Tuesday, April 13. 2010Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: fist of legend, irish rican, jet li, kung fu reviews, ryan mclelland, ryan's top 25 films
Ryan's Top 25 Films: #22 - Fist Of Legend
But as for #22 Fist of Legend lands with a bullet. The film, about a made-up folk hero named Chan Zhan who learns at Jingwu School (once a real school) under Sifu Huo Yuanjia (once a very real kickass martial artist), is a remake of the Bruce Lee classic Fist of Fury (which is also known in the states as The Chinese Connection). The original is a classic in itself and truly one of Lee's bestest flicks. Fist of Legend comes through with Jet Li at the top of his game with Yuen Woo-Ping direcing the martial arts choreography. It is better then the original film in every single way. It's plot, acting, and action are just top fucking notch. The best wired fight scenes ever created are in this film. Jet Li is even more badass in this role then Bruce Lee was...just a simple fact. Another cool fact? Jet Li also played Huo Yuanjia in his film 'Fearless' - he is the only person to ever play both roles - though Fearless is actually based on factual events. The true star here is Yuen Woo-Ping. He made this film, Tai Chi Master, and Iron Monkey all in a few couple years and these three, two made with Jet Li, just show off his amazing ability at directing martial arts. He's done great work with the Matrix films and flicks like Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon, Knockabout, and Drunken Master...but truly there is NO BETTER WOO PING FILM THEN THIS ONE. I can't stress it enough....Jet Li and Woo-Ping make this version of Fist of Fury the most kickassish thing on film. It is even a better kung-fu film then my other one on the list - except the other film is way better acted. Fist of Fury is easily top 50 for me - but Fist of Legend deserves its asskickinggloryness here at #22. TOMORROW: KHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN! Sunday, February 28. 2010Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: eye wannabe, irish rican, jackie chan, kung fu reviews, lola forner, meals on wheels, ryan mclelland, sammo hung, yuen biao
Kung Fu Reviews: Meals on WheelsKung Fu Reviews: Meals on Wheels Reviewed by Ryan McLelland
It's a hard toss-up for me trying to decide Jackie Chan's best film. It's a narrow thought process for me as it comes down to Dragons Forever and the weirdly titled "Wheels on Meals". Both films feature the amazing trio of Jackie, Sammo Hung, and Yuen Biao...'brothers' since their early days and all film stars in their own right. But the comedy in Wheels on Meals works the best and the action scenes are amazing, with Biao really strutting his mobility.
As for the reason the flick isn't titled 'Meals on Wheels' - it actually boils down to some Chinese superstition - where a flick that had been put out by the studio (Megaforce) failed - so they didn't want to release another movie that started with an "M" in case it failed. That is actually a true story... Friday, February 19. 2010Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: corey yuen, jean claude van damme, kung fu reviews, no retreat no surrender, ryan mclelland
Kung Fu Reviews: No Retreat No SurrenderKung Fu Reviews: No Retreat No Surrender Reviewed by Ryan McLelland
For those who have never seen this classic, it is finally time to find a version or catch it on TV. Directed by Corey Yuen (Transporter, DOA: Dead or Alive - and one of my billion 'Yuen Brothers' to include Sammo Hung, Yuen Biao, Yuen Woo-Ping, and Jackie Chan) it was his first American film with a script that is so bad you would probably laugh the entire movie would it not be for the actors actually trying their best to make the most out of it.
Tuesday, December 22. 2009Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: corrina everson, double impact, geoffrey lewis, jcvd, jean claude van damme, kung fu reviews, ryan mclelland, sheldon lettich, twin dragons, van dammage
Kung Fu Reviews: Double ImpactKung Fu Reviews: Double Impact Reviewed by Ryan McLelland
All this talk yesterday about Double Impact gave me a quick hankering to rewatch the film. It's one of the few Van Damme films I don't have in my collection but luckily, thanks to my friend Mr. Netflix, I have just as readily available as Twin Dragons was. Double Impact is not only a fun film but once of JCVD's best. When Chad and Alex's parents are murdered, the twin babies are split up: one baby is taken by a nursemaid and the other is taken by the family's bodyguard. Chad grows up in California to a privileged lifestyle with "Uncle Frank". Alex grows up in the mean streets of Hong Kong. When Frank is finally able to locate Alex, he tells Chad the truth and both make their way to HK. Why tell the truth? Because after 25 years it is time for the twins to know the truth: that their parents were murdered by the Chinese Triads. What happens next? Pure Van Damage baby.
