01-30-2010, 10:40 PM
I took a break from integrating albatross corrections because I had a shitty day on Friday and I just couldn't work any more. I had B&A, Wushu, and the entire upcoming season of NG's Fight Science, sitting in my queue. I'll get to the others in a month or so.
This is Donnie Yen's latest, a lavish period piece where they rebuilt a huge section of old Hong Kong to scale. The sets and costumes are amazing. It's also rather melodramatic with a ton of characters with complex relationships. My version only had Mandarin subs and it's the first time I've watched a kung fu flick and couldn't quite get wtf was going on without subs. As a kung fu flick, that's not to its favor. There's some decent action for sure, but not enough of it, and it's drowned by plot. The action is a lot of wire work - to a comic book level - although Donnie again shows his virtousity by adding his take on parkour to the mix. Cung and Xing Wu are in it, both friends who I've hung out with a bit, and both are villains, so I'm not sure what that says about the martial company I keep. There's some good stuff in here in terms of story, but as a martial arts film, it's a bit disappointing. There's just not enough action and too much weepy violin music. The Donnie vs. Cung fight is ok, the best on screen one for Cung so far, but overall, it's not mind blowing. The moral of most of the fights is when the villians bust out their hooks-on-chains, run like hell. Also, wtf didn't they just shoot some of the villains earlier? They had the damn pistol. That's a bit of a spoiler, and I should have warned you, but I'm sure if you bother to see this, that plot turn will bother you too. There's some good ninja attacks. I think if I understood the story, I might have liked it better, or at least been a little more engaged.
Donnie turns in his best acting performance to date. First Jet, then Jackie, now Donnie, busting out some real acting. It's odd. I have mixed feelings about that.
I'd recommend this to Greg because the set is out-freaking-rageous. I might recommend this to CF & LCF because they know kung fu, know the players a little better, and might be more interested in the story arc. The rest of you can give this a miss, sad to say. I was really hoping this one would be much stronger as a kung fu flick. It's got a great cast.
OK, back to the albatross for me.
This is Donnie Yen's latest, a lavish period piece where they rebuilt a huge section of old Hong Kong to scale. The sets and costumes are amazing. It's also rather melodramatic with a ton of characters with complex relationships. My version only had Mandarin subs and it's the first time I've watched a kung fu flick and couldn't quite get wtf was going on without subs. As a kung fu flick, that's not to its favor. There's some decent action for sure, but not enough of it, and it's drowned by plot. The action is a lot of wire work - to a comic book level - although Donnie again shows his virtousity by adding his take on parkour to the mix. Cung and Xing Wu are in it, both friends who I've hung out with a bit, and both are villains, so I'm not sure what that says about the martial company I keep. There's some good stuff in here in terms of story, but as a martial arts film, it's a bit disappointing. There's just not enough action and too much weepy violin music. The Donnie vs. Cung fight is ok, the best on screen one for Cung so far, but overall, it's not mind blowing. The moral of most of the fights is when the villians bust out their hooks-on-chains, run like hell. Also, wtf didn't they just shoot some of the villains earlier? They had the damn pistol. That's a bit of a spoiler, and I should have warned you, but I'm sure if you bother to see this, that plot turn will bother you too. There's some good ninja attacks. I think if I understood the story, I might have liked it better, or at least been a little more engaged.
Donnie turns in his best acting performance to date. First Jet, then Jackie, now Donnie, busting out some real acting. It's odd. I have mixed feelings about that.
I'd recommend this to Greg because the set is out-freaking-rageous. I might recommend this to CF & LCF because they know kung fu, know the players a little better, and might be more interested in the story arc. The rest of you can give this a miss, sad to say. I was really hoping this one would be much stronger as a kung fu flick. It's got a great cast.
OK, back to the albatross for me.
Shadow boxing the apocalypse