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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Better_Tomorrow_2646.jpg]]
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3''A Better Tomorrow'' (also known as ''Ying Hung Boon Sik'', or "True Colors of a Hero" in Cantonese) is a 1986 action film by Creator/JohnWoo and produced by Tsui Hark. The story follows two brothers on opposite sides of the law. Creator/TiLung plays Sung Tse Ho, a respected member of a triad whose principal operation is printing and distributing counterfeit US banknotes. Mark Gor, played by Creator/ChowYunFat in his breakout role, is Ho's partner in crime. Creator/LeslieCheung plays Sung Tse Kit, Ho's brother who has joined the HKPD. Ho cares deeply for Kit and encourages his career choice, but keeps his criminal life secret from him. When a job in Taiwan goes to hell, Ho is arrested while his accomplice, a new guy by the name of Shing (played by Creator/WaiseLee) gets away. Mark, as Ho's sworn brother, is mad as hell about this, and in one of John Woo's most iconic action sequences, he takes revenge on Ho's betrayers with both guns blazing, but near the end of the shootout, one of his kneecaps is blown out.
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5While Ho is in prison, Shing rises in the triad ranks and takes command of the organization. Ho's father is killed by an assassin sent by Shing, and as he dies, he begs Kit to forgive his brother. Anguished and pissed off, Kit holds his brother responsible for their father's death. When Ho comes out of prison, he wants to leave the criminal life behind and finds work as a cabbie, where he comes across Mark again. Mark has been reduced to being a crippled errand boy for Shing, and wants Ho to help him get revenge, but Ho refuses. Shing then makes his offer for Ho to come back to the triad, this time without Mark. Ho refuses again, and when Mark tries to fight Shing on his own, he gets the living shit beaten out of him and is almost killed.
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7Meanwhile, Kit is becoming increasingly obsessed with Shing, who ordered the hit on their father. He learns of Shing's major deal, but it's a death trap that Shing has laid in retaliation for Ho's refusal. Ho finds out about this and tries to warn him, but Kit won't believe him -- he's still mad at his brother and he wants to kill Shing more than anything. In the movie's final act, Ho and Mark steal the evidence tapes from the counterfeiting business and capture Shing, planning to ransom him in exchange for money and an escape boat at a pier, and Ho gives the tapes to Kit's girlfriend, who gives it to the police. Kit is captured by Shing's men at the pier, and when the converging forces meet, an explosive final shootout ensues, setting the stage for final revenge and reconciliation.
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9This film put John Woo on the map, provided a springboard for Chow Yun-Fat's career as a badass action star, and kick-started the HeroicBloodshed genre, along with [[TropeCodifier codifying]] most of the tropes associated with it. It led to the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hong_Kong_motion_picture_rating_system establishment of Hong Kong's film rating system]] because of the film's violence, which earned it the industry's first "Category [=IIb=]" rating (equivalent to the R rating in the US).
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11It would also spawn two sequels: ''A Better Tomorrow II'' (1987), which would see Chow Yun-Fat's return as Ken, [[BackupTwin the twin brother of Mark Gor]], and ''A Better Tomorrow III: Love and Death in Saigon'' (1989), a {{prequel}} directed by Tsui Hark and set in [[UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar Vietnam War]]-era Saigon in which Chow Yun-Fat reprises his role as Mark Gor. In 2010 Woo was executive producer for a Korean-language remake directed by Song Hae-sung, and in 2018 the film was remade again in mainland China, this time by Ding Sheng.
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13Despite its name, the 1994 film ''Film/ReturnToABetterTomorrow'' is not a sequel, but a homage to the series.
14----
15!!These films provide examples of:
16* ActionGirl: Kit from the third movie, a gunrunner and hitwoman who takes on entire armies using GunsAkimbo. Her relationship with a younger Mark notably inspires Mark to become the badass audiences knows in the original movie.
17* AlmostLethalWeapons: Codified by the second film. In the final scene, approximately 80 mooks are killed with every weapon imaginable. The heroes also suffer injuries, but appear to suffer no ill effects. At the end, they calmly sit in their blood-soaked clothes and wait for the cops to arrive, though the implication is that none of them are long for the world.
18* AtomicFBomb: In the second movie, right before the hotel shootout, Ken cocks his shotgun and lets out a huge '''FUUUUUCCCCCCK YOOOOOOUUUU!!''' at an assassin that is sneaking through a window behind him, before blasting said assassin to death.
19* BackupTwin: Mark Lee is killed near the end of the first film, but thanks to Mark being insanely popular, Chow Yun-Fat returned as Mark's twin brother Ken in ''A Better Tomorrow II''.
