saigon (英雄本色3-夕陽之歌) is a 1989 Hong Kong action film co-produced and directed by Tsui Hark. It is a loosely-based prequel to John Woo's A Better Tomorrow, though it was released after A Better Tomorrow 2.
The film stars Chow Yun Fat, who reprises his role of Mark Gor from the first film, Tony Leung Ka-Fai and Anita Mui. Set during the Vietnam War, it sets up the story of how Mark became the character he was in the original film.
Contents |
[edit] Box Office
The film grossed HK$18,476,116 at the Hong Kong box office.
[edit] Trivia
| Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- A Better Tomorrow 3 was directed by Tsui Hark, the producer behind the first two films in the series. John Woo wrote a screenplay for a third installment, but he never got to direct it due to having had artistic differences with Tsui Hark during the filming of the second film. Instead, the original screenplay would later become Bullet in the Head. The two films have many parallels, most notably, both being set in Vietnam during the war.
- The Taiwan version runs 145 minutes long which is the complete uncut version. The Hong Kong version runs only 114 minutes long despite saying 130 minutes on the cover. On a special 2004 DVD release, there's a few minutes of scenes that were deleted from the Hong Kong version as a separate feature.
- The second part of the title Love & Death in Saigon (夕陽之歌) is the title song for this movie. Love & Death in Saigon was sung by the late Anita Mui, who was also the leading lady in this third instalment.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
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