: The lead role is expected to be a young woman , marking a departure from Chow’s character, Sing .

: The story is expected to shift from the 1940s setting of the original to a contemporary, modern-day environment New Direction : Reports indicate the film will feature a female lead

Tone and Humor Chow’s comedic voice—deadpan delivery, visual puns, sudden tonal whiplash—remains intact. If you loved the first movie’s mix of Looney Tunes elasticity and Shaw Brothers melodrama, you’ll recognize the same impulses here. The film often opts for broader, more kinetic jokes: pratfalls, absurd physical transformations, and gag-driven surrealism. However, the balance between gag density and emotional cadence is trickier this time. The sequel’s jokes are frequently spectacular, occasionally brilliant, but the relentless escalation sometimes drains the quieter beats that allowed the first film’s sentiment to land.

: Chow intends for this to be a "modern-day" martial arts film, moving away from the 1940s setting of the original.