Jackie Chan actor portrait

CHARACTER ACTOR SPOTLIGHT

JACKIE CHAN

Chan Kong-sang · 成龍

The world's greatest action-comedy star — a daredevil performer who does his own stunts, has broken nearly every bone in his body, and still makes you laugh doing it. Every iconic film, ranked.

12

Films

1978

Breakthrough

7.3

Avg IMDb

Action

Genre

See All Films

JACKIE CHAN COMPLETE FILMOGRAPHY

Ranked by IMDb score and audience popularity. From Hong Kong martial arts classics to Hollywood blockbusters — the essential Jackie Chan viewing list.

  1. 1.
    7.8/10
    Police Story movie poster

    Police Story

    1985 · Jackie Chan · 1h 41m

    Action Comedy

    Chan's magnum opus — a Hong Kong cop battles gangsters through shopping malls and double-decker buses in some of the most jaw-dropping stunt work ever filmed. The gold standard.

  2. 2.
    7.7/10
    Drunken Master II movie poster

    Drunken Master II

    1994 · Lau Kar-leung · 1h 42m

    Action Martial Arts

    Widely considered the greatest martial arts film ever made. Chan's drunken boxing style reaches a peak in a finale that will make your jaw drop and your sides ache from laughing.

  3. 3.
    7.0/10
    Rush Hour movie poster

    Rush Hour

    1998 · Brett Ratner · 1h 38m

    Action Comedy

    Chan meets Chris Tucker and Hollywood never saw it coming. The buddy-cop chemistry is electric, the action is vintage Jackie, and it became one of the defining blockbusters of the '90s.

  4. 4.
    7.5/10
    Project A movie poster

    Project A

    1983 · Jackie Chan · 1h 46m

    Action Adventure

    A period-set coast guard adventure featuring Jackie's famous clock-tower fall — a direct homage to Harold Lloyd done without a safety net. Peak Golden Era Chan.

  5. 5.
    7.1/10
    Armour of God movie poster

    Armour of God

    1986 · Jackie Chan · 1h 28m

    Action Adventure

    Hong Kong's answer to Indiana Jones — Jackie plays a treasure hunter racing against a cult. Famous for the near-fatal stunt that hospitalized Chan with a skull fracture during filming.

  6. 6.
    6.7/10
    Rumble in the Bronx movie poster

    Rumble in the Bronx

    1995 · Stanley Tong · 1h 30m

    Action Comedy

    Chan's Western crossover moment — shot in Vancouver but set in New York, this gonzo action romp introduced millions of American audiences to the Jackie Chan experience.

  7. 7.
    6.8/10
    Shanghai Knights movie poster

    Shanghai Knights

    2003 · David Dobkin · 1h 54m

    Action Comedy

    Chan and Owen Wilson head to Victorian London in this fun period sequel that arguably tops the original. The Singing in the Rain fight sequence alone earns its place in the pantheon.

  8. 8.
    7.1/10
    Who Am I? movie poster

    Who Am I?

    1998 · Jackie Chan · 1h 48m

    Action Thriller

    A globe-trotting amnesiac spy thriller with a Rotterdam rooftop finale that remains one of the most dangerous sequences Jackie ever filmed. Underrated gem.

  9. 9.
    7.6/10
    Kung Fu Panda movie poster

    Kung Fu Panda

    2008 · Mark Osborne · 1h 32m

    Animation Comedy

    Chan voices Monkey in DreamWorks' beloved animated franchise — a love letter to martial arts cinema wrapped in a heartwarming panda story. Skadoosh.

  10. 10.
    7.0/10
    The Foreigner movie poster

    The Foreigner

    2017 · Martin Campbell · 1h 53m

    Action Thriller

    Chan's most dramatic performance — a grieving father seeking justice against IRA terrorists. A grittier, darker side of Jackie that proved he can do serious cinema when he wants to.

  11. 11.
    7.5/10
    Drunken Master movie poster

    Drunken Master

    1978 · Yuen Woo-ping · 1h 51m

    Martial Arts Comedy

    The film that made Jackie Chan a star. A young Wong Fei-hung learns Drunken Boxing from an eccentric master — the blueprint for everything Chan perfected over the next four decades.

  12. 12.
    6.6/10
    Rush Hour 2 movie poster

    Rush Hour 2

    2001 · Brett Ratner · 1h 30m

    Action Comedy

    Chan and Tucker head to Hong Kong and Las Vegas in a sequel that some fans prefer to the original. The chemistry is still undeniable, and the action is just as inventive.