The characters played by Van Damme we've already seen before...which makes this movie so much fun. Chad, as the wide eyed twin, is played alot like Kickboxer's Kurt Sloane. He's fun, eager, and perhaps not as street-wise as everyone else. Alex, with his black outfit and slicked-back hair, comes off just like No Retreat No Surrender's Ivan the Russian. Alex is a mean SOB who really takes no shit from no one. A big gripe with Twin Dragons is that both parts were really...Jackie Chan. What I mean by that is - watching Double Impact you feel like you are watching Van Damme as Chad...but there is a big difference between Chad and Alex. They feel like twins who are nothing alike and PLAYED BY DIFFERENT PEOPLE even though they are both just Van Damme.
There's two other big selling points to the flick. #1 is Geoffrey Lewis, who plays Frank. He's starred with everyone from Clint Eastwood to Sylvester Stallone - and who can forget his role in Only the Strong??? #2 is the return of Bolo Yueng who squared off against JCVD in Bloodsport. Bolo really makes an awesome villain and he is awesome beating up two JCVD's in this film. Sure this film is far from perfect - there are some truly cheesy scenes here especially some of the gun fighting...but I'm SO okay with it. It's just a fun film and the doubling effects are done very, very well.
There's no need to really discuss the rest of the plot - is there? Van Damme and Van Damme go after bad guys. They all die. There is an AWESOME fight scene at the end with bodybuilder Corrina Everson (looking quite built and HAWT). Van Damme vs. a hot bodybuilder chick?!?! Didn't I tell you this movie had everything!?!?!? To top this all off the film is directed by Van Damme fave Sheldon Lettich who wrote Bloodsport, wrote and directed Lionheart, plus a bunch of later Van Damme flick. Lettich also wrote and directed Dacascos flick Only The Strong. So YAY! Major Van Dammage in this flick...happy to say it still holds up nicely. Wednesday, December 16. 2009Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: 2009, isaac florentine, kung fu, kung fu reviews, ninja, ryan mclelland, scott adkins
Kung Fu Reviews: Ninja (2009)Ryan Note: Sorry for the lack of updates Monday and Tuesday - my grandmother passed away. This may be the only update this week (I will TRY to do one on Friday as well) - but I did get to watch this awesome movie today!!! Kung Fu Reviews: Ninja (2009) Reviewed by Ryan McLelland
I had never even heard of the film Ninja until a buddy of mine told me about it recently. I thought he was talking about the filnm Ninja Assassin which is also a brand new 2009 film but I was informed that this is an entirely seperate film. Knowing nothing about the film I started to watch - in a Japanese dojo a lone white guy named Casey (played by uber martial art expert Scott Adkins - who is WAY too built for this own good) trains along other Japanese. Casey was an orphan and has been raised and trained at this dojo. There is a hot chick and a guy who is dressed in black and doesn't like Casey. When the Sensei of the dojo (Mako lookalike Togo Igawa) declares that dressed-in-black guy Masazuka (Tsuyoshi Ihara) and Casey are both nearly ready to take over the dojo - Mas gets that look in his eye. Casey wears white. Casey likes the hot chick. Masazuka wears black. Masazuka lurks in the shadow stalking the girl. Masazuka practices his swordplay at night. I wonder who is going to be the good guy in this movie and who is going to be the bad guy?????
