Knock Off 4K Blu-ray Movie

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Knock Off 4K Blu-ray Movie United States

4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray
MVD Visual | 1998 | 91 min | Rated R | Feb 17, 2026 (2 Weeks)

Knock Off 4K (Blu-ray Movie)

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List price: $49.95
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Movie rating

5.8
 / 10

Blu-ray rating

Users0.0 of 50.0
Reviewer2.5 of 52.5
Overall2.5 of 52.5

Overview

Knock Off 4K (1998)

Marcus Ray, a Hong Kong fashion designer who specializes in "knock-offs," cheaply produced jeans and sneakers meant to look like major-label merchandise. With his new partner Tommy Hendricks, Marcus hopes to go legit and put his shady past behind him, but Tommy is really an undercover CIA agent investigating the smuggling of mini-bombs in Marcus' products. An unwitting pawn in a scheme concocted by the KGB and Tommy's CIA superior Johanson, Marcus must clear his name and save his company.

Starring: Jean-Claude Van Damme, Rob Schneider, Lela Rochon, Paul Sorvino, Michael Wong (I)
Director: Tsui Hark

ActionUncertain
ComedyUncertain

Specifications

  • Video

    Video codec: HEVC / H.265
    Video resolution: 4K (2160p)
    Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
    Original aspect ratio: 2.35:1

  • Audio

    English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
    English: LPCM 2.0

  • Subtitles

    English SDH

  • Discs

    Blu-ray Disc
    Two-disc set (2 BDs)
    4K Ultra HD

  • Packaging

    Slipcover in original pressing

  • Playback

    Region A (B, C untested)

Review

Rating summary

Movie2.0 of 52.0
Video4.5 of 54.5
Audio4.0 of 54.0
Extras3.0 of 53.0
Overall2.5 of 52.5

Knock Off 4K Blu-ray Movie Review

Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman January 31, 2026

Tsui Hark has built one of the most monolithic reputations in the Hong Kong film industry to the point that he's often given the sobriquet "the Steven Spielberg of Asia". That iconic status has come courtesy of any number of well remembered (even beloved) films like Once Upon a Time in China: The Complete Films, Peking Opera Blues*, The Taking of Tiger Mountain, Journey to the West: The Demons Strike Back and Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame, among many others. Hark's shadow looms so large in the Asian film world that it can be hard to remember he actually (briefly) worked in good ol' La La Land, or at least in its business circles, if not strictly on location there. Hark teamed with Jean-Claude Van Damme for 1997's Double Team before, well, double teaming again for this frankly pretty lackluster enterprise. Whatever deficits the film may have, as a somewhat comical commentary by the typically entertaining Mike Leeder and Arne Venema discloses, for a certain demographic Knock Off is a definite "guilty pleasure".


Writer Steven E. de Souza is on hand in some of the supplements included with this release and he freely admits he had become so successful by the 1990s courtesy of such efforts as 48 Hrs., The Running Man, Die Hard, and Judge Dredd that he had become used to seeing other screenwriters rip off his ideas, so he pretty much just decided to do that himself with regard to Knock Off, perhaps adding an unintended irony to the film's very title. In terms of the writing acumen de Souza offers here, it may be salient to briefly recall he was feted with not one but two Golden Raspberry Awards for Worst Screenplay for Hudson Hawk and The Flintstones.

Knock Off has ostensible irony in its title even divorced from any recycling de Souza may have been guilty of, with Van Damme portraying Marcus Ray, a maybe slightly higher echelon purveyor of designer copies than the type you might see, say, selling counterfeit Rolexes underneath overpasses in crowded urban centers. Ray is partnered with goofy Tommy Hendricks (Rob Schneider), who turns out to be an undercover FBI agent trying to penetrate Hong Kong's black market. What is both fascinating and ultimately kind of frustratingly ignored in this story is the fact that everything is taking place during the handover of Hong Kong back to the Chinese, something that certainly seems like it could have contributed in some may more incisively to the narrative.

