No Spoilers Film Review: THE SHADOW’S EDGE with Jackie Chan and Tony Leung Ka-Fai
Jackie Chan’s latest action blockbuster THE SHADOW’S EDGE has pleasantly surprised fans and critics alike. While the film filled cinemas almost worldwide, Germany will unfortunately have to make do with home cinema releases in January 2026. To bridge the waiting time, I invited Lee B. Golden III from Film Combat Syndicate to write a spoiler-free (!) review.

The label Plaion Pictures has once again struck a deal and is set to release Jackie Chan’s new film in three German editions in January 2026: DVD, Blu-ray, and Mediabook (4K/BD).
The title was also changed. In Germany, the film, which was mainly shot in Macau, China, will be called SHADOW CHASE – IM NETZ DER DIEBE (translated to “Shadow Chase – Within The Network Of Thieves”).
The film was released in UK cinemas at the beginning of October 2025 and has caused a sensation among fans and at the box office. “It’s been a long time since we’ve had a really good Jackie Chan film that you have to see in the cinema,” say fans from Great Britain. But the movie also received thumbs up in the US (where guest author Lee B. Golden III writes his film reviews), Australia, and other English-speaking countries. To promote international friendships among film fans, author Lee Golden from www.filmcombatsyndicate.com and I thought we’d bring the anticipation to Germany.

NO SPOILERS FILM REVIEW: THE SHADOW’S EDGE
by Lee B. Golden III (www.filmcombatsyndicate.com)
I can’t much remember a time in recent memory apart from “The Foreigner” another director was able to truly keep my attention for more than a handful of moments while watching a film featuring Jackie Chan. This isn’t to scale back what I previously iterated with “Karate Kid: Legends”, but I just love a really good, enticing thriller that thinks further beyond trying to so hard to sell its biggest star for it to be bankable to the point of gimmicky.
This is all to say that as much as I enjoyed Larry Yang’s “Ride On”, I’m even more approving of their latest pairing together with surveillance thriller, “The Shadow’s Edge”, which borrows inspiration from Yau Nai-Hoi’s 2007 film, “Eye In The Sky”. Yang’s film also joins Chan’s talents with that of Tony Leung Ka-Fai in one of the saltiest, most meaty villain roles he’s ever played; His performance as the leader of an elusive band of high-tech thieves is really one for the books, which is also one that certainly lives up to what makes a Jackie Chan action film worth watching, specifically being Chan himself.
Carried by a raft of talents such as Zeng Zifeng, Lang Yueting, and Wang Ziyi, the film also bolsters a crop of talents like Li Zhekun, Wang Zhenwei, and SEVENTEEN member Jun. For this, we get a Hong Kong cop procedural that forces law enforcement in all its concurrent advancements in, and adaptations of A.I. in its crime-solving framework to go back to basics in an effort to nab ‘The Shadow’ (Leung) following two successful robberies that foiled every effort by the police to catch them.
That effort sees burgeoning detective He Qiuguo (Feng) reluctantly aiding in bringing in ex-cop-turned-retiree Huang Dezhong (Chan) who, for what it’s worth, hasn’t lost a step when it comes to tracking and tracing. The department forges Huang as the leader of a new team responsible for staking out ‘The Shadow’ and his team, who also happen to be his adopted godsons from a heyday orphange. As Huang and his team make progress, however, it’s only a matter of time before the integrity of both forces are truly tested, as internal conflict and high drama set the stage for one explosive and bloody showdown after the next.
“An emotionally compelling drama […] catering to action fans in the best way.”
Amidst the stark dichotomy set between Chan and Leung is a narrative synchronicity as men well up in age and while able to lead the charge in their fields, still struggle to keep up with their younger successors; Huang is focused on staying on mission while simultaneously working to repair old ties with He following the death of her father during a stakeout many years earlier. With ‘The Shadow,’ you learn what’s at stake with a semblance of a family that, while still loving and caring for each other, is still a group slowly coming apart at the seams with the godsons’ and their ideations on how to handle their father’s unnerving behavior.
Yang crafts an emotionally compelling drama out of both branches that balances things out aptly while delivering a film that still stands on business, catering to action fans in the best way with sumptuous set pieces. You also get a useful application of law enforcement tech as a viable supporting character designed smartly for its timed uses to the film’s benefit, leaving the rest to fall prominently on our human characters to carry things home.
Celebrated actors Yu Rongguang and Melvin Wong also manage to eke in some screentime much to the delight of Hong Kong and Chan fans alike. Yang’s mix of Cantonese and English dialect along with a spinkle of Japanese doesn’t feel like a shoehorned effort at making this Hong Kong film palatable to Western sensibilities, and feels plentily genuine in its writing and overall presentation.
Action and stunt sequences by Su Hang and Lee Huang aim to please, serving up big setpieces along with ample uses of green screen that don’t necessarily work against the film’s intent. The actors look amazing, including Zeng whose unassuming build would have you easily fooled with a role that’s hellbent on proving herself to some of her naysaying colleagues. She’s an absolute joy on screen as someone who can carry drama and action and I would love to see more from her any day. Emphatically, the same goes for Leung, a longstanding screen prescence whose performance here should make him a ripe and qualifiable candidate for the most violent and bloody Timo Tjahanto escapades.
Topping it all off is the enduring starpower of Chan who still proves he can tussle with the best and the rest. I’m exasperated by a lot of the bargainous stories he’s appeared in like the forgettable “CZ12”, “Vanguard” and “Kung Fu Yoga” to name a few, and “A Legend” hardly enticed me as did Chan’s continued use of a digitally de-aged version of himself, so to see his character’s younger iteration played organically by a different actor feels refreshing.
Indeed, not all of Chan’s works of late tend to raise the bar as much as one hopes, but films like this one sure make it easier to give credit where its due. There’s a level quality and depth in “The Shadow’s Edge” that Yang taps into, specifically in his ability to tell a story that doesn’t cast another shadow over the main star’s legacy, and that’s worth something.
THE SHADOW’S EDGE (2025) Trailer
More about Film Combat Syndicate

Lee B. Golden III is the founder of Film Combat Syndicate, a film website with the goal to cover a wide variety of mainstream and independent projects attributed to action movies and projects from around the world with an angle toward following stunt performers and independent creatives. Lee lives in New York City and is heavily involved in social media.
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