Masazuka's hate-on for Casey shows when the sensei orders them out in the ring for some sword fighting. Mas kicks his ass, shattering Casey's wooden sword. He then beats the shit out of Casey some more and steals someone REAL sword. This attempt to kill Casey is halted by Casey himself and some of the classmates. Masazuka has broken the code of the school and is expelled. He is heartbroken and screams into the air. So I knew we had the bad guy and now he is expelled. I fully expect the plot to be about Casey having to track down and fight Masazuka in the real world once he sets himself up as (a) an assassin or (b) a boss - either way using his martial art for personal gain and killing mofos. Alright - so this plot is TRANSPARENT. Even though I guess those plot points right away I'm quite glad to stick with it because luckily the story is much more fun.
So the plot moves on with Masazuka wanting the secret ninja armor passed down from generation to generation. Sensei, knowing that Mas will come for it, sends Casey, Namiko (AKA Mika Hijiia AKA hot oriental chick), and two others (nameless guys you know will die) to New York to keep the box safe. Masazuka returns to the school for the box and kills everyone trying to find it. If the sensei can't stop the awesome evilness of Masazuka - who wants the secret ninja stuff and will stop at NOTHING to do it!!! Of course Masazuka finds out they are in New York, of course Mas is now an uber-awesome ninja assassin guy, and of course those two guys die! Casey and Namiko try and run away, some uber-secret society gets in the way...and things go...AWESOME! Scott Adkins plays Casey very reserved - he's not a wise-cracking guy. You aren't watching this film for the dialogue and luckily the cinematography is great. The acting...not so much. Also they are in New York but it NEVER looks like New York - it always feels like a back lot or some corner in Vancouver. There's lots of style but, again, the flick is thin on plot. The character of Casey is very good...and Mas is very bad...it feels like a comic book film and you need to suspend disbelief like a comic book film to have fun.
Adkins sells the movie with his amazing martial arts. The guy can just MOVE. Seeing him in this film makes me want to see his other films like Undisputed 2 and Shephard: Border Patrol (with JCVD!!!). The guys who made this made Undisputed 2 and are making Undisputed 3...once again with Adkins. This movie impressed me enough to want to see alot more of Adkins - too bad he didn't have a killer budget with this or Ninja could have been twice the film. Now I need to see Ninja Assassin to truly see who is 2009's Ninja King. Wednesday, December 9. 2009Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: kung fu reviews, ryan mclelland, sammo hung, samo hung, the legend of zu, tsui hark, wuxia, yuen biao, zu warriors from the magic mountain, zu warriors of the magic mountain
Kung Fu Reviews: Zu - Warriors From The Magic MountainKung Fu Reviews: Zu - Warriors From The Magic Mountain Reviewed by Ryan McLelland
Since starting my Kung Fu Reviews I've basically been going through my massive collection and rewatching films one-by-one for these reviews. Today, straight from HK, I received a copy of Zu: Warriors from the Magic Mountain in the mail today. So I find myself, for the first time, reviewing a Kung Fu film that I've never actually seen before. JOY!!!!! There are quite a number of Yuen Biao films I have yet to watch, Biao being my favorite martial artist of ALL time. The man is so fun to watch especially his films from the late 70s / early 80s. Zu falls into that category, having been released back in late 1983. The film is not your typical wuxia film and is more of a fantasy/sci-fi film based in the 10th century. Watching the film it really reminds me, for some reason, of John Carpenter's awesome Big Trouble in Little China. The film is plagued with bad special effects but what can one expect from a film from 1983? A part from the cheese the film is WAY fun which I'm truly glad for. Biao plays Ti Ming Chi, a soldier caught up in a massive China civil war where at least five different factions are fighting each other at once. When we meet Ming Chi he gets caught up in a fight with a soldier from another army (Sammo Hung!!!) only to discover they are about to get caught up in a