20* BadassLongcoat: Mark. So much that it led to a period where a lot of young people wore longcoats much like Mark (in fact, the BadassLongcoat is still known in Hong Kong as "Brother Mark's Coat").
21* BattleButler: In ''A Better Tomorrow II'', Chong is given a pile of cash by his terrified employer, but completely ignores it, indicating that his only concern is finding a WorthyOpponent, which he ultimately finds in Ken Gor.
22* BigApplesauce: The second film has part of its storyline play out in New York City, where Ken is beset by an army of Italian mobsters trying to extort him.
23* BirthDeathJuxtaposition: Near the end of the second film, Kit's daughter is born...[[spoiler:concurrently with Kit succumbing from a fatal gunshot wound]].
24* BreakoutCharacter: Mark Lee. Modern viewers can be puzzled that he's not actually the main protagonist of the first film, but Chow Yun-Fat's charismatic performance led to him becoming the most popular character and the later two films would have him in a leading role.
25* TheCameo: Pierre Tremblay, the Canadian-born Hong Kong actor of [[Film/GodfreyHoNinjaMovies Godfrey Ho]] infamy, pops up in the first film as an Interpol agent.
26* CigarFuseLighting: In the second film, Ken uses a cigarette to light a stick of dynamite to blow up part of the mansion during the climactic battle.
27* ConscienceMakesYouGoBack: Ho implores Mark to escape by himself in the boat in the climax. When the shooting starts, Mark turns the boat around and goes in guns blazing.
28* CoolShades: Mark's Alain Delon aviator shades. Creator/AlainDelon himself sent Chow Yun-Fat a personal thank you note after the film's release, as the film helped drive sales of the sunglasses in Hong Kong, and throughout Asia.
29* CopCriminalFamily: Ho is a Triad and Kit is an officer in the Hong Kong police. Kit tries to stay away from the mob business and his brother (who he blames for their father's death) at first, but he becomes increasingly obsessed with taking down the new boss who killed his father. Eventually, Ho and Kit team up from opposite sides of the law to take down Shing, showing brotherly loyalty is stronger than anything else.
30* CounterfeitCash: This is Mark and Ho's line of business.
31* CuteClumsyGirl: Jackie's introduction.
32* DavidVsGoliath: The climax of the third movie, where Bond, in a tank, battles Mark, on a motorcycle, one-on-one. [[spoiler: Mark wins]].
33* DenserAndWackier: The second film has considerably more humor and self-referential elements than the first. John Woo and producer Tsui Hark clashed over this, with Woo wanting the film to be closer in tone to the first. The resulting fallout between them led to Woo disowning the second film (aside from the final gunbattle) while Tsui Hark would direct the third film himself.
34* DiegeticSoundtrackUsage: In the scene where Kit rushes Jackie to her music recital, the violinist playing before her plays the theme song of the movie
35* DoomedByCanon: In ''A Better Tomorrow III'', Mark has to survive and have no love interest, which is bad news for Chow Ying Kit, Anita Mui's character in that film.
36* TheDragon: One of the villains in the second film is a silent gunslinger with dark glasses who [[spoiler:kills Kit, refuses to flee with money when he's given chance during the climax, and instead dies in a fair duel against Ken]].
37* DualWielding:
38** In the first film's climax, Mark and Ho wield a sub-machine gun and a pistol (Mark uses a Mini-Uzi, while Ho uses a Heckler & Koch MP5A3.
39** In the second film's climactic battle, Ken wields a shotgun and a mini-Uzi, while Ho and Lung wield a pistol and an Uzi each.
40* ExplodingFishTanks: At the start of the second film's final shootout a grenade flung by Ho kills several mooks...and blows up a tank full of goldfish.
41* {{Expy}}: Mark is based on a character (the "wandering knight") from a previous John Woo movie, ''Last Hurrah For Chivalry''.
42* FallenOnHardTimesJob: When Ho gets out of prison, he's shocked to find Mark working as a janitor. Ho himself working as a cabbie also counts; the owner of the taxi depot pretty much says that cabbies is the only job that ex-cons can still work in.
43* FoodSlap: In the second movie a mafia brute threatening Ken for protection money turns down Ken's gracious offer of allowing them to eat for free... by flinging a plate of fried rice in Ken's face. Ken then retaliates by scooping up the rice and suddenly pulling out a gun, demanding for the brute to eat his rice at gunpoint.
