'Enter the Fat Dragon': Donnie Yen in a fat suit...why? – The China Project (2025)

Honestly, if I imagined any Sammo Hung movie would be remade for modern audiences, 1978’s Enter the Fat Dragon (洪金宝 Hóng Jīnbǎo) would be the last thing on my mind. Hung’s original picture was a parody and tribute to Bruce Lee, all the while satirizing the endless Lee clones and impersonators of the era. It puts Hung in the shoes of Ah Lung, a Lee-obsessed pig farmer who comes to the city, works at a restaurant, and ends up fighting gangsters to rescue a waitress. Ah Lung is kind and innocent, but painfully naive, and finds that the city isn’t much like his favorite movies at all. While not a masterpiece by any means, it’s fun, vintage Hung, with some great fight scenes and jokes.

The new Enter the Fat Dragonshares very little with the original. Yen’s character Fallon Zhu is nothing like Ah Lung, save his rotundus figure and fondness for Bruce Lee. Fallon is confident and reckless, the kind of action hero who stops the bad guy while destroying half the world in the process. The opening scenes do well to set up his character. When he’s supposed to meet his fiancee, Fallon instead chases a group of bank robbers and jumps onto the gang’s getaway van as it’s speeding down busy Hong Kong streets. He busts the backdoor down and beats the hell out of the criminals. The chaos causes the driver to get stabbed and knocked out, spinning the van out of control. Fallon stops the car, but only after crashing into the police station and stopping inches before his superintendent.

Even though Fallon saves the day, his superiors have had it with his recklessness. The media dubs him “Jackass of the Century,” and he’s taken off the streets and demoted to hang around the evidence room. His fiancee Chloe, an actress lampooned as Hong Kong’s worst, breaks up with him. To alleviate his romantic and professional woes, Fallon binges on junk food and Bruce Lee movies. Six months pass, and he gains over a hundred pounds. After sitting on the sidelines for so long, Fallon is finally given a case to redeem himself. He flies to Japan for an escort mission that ends with his charge being very poorly protected. There’s a lot suddenly flung on the disgraced hero’s plate: the Japanese cops are corrupt, the Yakuza are plotting something, and his ex-fiancee just happens to be in Tokyo at the same time he is.

Although in a strange and foreign land, Fallon isn’t alone. He’s assisted by Thor, a former Hong Kong cop who followed the woman he loves to help with her restaurant. Charisma is sassy and tough, but has a sweet spot for her nephew Tiger, an orphan who can take on grown men with his kung-fu skills. Unfortunately, none of these side characters are as interesting as they sound. They’re all too often caricatures, with just the slightest twists and quirks to make them appear like more than cartoons. The two romantic subplots, involving Fallon and Thor and their respective ex-girlfriends, also come across as boring, sappy diversions that fail to add to these characters and their relationships in any meaningful way.

In some aspects, Enter the Fat Dragon seems to channel the energy and humor of ’80s Hong Kong comedies, when stars like Jackie Chan and Sammo Hung were at their peak. There’s slapstick, crude jokes, and some impressive, certainly bone-breaking stunts. Indeed, the movie’s best and most creative moments come from its slick, frantic fight scenes. I especially enjoyed the opening fight, which sees Fallon taking on a gang by himself, as he’s harassed by journalists who stream the chase and even give a robber a weapon to increase their views. Another wonderful brawl in a warehouse sees Thor drive a forklift through a gang of Yakuza, while Fallon rides on top and eventually ahead of it, slugging down thugs.

Oddly, despite his massive weight gain, Fallon’s fighting abilities aren’t hampered in the slightest. He runs, jumps, and kicks just as he did when he had an eight-pack. In fact, hardly anyone brings up Fallon’s weight, with the movie barely acknowledging the gimmick. It’s a pointless novelty, and ditto for the shoehorned message at the very final scene that bluntly tells viewers that it doesn’t matter whether a person’s thin or fat. When it isn’t bogged down by cliches, or pushing family-friendly, New Year schmaltz, Enter the Fat Dragon can be pretty entertaining. With such a needless gimmick, a by-the-numbers plot, and a forgettable cast, it never goes beyond being mediocre though. Plus, why watch the 2020 version when you can see Sammo Hung take on a Bruce Lee impersonator in the original?

'Enter the Fat Dragon': Donnie Yen in a fat suit...why? – The China Project (2025)
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