much bigger fight. The two decide to team up and try to get out of this massive fight alive, play fighting with each other to try to make it out of the fight. This leads Ming Chi to find a hidden hole in a mountain where he runs into the mystical Swordsman. Ming Chi gets caught up with Swordsman, another powerful monk Master Ting, and his student Yi Chen all looking to take down a bunch of uber-baddie mythical creature types including the Blood Demon. Fighting these creatures Ming Chi realizes quickly that there's more to the world then the fighting of men. Another monk (also played by Sammo) defeats the Blood Demon but only the body is destroyed, the soul survives and starts to make a new body. So Ming Chi is sent on a quest to get the Twin Swords that can kill the Blood Demon's soul, aided by his friends, and sought after by many enemies. The film is an early directorial effort by Tsui Hark - who I just talked about in my Double Team review. Though this was made nearly fifteen years earlier with cheesy special effects it is 100x the movie Double Team is. Watching the film only leads to a question...what would Hark do with a bigger budget and a premise like this?!? It's an easily answered question: Hark would do a 2001 sequel titled The Legend Of Zu starring Sammo and Crouching Tiger's Zhang Ziyi. I'm not sure if that film is a true sequel or a spiritual one - I'll have to find out when I finally get a chance to watch it in the future. It's also very cool that Biao becomes a super cool super guy psychic Jedi guy with a kickass lightsaber thingie.
So if you are in the mood for a weird, awesome wuxia flick with killer chicks (both in looks and they are kickass fighters), evil demons, kung-fu, Biao wish a weird lightsaber, and more....Zu is certainly the flick for you. I can see how some people may not like this film as it isn't your a-typical kung fu flick, but I think that's why I really liked it. Like Biao's The Iceman Cometh it combines some supernatural elements that makes an average kung fu film alot more fun.
Tuesday, December 8. 2009Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: eye wannabe, eyewannabe, jackie chan, kung fu, kung fu reviews, mr. nice guy, richard norton, ryan mclelland, sammo hung, samo hung
Kung Fu Reviews: Mr. Nice GuyKung Fu Reviews: Mr. Nice Guy Reviewed by Ryan McLelland
Jackie Chan had spent a short time in Australia back in the 1970s - he had made a few films with him in a starring role that weren't successful and went to Australia before heading back to HK to become the star he would become today. It was even in Australia where he received the name 'Jackie.' It was nice that in 1997 he made an English-language movie in Australia - made even better when he reunited with Sammo Hung who directed the film. The plot is your basic chase-after Jackie for a McGuffin and he takes on 3,000,000 bad guys. Who needs plot!?!?!? This is an amazing action flick with tons of Jackie kicking major ass against drug lords and gangs!
So Jackie is...Jackie - a TV chef who gets mixed up with a reporter that videotapes a drug lord and his crew taking on a local gang who stole his cocaine. Jackie saves the reporter only to end up with this mysterious videotape - which then ends up in the hands of an eight year-old who unknowingly takes the tape and thinking it's some sort of cool movie. Everyone wants this tape because of how damaging it is. Everyone knows Jackie because he's on TV. So the drug kingpin (Richard Norton - once again playing an awesome Jackie Chan heavy) AND the rival gang both hunt down Jackie and his friends looking for the videotape. So Jackie spends most of the movie trying to avoid these people while trying to save his girlfriend from the mitts of the evil gang.
With a subpar plot you need alot of action and you need this action done WELL. Jackie's stunt team once again brings the action and Sammo, no stranger to delivering an action packed film, directs the hell out of Jackie and his stunt team. The results are a well done action packed comedy. It's refreshing to have this in English as well. No dubbing - when Jackie's girlfriend Miki shows up and knows no English we are greeted with subtitles. It's part of the plot and thank God she isn't dubbed. Jackie isn't the best English speaker in the world but he has certainly moved past his bad 80's films.