44--> '''Ken''': "For you, rice (is) nothing. But for us, rice is my ''father and mother''. '''Don't [[AtomicFBomb FUCK]] with my family'''. You make me feel so sorry for my rice... if you have any dignity, '''[[SuddenlySHouting APOLOGIZE TO THE RICE, RIGHT NOW!]]'''"
45* {{Foreshadowing}}: [[spoiler:The iconic image of Mark burning a fake $100 bill also foreshadows his death, as Buddhists burn fake money during funerals, so that the dead will have money in the afterlife]].
46* GirlsWithGuns: The third movie features Anita Mui's character, a gunslinger and lethal killing machine who inspires Chow Mark to become a triad hitman.
47* GratuitousEnglish: Half of the second film is set in New York City, and features some startling English dialogue.
48** Creator/ChowYunFat didn't speak English, so he [[FauxFluency learned his lines phonetically]], with [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G0fEJt54vxI truly hilarious]] results
49* GunsAkimbo:
50** Mark uses a pair of Berettas to blow away a restaurant full of bad guys to avenge the betrayal that got Ho sent to prison.
51** In the second film, Ken does this during the motel shoot-out and during the siege on the mansion.
52** Kit in the third movie (chronologically the first) kicks all kinds of ass using dual pistols.
53* HandCannon: Kit uses a Colt Python during the climax. He later gives it to Ho, who uses it to kill Shing.
54* HandicappedBadass: Mark continues to kick ass even with a blown out knee cap.
55* HeadphonesEqualIsolation: Jackie during the attempted kidnapping of Kit's father.
56* HeroicBloodshed: TropeMaker and [[TropeCodifier Codifier]] in Hong Kong.
57* {{Homage}}:
58** Mark's entrance to the restaurant was inspired by Johnny Boy entering the club in ''Film/MeanStreets''.
59** The motel shoot-out in the second film was inspired by both ''Film/TheGetaway'' and ''Film/TaxiDriver''.
60* IAmWhatIAm: Initially, Mark is convinced that gangsters like him can't really change their ways and run an honest life, and at one point even scolds about it to Ho, who is trying to do just that. But later on, Mark acknowledges the fact that only by taking their destinies straight in their hands, people can really call themselves free, and even ends up being killed while lecturing Ho's brother (who is a cop and quite the Inspector Javert of the situation) on the goodness of Ho's efforts.
61* IncrediblyObviousBug: Done to a truly awful degree in ''A Better Tomorrow II''. In order to bug a mob boss, Kit gives him a ship in a bottle. But instead of building the bug into the ship he attached the huge obvious thing to the outside. The kicker? He doesn't attach in it advance, but instead stands right outside the guy's office sticking it on.
62* IronicEcho: In Ho and Kit's first scene, Kit playfully frisks him. In a later scene, Kit aggressively does it for real, showing just broken their relationship is.
63* ItAlwaysRainsAtFunerals: Not quite a funeral, but it starts to rain when Kit and Jackie visit his father's grave.
64* KatanasAreJustBetter: Ho slices through a horde of mooks with a katana in the climax of the second film.
65* KilledMidSentence: [[spoiler:Mark get his brains blown out by Shing's Uzi while he's in the middle of convincing Kit and Ho to reconcile with each other]].
66* {{Kneecapping}}: Happens more than once in the trilogy.
67** In the first movie Mark gets shot in the knees at the end of the restaurant shootout, reducing him to a cripple for the rest of the movie.
68** In the second movie, after the rice scene Ken shoots one of the mafia goons in the knees to prevent him from shooting Bobby.
69* ManHug: Ho and Mark do this when they're reunited.
70* MexicanStandoff: In the second film, Ken pulls a gun on a gangster out to extort his restaurant, then another gangster pulls a gun on him.
71* MidfightWeaponExchange: During the climactic battle of ''A Better Tomorrow II'', Ken Lee and Chong do this at the very end of their duel.
72* MoneyToBurn: One of the classic shots of this movie comes in the beginning, where Mark does this with a counterfeit bill.
73* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: Delivered to Mark at the hands of Shing and his men. Kit also gives one to Ho at their first reunion.
74* OhCrap: Shing when he sees [[spoiler: Ho has another gun.]]
75* OneLastJob: Ho decides to get out of the game once he finds out that Kit's joining the police. He promptly gets arrested.
76* OralFixation: Mark and Ken are frequently shown chewing on toothpicks in their respective films. Given they're ''both'' played by Chow Yun-Fat...Ken, especially in the sequel, deliberately pops a toothpick in his mouth right before he duels the BattleButler.