This is really just kind of cornball entertainment that simply can't be taken seriously either on its face, let alone anything deeper. There are a number of relatively visceral action sequences, and some completely hilarious moments like exploding dolls (in the ocean, no less) that at least keep things intermittently propulsive. The supporting cast includes a tonally disjunctive Paul Sorvino as an FBI honcho, with a completely unsurprising "reveal" lurking late in the story. Hark attempts to invest the film with style, and if this certainly doesn't rise to the heights of his best work, it still shows his typically fluid craftsmanship.


Knock Off 4K Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality  4.5 of 5

Note: Screenshots are sourced from the 1080 disc in this package.

Knock Off is presented in 4K UHD courtesy of MVD Visual's MVD Rewind imprint with an HEVC / H.265 encoded 2160p transfer in 2.35:1. As tends to be the case with MVD Rewind's releases, there's not a ton of technical information imparted on the packaging, though the back cover does say this is an "HD Restoration (16 bit scan of the original camera negative) in its original 2.35:1 aspect ratio in HDR-10. The 4K UHD presentation offers a more vibrant palette than the already pretty sumptuously suffused 1080 presentation from MVD Rewind, but it probably unavoidably tends to make a more widely variant than usual grain field all the more observable. Grain resolution can either be nicely tightly resolved or positively chunky and yellow throughout this presentation, and rather interestingly these differentiations are not necessarily based on lighting conditions or where various vignettes take place. The underwater footage that opens the feature, for example, actually offers a grittier, blacker looking grain field, but once things get topside there are moments with very tight grain resolution and others with a much thicker overlay of grain, sometimes within the same scene. That may end up making the 1080 presentation preferable for some, since while these changes are simply too obvious to ignore, they may be at least a bit more subliminal at the lower resolution and in SDR. HDR does add significant pop to the visuals in this version, and blues and reds in particular are repeatedly impressive. Hark's penchant for "arty" framings can sometimes detract from fine detail levels, but on the whole detailing is commendable throughout in a variety of lighting conditions.


Knock Off 4K Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality  4.0 of 5

Knock Off features DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 and LPCM 2.0 options. The film has some appealing music, including by the pop duo Sparks, and it features an early scene with Van Damme himself singing along to the radio. The scoring has an audibly more spacious presentation in the surround track, and the 5.1 track also significantly opens up the action set pieces, including delivering a more reverberant accounting of things like explosions. Dialogue is rendered cleanly and clearly throughout. Forced English subtitles (somewhat hilariously with quotes surrounding the dialogue) accompany some of the Chinese language segments, and otherwise optional English subtitles are available for the rest of the presentation.


Knock Off 4K Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras  3.0 of 5

4K UHD Disc

  • Audio Commentary by Mike Leeder and Arne Venema is accessible under the Audio Menu.
1080 Disc
  • Interview with Steven E. de Souza (HD; 40:51) is a fun sit down with the film's writer.

  • Interview with Moshe Diamant (HD; 18:24) features the film's producer.

  • 2020 Interview with Steven E. de Souza (HD; 9:49) is basically an audio interview that plays to scenes from the film.

  • Making Knock Off (SD; 23:15) is an archival EPK. This is kind of weirdly anamorphically squeezed.

  • Theatrical Trailer (HD; 1:57)

  • Audio Commentary by Mike Leeder and Arne Venema is accessible under the Audio Menu.
Trailers for other MVD Rewind releases are also included. The keepcase sleeve is reversible and also encloses a fold out poster. Packaging also features a slipcover.


Knock Off 4K Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation  2.5 of 5

It's probably not hard to understand why Hark decided it was probably best for him to concentrate on more "home grown" properties after Knock Off. As Mike Leeder and Arne Venema get into in their commentary track, this film has its own dedicated fan base, and those folks should be generally delighted with the technical merits offered in both 1080 and 4K, as well as the supplements MVD has aggregated for this release.


Other editions

Knock Off: Other Editions



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