It was nice to see Jackie and Sammo on-screen together again (Sammo has a cameo as a bike courier) and also Jackie with Richard Norton - who he worked with on both City Hunter and Twinkle Twinkle Lucky Stars. Norton is that great tall, good looking, cocky bad guy who had mad martial arts skillz - a perfect villain for Jackie. All-in-all Mr. Nice Guy is another Jackie Chan film that you can't take too seriously and you'd never want to. You are in it for the action and the fun and Mr. Nice Guy easily delivers on both parts. Monday, December 7. 2009Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: bloodsport, dennis rodman, double team, eye wannabe, jcvd, jean claude van damme, kung fu, kung fu reviews, mickey rourke, ryan mclelland
Kung Fu Reviews: Double TeamKung Fu Reviews: Double Team Reviewed by Ryan McLelland
In terms of action movies it is way, way, WAY too easy to bash Double Team. Pairing Van Damme with Dennis Rodman just doesn't 'seem' like a bad idea - it 'IS' a bad idea. It had been a number of years since I watched Double Team and in those years my kung fu/action film knowledge has probably increased 100 fold. The first new knowledge I had about this film is that it is directed by Tsui Hark - a director/producer fairly infamous in HK. Some say he is fairly hard to work with. Some swear by him. He's produced/directed an amazing amount of films including Jet Li's Once Upon A Time In China series, John Woo's A Better Tomorrow series, and going all the way back to Yuen Biao's classic Zu Warriors From The Magic Mountain.
Would have Tsui Hark direct this film make it better or worse? My guess even back then would be the same as now: some kickass action with horrible acting. Hark had some horrible acting takes in this film. It's hard to get great talking out of Van Damme at times and I'd say the directors who simply shoot, cut, and print are ones from the HK market like Hark and Ringo Lam. Obviously Van Damme is fully capable of amazing performances - from the current fan-rave JCVD going way back to Bloodsport.
Add Dennis Rodman here who cannot act. Who cannot speak. He's simply horrible. He's flamboyant Dennis Rodman put in some horrible clothing and made to try to look like he can fight. He can't. Flip that to Coolio from China Strike Force. Coolio was fun, he actually could act, and he could fight - whether that be him or at times his double - you couldn't tell nor care. If Van Damme was teamed with Coolio I think this movie would have had a lot more going for it.
The saving grace is, of course, Mickey Rourke. Rourke wasn't the golden child he is now since his resurrection thanks to Sin City and The Wrestler back when he filmed Double Team but that doesn't mean that he doesn't bring his amazing acting skills. He does - and when he's on film he certainly is the ultimate baddie. Is he on-screen enough? Of course he's not. The plot of this film is certainly not important: Van Damme plays Quinn who comes out of retirement to take down his old nemesis Stavros (Rourke). Quinn is seemingly killed but wakes up on a beautiful island with all sorts of "dead agents". Stavros has declared war on the world and in investigating a bombing (the job of the "dead agents" on this island is to interpret information for different countries) he sees a clue that Stavros has his hands on Quinn's pregnant wife. So Quinn escapes the island, teams up with his arms dealer Yaz (Rodman) and goes forth to save his wife and kill Stavros.
It is HARD to get through Double Team. The film is clunky and moves slow. I'm sure most people who don't have it in them would just turn this film off. That is actually a shame becuase the ending is actually done quite well. It's Van Damme and Rodman vs. Rourke and a tiger. A real life tiger. It's pretty damn sweet even with Rodman's horrible acting. Sammo Hung is actually credited as a special action coordinator on the film and I'm not sure how he helped - but I wouldn't be surprised if the ending of the film was chorerographed by Sammo. Speaking of the credits - there is a song done by Crystal Waters WITH Dennis Rodman. You really have to hear it to believe it. ACTUALLY - the song is ten times better than his entire performane on film. If you want great Van Damme go watch JCVD. If you want great Rourke go watch The Wrestler. If you want great Rodman..well...you'll never find that but you might have a better time with Simon Sez just because of Dane Cook. As for Double Team - it's a bad film with a great ending probably made even worse by the horrible directing of Tsui Hark and the awful acting of Dennis Rodman. For Van Damme fans like me only.
