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  • got busting in more ways than one.

  • Welcome to watch Mojo, and today we're counting down our picks for the top 10.

  • Funny, Jackie Chan Moments for this list.

  • We're taking a look at the funniest moments from Jackie Chan's movie career, while often hilarious outtakes will not be considered.

  • Number 10.

  • Priceless Base Rush Hour Good.

  • While the martial artist had been doing his thing for around three decades in Hong Kong, in the West, Jackie Chen would not really become a household name until 1990 eight's rush Hour.

  • Look, FBI.

  • I'm a policeman.

  • I'm just showing him how to take a gun from a suspect.

  • Along with showcasing Chan's jaw dropping stunt work, the Buddy Cop movie also highlights the actors excellent comedic timing, with one moment in particular serving up the best of both worlds.

  • The priceless vase sequence is not only one of the funniest scenes in a consistently hilarious film, but it brought to the forefront chance, versatility and slapstick style of comedy, one that transcends culture or era Number nine.

  • A dynamic profile image.

  • Chinese Zodiac As a sequel released more than two decades after the last armor of God movie Chinese Zodiac feels wholly unnecessary and leaves quite a bit to be desired.

  • Despite not being one of Jackie Chan's greatest movies, Chinese Zodiac does produce one moment of inspired comedy.

  • During a well choreographed brawl against several guys in the studio, Chan makes use of a couple of makeshift weapons, including an umbrella and a camera that is more than ready to document the action.

  • The final punch line is particularly memorable as Chan proves that some people are just born photogenic.

  • Number eight, the Chun Jackie Lee City hunter.

  • Some moments are inherently funny.

  • Others toe the line between hilarity and insanity.

  • Based on a popular Japanese manga and anime.

  • City Hunters Live action adaptation tried to recapture the source material spirited brand of humor, Although that may just have been an excuse to have Jackie Chan cause play as Street Fighter two's Chun Li.

  • A moment this weird could easily cross the line into cringe territory.

  • But Chan's dedicated and unapologetic performance keeps this one on the funny side of strange.

  • The image of Jackie Chan dressed is Chun Li might be something nobody asked for, but the world is better off with it.

  • Existing Number seven The Rat paper fight the myth.

  • Despite its epic scope, the myth is still a lesser film in Jackie Chan's filmography.

  • However, that does not mean the action comedy is devoid of mesmerizing sequences.

  • By 2005 a 51 year old Chen had understandably slowed down since the seventies and eighties.

  • In response, the Myths Rat paper factory sequence decided to just bring things to a screeching and sticky halt.

  • Don't know Seeing Chan play A game of hot lava on the glue covered conveyor belt never gets old, while several tiny funny exchanges combined to create a sequence that is splendidly paste, novel and hilarious.

  • Sorry Number six.

  • Jackie Chan and the Ladder Police story for first Strike Thief Police Story franchise represents peak Jackie Chin, with the fourth entry going for broke when it comes to over the top set pieces, along with throwing a killer shark for good measure.

  • First Strike also contains one of Chan's best action sequences of all time, a flawlessly choreographed romp through a warehouse that sees the actor doing things with the ladder that seemed beyond human capability.

  • Well, it's easy to be mesmerized by the martial arts on display.

  • Chan also inject some of his trademark humor, culminating in a simple but amusing punchline that serves as the cherry on top of a kick ass Sunday.

  • Number five.

  • Drunken fighting, drunken master and drunken master, too, may sound being don't.

  • A central characteristic of Jackie Chan's humor is its physicality.

  • The actors movies tend to strike a perfect union between action and comedy, where one genre compliments and heightens the other be in 1970 eight's original or 1994 sequel.

  • The Drunken Master Films distill chance talents.

  • Their purest form as the protagonist.

  • Central martial arts style is inherently hilarious.

  • A few other sequences better encapsulate the comedic brilliance of the drunken boxing style than the extensive fight in Drunken Master to Win, Chan battles several henchman well at the behest of his mother, getting increasingly drunker.

  • Number four.

  • Bike Chase Project A.

  • Along with being an expert martial artist, Jackie Chan is also a student of comedy, specifically silent era film starring the likes of Harold Lloyd.

  • The most obvious example is Project, a Clock Tower Scene, which directly references one of Lloyd's movies.

  • But these influences can be seen throughout the actress filmography.

  • Another project, a sequence that emphasizes this style of humor.

  • Has Chan, riding a bike through several tight alleyways while using all sorts of innovative tricks, toe out thinking various goons?

  • It's the type of scene that would have been justice funny in the 19 twenties, as it proved to be in 1983.

  • Number three catfight Snake in the Eagle's Shadow, 1978 was a huge year for Jackie, as films like Drunken Master and Snake in the Eagle's Shadow helped define the martial artists trademark mix of action and comedy.

  • While a relatively short moment in the grand scheme of things.

  • Chan, suddenly whipping out his cat like reflexes in the middle of a fight, is both totally bizarre and the most Jackie Chan thing ever.

  • Along with being hilarious, this scene marked the point when Chan stopped being the next Bruce Lee and became a unique performer destined for superstardom.

  • Number two Wong Fei hung vs John Fight.

  • Drunken Master, too More use.

  • Drunken Master to is the perfect case study on how to seamlessly blend action and comedy, especially the final fight between Jackie Chen and Ken Low.

  • Oh, from the second Chan drinks the industrial alcohol to the moment that low is defeated.

  • This sequence is pure bliss, simultaneously producing comedy gold and impeccably choreographed martial arts.

  • The action is hectic.

  • The jokes are constant but never disrupt the flow of the fight.

  • And there's even a moment where Chantix low for a walk, whether cheering or laughing Drunken Master two's final fight will get a reaction out of anyone.

  • Yeah, yeah.

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  • Number one Wooden Shoe fight.

  • Who am I?

  • Okay?

  • Jackie Chen doesn't need a lot to bring the laughs.

  • Sometimes all it takes is a pair of wooden shoes.

  • While consistently entertaining, Who am I?

  • Produces its heartiest chuckles during a short fight scene where a barefoot Chen takes on a couple of goons using nothing but clogs.

  • Unlike many of the actors fight scenes that pepper in a few laughs amid the action.

  • This one is nearly all comedy, with Chan even finding the time to deliver a witty one liner.

  • Good, perfect pairing, hilarious reactions.

  • And Chan literally kicking ass this moment is Jackie at the peak of his comedic genius.

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got busting in more ways than one.

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