Jackie Chan’s The Shadow’s Edge climbed to No. 1 in China in its second weekend, adding an estimated RMB 182.9 million (about $25.4 million) and lifting its cume to roughly $77.5 million, according to industry tallies. The late-summer surge follows an Aug. 16 launch and positions the crime thriller—directed by Larry Yang and co-starring Zhang Zifeng and Tony Leung Ka-fai—as Chan’s strongest domestic performer since 2017.
Weekly tracking points to sustained momentum. Data for Aug. 18–24 shows The Shadow’s Edge earning about RMB 340 million for the week and reaching RMB 559 million in nine days, overtaking the star’s 2017 drama The Foreigner and trailing only Kung Fu Yoga among his recent leads. Audience marks remain high, with Maoyan at 9.6 and Douban around 8.1, figures that have helped theaters expand showtimes heading into the film’s third weekend.
The performance arrives amid a competitive stretch for the local market, where family animation and prestige holdovers have dominated much of August. Box office trackers report the monthly total surpassing RMB 50 billion across releases, with The Shadow’s Edge, Nanjing Photo Studio, and Langlang Mountain Little Monster among the top drivers. The Shadow’s Edge benefited from strong weekday retention and premium-format placements, a pattern typical of late-summer hits that lean on favorable word-of-mouth.
Plot-wise, Chan plays Wong Tak-Chung, a retired surveillance ace in Macau pressed back into service to pursue the “Wolf King,” with the film emphasizing procedure and cat-and-mouse reversals over slapstick action. The darker register has drawn attention as a change of pace for the 71-year-old star, and positive exit scores suggest the tonal pivot resonated with core fans and younger moviegoers. Distributor updates and ticketing dashboards indicate a wide footprint continuing into the next frame as the title builds on its second-weekend lead.















