Sunday, December 6. 2009Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: bulletproof monk, chow yun fat, comic book, comic book adaptation, comic film reviews, jaime king, kung fu reviews, moviestop, seann william scott
Kung Fu Reviews/Comic Film Reviews: Bulletproof MonkKung Fu Reviews/Comic Film Reviews: Bulletproof Monk Reviewed by Ryan McLelland
While I was at MovieStop a couple weeks back I picked up Bulletproof Monk in a Buy 3 Get 1 Free promo. I had seen Bulletproof Monk at the dollar theater many moons ago when it first came out and I remember think it was...'meh-okish'. But as I'm doing these kung-fu reviews I figured I could really use different genres so I'm just reviewing Jackie Chan movies every day. Bulletproof Monk is a fun action film featuring two of my favorite things: kung-fu and comic books (yes sir - this is actually an adaptation of a comic book!). The plot is simple - one Monk watches a scroll for sixty years, gaining powers so to protect the scroll until he finds the next scroll watcher. In the 40s Nazis invade the temple looking for the scroll right as the power changes hands from the old monk to the new Monk (Chow Yun Fat). The head Nazi is Karel Roden, who is probably most famous for playing the head Nazi in Hellboy. It's a wonderful career tract for him and I'm sure he was pissed not getting cast in Inglorious Bastards. Monk gets away and sixty years later the Nazis are still following him in the modern day. Monk is looking for a replacement and ends up running into Kar (Seann William Scott), a good-hearted pickpocket who knows kung-fu because he works at a movie theater that plays only kung-fu films. The baddies are after Monk, so Kar ends up caught in the middle. There's also Jaime King who is there to be the love interest and look totally hot - accomplishing both with ease. Let's face it - Chow Yun Fat hasn't been too impressive in his American films. I actually watched The Replacement Killers last night as it really was a sub-par film. The one thing you realize between that film and Monk is how much he's improved on his English. It is certainly alot clearer and expansive then it was in TRK.
'Stifler' is the big sell of this film and as a young, charismatic actor Bulletproof Monk is sold on his ability to perform kung fu and his matchup with Chow Yun Fat. Seann is awesome in the film - he's cocky, he's charming, he's fun. He pulls the action scenes very well and while this film won't win awards for its wire work, the scenes are done well. This is the type of film where everyone knows how to fight well. The heroes, the heroine, the bad guys, everyone can kick some major ass. So having Nazis as your bad guys always feels lazy to me - especially in a movie during the early 2000's. Having never read the comic I'm not sure who were the baddies and if they were Nazis pehaps that makes sense why they are the baddies in the film adaptation. But really? Nazis? COME ON. Well - no kung fu fan will mistake Bulletproof Monk for a film by Yuen Wo Ping but it truly has its moments. I think it is one of Chow Yun Fat's best American roles, if not the most fun. Did I mention that Jaime King is SMOKING in this film??? Cause she is...
A BIG P.S. - This film is not only a kung-fu film but is a comic book film - so it also will double as the first review of our new 'Comic Film Reviews' section! GOOD JOB MONK! Friday, December 4. 2009Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: A&E, above the law, aikido, eye wannabe, eyewannabe.com, glimmer man, kung fu reviews, ryan mclelland, steven seagal lawman, under siege
Kung Fu Reviews: Steven Seagal - LawmanKung Fu Reviews: Steven Seagal - Lawman Reviewed by Ryan McLelland
This is a bit of a stretch for a 'kung fu review' but I thought it would be fun to cover the first episode of Seagal's Lawman series. Good ol' Stephen has been a Sheriff for twenty (twenty!?!?!) years now and finally landed his own reality show on A&E. It's like Cops - "Good Ol' Boys Edition" featuring Stephan Seagal! Sure Seagal is a bit bigger then he used to be but give the man a break, he's 57 years old now! The episode really was ...well... FUN! I can't even imagine being the people who call the cops and have Seagal show up. I'd personally be like, "Fuck...I can't run. He's gunna aikido the shit outta me!" One thing you learn in this episode is how Seagal applies his zen philosophy to shooting a gun. The man can shoot. He is AMAZING. I was in the Army for 12 years, I'm an incredible shot, but Seagal is...the man is a born sniper. It's astonishing to see him just kill every target and how spot on he is. His grouping is phenom. If you don't know what grouping is then you really don't know much about guns..so just take it from me when I say he's a natural.