77* PapaWolf: Kit and Ho's father, especially his attempt on convincing Ho to quit his criminal career and saving Kit during an assassination attempt.
78* PinPullingTeeth: Happens all the damned time in the final mansion shootout in ''A Better Tomorrow II''.
79* PineappleSurprise: In the third movie, Mark struggles a bit with an enemy soldier before getting knocked aside, but also managed to remove a pin on the grenade clipped on said soldier's belt. BOOM.
80* PrettyLittleHeadshots: Quite a few, although the amount of blood varies according to the RuleOfDrama.
81* PrisonerExchange: An exchange between Shing (who Ho, has captured) and Kit (who Shing's mooks have at gunpoint) sets off the final battle of the movie.
82* QuickDraw: ''In A Better Tomorrow II'', Chong and Ken's final duel involves a quickdraw, though it's really more like a 'quickly grab the gun off the floor simultaneously and shoot' kind of deal.
83* ReCut: ''A Better Tomorrow II'' was severely cut from 160 minutes to 104. The Taiwanese version of ''A Better Tomorrow III'' runs 145 minutes long, which is the complete uncut version. The Hong Kong version runs only 114 minutes long despite saying 130 minutes on the cover.
84* ReformedButRejected: When Ho gets out of prison, he makes good on his efforts to go straight, but Kit wants nothing to do with him. Not helping matters is Shing trying to pull him back in.
85* TheRemake:
86** Believe it or not, this movie is actually a remake of an old 1967 Cantonese film called ''Ying Xiong Ben Se'' (Story of a Discharged Prisoner). Creator/TsuiHark had been toying with the idea since his days in the TV business, but because of an overwhelming workload, he had to pass the directorial reins to Creator/JohnWoo.
87** A 2010 remake of ''A Better Tomorrow'' was made in South Korea.
88** Another remake of this film was made in China, in 2018
89* {{Revenge}}: As the movie progresses, Kit becomes increasingly obsessed with revenge against Shing, who had his father killed.
90* RichesToRags: Mark somehow loses his status during Ho's incareration and is reduced to working as a janitor.
91* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: Mark embarks on a particularly badass one to avenge the betrayal that got Ho arrested and sent to prison.
92* SacrificialLion: Mark is blown away by Shing near the end of the movie. Kit gets killed in the second film.
93* ScreamingWarrior: Ho when Shing's goons start trashing the taxi company.
94* ShotgunsAreJustBetter: Ken in the second film wields a Franchi SPAS-12 during the motel shoot-out and Remington Model 31 during the climactic battle.
95* StabTheScorpion: At the beginning of the final shootout, Ho tosses a gun to Kit, who [[InspectorJavert immediately points it at him]]--and then shoots a man sneaking up behind.
96* StormingTheCastle: ''A Better Tomorrow II'' ends with the three remaining heroes going on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge through a whole ''mess'' of mooks at the BigBad's mansion.
97* SuddenSequelDeathSyndrome: [[spoiler: Kit dies in the second film]].
98* TankGoodness: The climax of the third movie had Bond, the BigBad, trying to run over Mark using a '''tank'''. [[spoiler: Mark managed to take out said tank while on a motorcycle, dragging a cache of explosives behind him which he slides under the tank. The subsequent explosion defeats the tank and kills Bond]].
99* ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill: In the climactic shootout of the second film, one mook gets shot more than ''20'' times.
100* TragicKeepsake: For the climax of the second film, Ken wears his brother's bullethole-ridden coat.
101* TheTriadsAndTheTongs: Mark Lee inspired a generation of Chinese kids to walk around in dusters and sunglasses while chewing on toothpicks. Mark is a romantic in a cynical world, who steadfastly holds onto notions of brotherhood and honor, and would gladly lay down his life to protect innocent women and children.
102* TrueCompanions: Ho's taxi depot is made up of people who generally help him out due to everyone's shared background as ex-convicts with little job prospects.
103* UnflinchingWalk: Accidentally {{subverted}} during the big mansion shootout from the finale of ''A Better Tomorrow II''. Ken Gor, tosses a grenade into the mansion and turns to nonchalantly stand in front of the ensuing explosion. But Chow was standing a few inches too close to the pyrotechnics when they went off, and he flinched away as his hair was singed.
104* VillainInAWhiteSuit: The white suit is used as a status symbol in the triad, and Shing wears a white longcoat in the final showdown.
105* YouKilledMyFather: Kit's reason for revenge. Ultimately, [[spoiler:it's Ho who ends up pulling the trigger on Shing]].

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