![]() They may be topless.Ī shirtless man and a woman in her underwear (cleavage on her buttocks and breasts), engage in foreplay and prepare to have sexual intercourse.Ī man and woman fight, but a man with his ear to the door believes they are having sex and makes several explicit sexual comments.Ī man says that Frenchwomen are naked 34% of the time, and he smiles at this. Viewers see a little bit of her buttocks.Īpproximately 54 minutes and 10 seconds into the film, women suddenly dance out on stage. This scene lasts until approximately 50 minutes and 16 seconds.Īpproximately 51 minutes into the film, women are dancing on stage and tear off their pants, revealing their underwear.Ī woman wears suggestive clothing and performs a sensual dance in front of a crowd. They are obviously naked, but only their bare buttocks are shown-albeit for an extended amount of time, and quite clearly. Initially dismissive of Yankees ("You lost in Vietnam, you lost in Iraq," he sniffs), George is soon won over by Carter and Lee's thrilling chaos in the form of the car chases and guns.Approximately 49 minutes and 33 seconds into the film there is a scene where a man orders women to strip down to their thongs. Both characters embody Carter's generally anti-French sentiments (when he meets an "Asian" who speaks French, he instructs, "Stop humiliating yourself!"). The action is non-stop and includes several urban chase scenes, martial arts slapstick (one pits Carter and Lee against real-life 7'9" basketball player Sun Ming Ming, here a lumbering bodyguard), and shootouts in a hospital and a nightclub. Not incidentally, they also end up saving two beautiful women, Han's daughter Soo Yung (Jingchu Zhang) and model-singer-gambler Genevieve (Noémie Lenoir). Supposedly there to protect World Criminal Court chief General Reynard ( Max von Sydow), the duo indulges in one raucous scene after another. This time, following the shooting of Ambassador Han (Tzi Ma, who was also in the first film), the guys make their way to Paris, a stronghold for Chinese Triad gangs. Like the original Rush Hour, RUSH HOUR 3 finds perennial LAPD muck-up Carter ( Chris Tucker) joining forces with Chinese Chief Inspector Lee ( Jackie Chan), even though they're barely able to understand each another. Frequent language includes variations on "s-t," "damn," and "ass." To stay in the loop on more movies like this, you can sign up for weekly Family Movie Night emails. Supporting characters smoke cigarettes and drink, and a brief, unconsummated sex scene shows Carter in bed (naked chest) with a woman in her bra and panties. A French detective conducts anal probes of Carter and Lee when they arrive in Paris (off-screen), leaving them in some visible pain. Motor-mouthed co-star Chris Tucker's brand of verbal comedy includes plenty of sexual references and dicey language that seems designed to get around the PG-13 rating (for example: referring to, but not saying, the "N" word and cutting off "motherf-" before it's finished). ![]() ![]() It's got lots of extremely boisterous comic violence, with a mix of martial arts, slapstick, and shoot-'em-up aesthetics that sometimes leads to bloodied faces and painfully twisted bodies. ![]() Parents need to know that this third installment in the Rush Hour franchise is a lot like the first two.
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