Knock Off is a 1998 Hong Kong-American action film directed by Tsui Hark and starring Jean-Claude Van Damme and Rob Schneider. The film was released in the United States on September 4, 1998. The title is a double entendre, as the term colloquially refers to both counterfeit goods as well as targeted killing. The film is one of the last in the world to feature Kai Tak Airport still in use; the airport closed in 1998.
It was Hark's second and last American film; he returned to Hong Kong after
Knock Off, feeling unsatisfied with his work in America.
Plot
Marcus Ray
(Jean-Claude Van Damme), a sales representative for "V SIX" jeans, and
his partner, Tommy Hendricks (Rob Schneider), are about to be busted for
selling "knock off" jeans (a low-quality imitation of well-known
products). Their American contact, Karen Leigh (Lela Rochon), who is not
only their employer but a CIA agent sent to find the mole in their
operation, is threatening them with a jail term if they do not prove
their innocence. Meanwhile, Ray and Hendricks meet up with Harry
Johannson (Paul Sorvino), who is a CIA agent that just happens to be a
double agent for the Russian Mafia and a ringleader to the terrorists.
He tells Ray that Hendricks is really a CIA agent and that they need
Ray's support. Ray and Hendricks then learn that Skinny Wang (Glen Chin)
is involved with the knock off jeans and they seek him out; which
results in the death of Wang and the pursuit of angry workers, who are
loyal to Wang and who are under the impression that Ray and Hendricks
killed him. Ray and Hendricks then learn that these knock off jeans are
laden with nanobombs, which were developed by former KGB operatives who
are in league with international terrorists that are utilizing a Russian
Mafia's scheme to bring this deadly technology to the black market and
extort $100,000,000.00 in monthly revenue from the world super powers.
This particular order is to be shipped to the U.S. Furthermore, we
discover that the CIA headquarters, in Hong Kong, is located on Lantau
Island inside a huge Buddha statue, which is later blown up. In the end,
Hong Kong is safe and so is the rest of the world.
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