Jackie Chan movies available on 4K Blu-ray, ranked by transfer quality.
dir. Kirk Wong Chi-Keung
S-Tier 88 Films 4K. Jackie Chan's Hong Kong crime film. 88 Films has been building a strong martial arts catalog.
88 Films · 4K + Blu-ray
dir. Sammo Hung Kam-Bo
S-Tier 88 Films 4K. Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung, and Yuen Biao. The Hong Kong action trio.
dir. Jackie Chan
S-Tier 88 Films 4K. Jackie Chan directed and starred in this 1989 crime comedy. One of the less-discussed entries in his 88 Films run but the transfer is in line with their Hong Kong Cinema Classics standard.
dir. Stanley Tong Gwai-Lai
S-Tier 88 Films 4K. Jackie Chan's third Police Story with Michelle Yeoh. 88 Films released a standalone for people who already own the Criterion PS1-2 set. There are actually 8 films in the broader Police Story franchise, which surprises people.
88 Films
S-Tier 88 Films 4K. Jackie Chan directed this 1983 period action film. Both 88 Films and Arrow have 4K releases.
S-Tier 88 Films 4K. Jackie Chan's sequel, with an 88 Films release coming June 2026 available through OrbitDVD.
dir. Harald Zwart
Sony S-Tier 4K. Locked behind an expensive box set with the Karate Kid sequels and nobody is happy about it. Sony will probably release it separately eventually, but knowing Sony it'll be a limited edition steelbook.
Sony Pictures
dir. Lo Wei
88 Films S-Tier 4K. Early Chan before he was Chan, and 88 Films gave it one of their best transfers. If you're working through the HK catalog, put this on the list.
88 Films A-Tier 4K with a preorder up at Rare Waves. The region coding is split between the 4K disc (region free) and the Blu-ray (Region B), so check your setup before buying.
A-Tier Eureka 4K. Jackie Chan's 1985 action classic, and the Eureka trilogy set was on sale for £23.99, shipping to the US for about $30 USD total. Eureka and Arrow both have releases. People wonder if the transfer is better than Criterion's scan of the first two films. The cars going down the hill in the first one still blows minds.
Eureka Entertainment · 4K + Blu-ray
Eureka A-Tier 4K. Part of the Police Story trilogy set that collectors say is worth the upgrade. The theatrical cut transfer is a real improvement over previous releases.
dir. Rob Minkoff
Lionsgate A-Tier 4K. Chan and Jet Li in the same frame, which is enough of a reason for martial arts collectors. The wire work and production design benefit from the extra resolution even if the film itself is lightweight.
Lionsgate · 4K + Blu-ray
88 Films 4K. Chan doing Indiana Jones before Indiana Jones went to Hong Kong. The stunts in this one are insane even by his standards, and the behind-the-scenes injury footage is legendary.
dir. Lau Kar-Leung
Arrow Video 4K limited edition. Has the greatest fight scene put to film according to pretty much everyone who watches it. Chan's breakout hits box set from Arrow is the way to get this one, and collectors with kids getting into martial arts films are buying it as an entry point.
Arrow Video · 4K Ultra HD
A Chinese chef accidentally gets involved with a news reporter who filmed a drug bust that went awry and is now being chased by gangs who are trying to get the video tape.
Two Hong Kong cops are sent to Tokyo to catch an ex-cop who stole a large amount of money in diamonds. After one is captured by the Ninja-gang protecting the rogue cop, the other one gets his old Orphanage gang, dubbed the "Five Lucky Stars," to help him. They don't like this much, but they do it.
Arrow Video 4K. The most accessible of the Police Story sequels and the one that feels most like a Bond film. Arrow's presentation is clean.
Arrow Video 4K limited edition, part of the breakout hits set. This was one of the first DVDs a lot of people owned, and the nostalgia factor is real. The HK version with the original subtitles is the one people want.
dir. James Glickenhaus
88 Films 4K. The American-produced Chan film where Hollywood hadn't figured out how to use him yet. Interesting as a curiosity, and the 88 Films disc is a solid presentation of a weird film.
88 Films · Limited Edition
Arrow Video 4K. Chan directing himself in one of the loosest, most fun entries in his early filmography. The final fight sequence is ridiculous in the best way.
dir. Gordon Chan
Arrow Video 4K. The car chase sequences are the selling point and HDR should make them pop. Deep cut in the Chan catalog but the Arrow treatment is reliable.
dir. Jackie Chan, Benny Chan Muk-Sing
A group of covert CIA operatives trailing a potential new energy source are double-crossed by corrupt agent Morgan, who causes a helicopter crash in remote South Africa. The sole survivor, suffering severe amnesia, is nursed to recovery by a kindly native tribe who call him "Whoami" after the question he keeps asking. With the help of a mysterious reporter Christine, Whoami pieces together his past and tracks the turncoat agent and his criminal cohorts.