Add a Review

  • As with many Hong Kong comedies, the humor in this movie is screwball and slapstick and the plot goes all over the place. The movie basically takes on a hint of the Cinderella fairytale, where two housebreaker brothers steal a diamond that was eyed by triad members. Then, TV actress Cheung Man Ju gets mixed up in the plot.

    The plot was steady and the acting was crazy fun. Lots of A-list actors in this one and, although not the best Hong Kong comedy out there, it does have its moments of entertainment, romance and humor.

    Grade B-
  • Warning: Spoilers
    One of the last of the Shaw Brothers productions, GIRL WITH THE DIAMOND SLIPPER turns out to be a typically wacky contemporary comedy from the one and only Wong Jing, who wrote and stars as well as directing. He's on strong form here, delivering a Cinderella-style storyline full of decent slapstick and some very good stunts, although Maggie Cheung's titular characters plays in support while the twosome of Jing and Natalis Chan get the lion's share of the screen time. The wacky character humour works a treat and the fast pacing means there's nary a slow moment throughout; there's also some intense action here, including a climactic fight between Wong Yue and guest baddie Johnny Wang Lung Wei which really packs a punch.
  • Two hopeless housebreaker brothers, Ah Chi and Fatty (Nat Chen and Wong Jing), steal a diamond that had already been earmarked by a criminal gang. Through a series of unfortunate and - frankly - unlikely events, the diamond ends up in the shoe of a rising star TV actress Cheung Man Ju (Maggie Cheung). They pursue her all over Hong Kong until finally tracking her down at a charity ball where (you guessed it) she must leave by midnight, and accidentally loses a shoe in the process.

    This is a genuinely funny film that has stood the test of time. There's plenty of slapstick, comic book violence, wordplay gags (that even work in translation), and sexual and romantic comedy. It is, even at 89 minutes, about 5 or 10 minutes too long, with a beach section near the end that could easily have been excised. Still, the plot is engaging and complex without being confusing, and it builds to a nice climax.

    Girl With the Diamond Slipper, was released in 1985 making it one of the last Shaw Bros productions before they effectively shut up shop. It showcases two of the Hong Kong movie industry's titans early in their careers: Maggie Cheung, all chubby-faced and buck-toothed, but still astoundingly beautiful, and Wong Jing, directing and acting. Wong Jing is famously prolific, and while there is always something new and interesting (and often surprising or even shocking) in each of his films, he very much works to a formula and its not hard to tell that he was producing several films and TV series every year at this time. But this film stands up for the most part and doesn't feel too much like hack work.

    It's worth a watch if you're a Maggie Cheung or Wong Jing fan, but there are better 80s HK stupid crook films out there.