If you came looking for Seagal to karate chop the bad guys, the show doesn't feature that. But he does chase after REAL criminals - so it's instantly much more interesting then most reality shows out there. Seagal bash all you want, but the man is still amazing in my eyes. Lawman premiered to the highest numbers A&E has ever had so obviously the show is going nowhere. It's nice to have Seagal back, even if it is on TV or a small part in Robert Rodriguez's upcoming film Machete. Will I be tuning in each week? I sure will. I love kung-fu and I love shows like Cops and Wildest Police Videos. That's what makes Steven Seagal: Lawman great for some one like me. The fact that it delivers the goods just RAWKS. New episodes every Wednesday night on A&E. Do yourselves a favor and check it out!!! Thursday, December 3. 2009Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: china strike force, coolio, drive, gangsta's paradise, kung fu, kung fu reviews, mark dacascos, only the strong, stanley tong, the crow
Kung Fu Reviews: China Strike ForceKUNG FU REVIEWS: CHINA STRIKE FORCE Reviewed by Ryan McLelland
China Strike Force surely seemed like a weird movie to me. I saw it first at MovieStop and couldn't believe my eyes. Coolio and Mark Dacascos...in the same movie?!?!?!? I put it on my Netflix queue and a few days ago it finally arrived.
What's weird about this movie to me? Well first off it is obviously an HK film but filmed in English. Why!?!?! It seems worse having actors just trying to get their lines out! Just have them speak Chinese! Subtitles rock! Why would have them speak English...so you may have a big Hollywood hit on your hands? But if you wanted a big Hollywood hit wouldn't you have actors who can speak better English and not have Coolio as one of your stars? No offense meant...because I LOVE Coolio. Love because he's horrible of course, but he's brought the awesomeness to great films like Daredevil (The Director's Cut) and Leprechaun In The Hood! But the fact this this is in English takes away from the film right from the start - especially since the film is directed by Stanley Tong - known for working with Jackie Chan on Police Story 3, First Strike, The Myth, and Rumble In The Bronx. Maybe after attempting to hit the big time with Mr. Magoo, Stanley thought an English flick would rock. AT LEAST the movie does have some bad dubbing at times. I abhor dubbing but it really hit the spot in this case.
The plot? There is none. Two cops are going after Mark and Coolio who are bringing drugs into the country. The two cops are so bland and no name that they are only known to me as Cop A and Cop B. There is also undercover agent hottie Japanese girl - her English is HORRIBLE but she is SUPER-DUPER HAWT. The cops are boring every time they are on screen EXCEPT when its an action sequence. The action sequences are top notch as one can expect from Tong. Problem is there is too much talking in-between these scenes. It's not really PLOT per se...it is really just the characters doing boring dialogue. Coolio and Dacascos actually work great together. Coolio is surprisingly awesome. He's not as good as the Dacascos/Kadeem Hardison team-up from 'Drive', but it is a very hard choice between Kadeem and Coolio. I think in the end Drive is just the better film and therefore makes the characters a bit more likeable - especially since Mark is a good guy in that film whereas he gets to play Mr. Baddie-Azz in China Strike Force. THE BEST PART OF THIS ENTIRE FILM is Coolio's character is named 'Coolio.' Seriously - that is just awesome. And yes - seriously - that is probably the 'best part' of this film. Actually Coolio himself is great in this film...I actually want to see more of him after seeing this. Problem is Coolio is stuck in this film. Never thought I'd say those words. Seeing Coolio do kung-fu...well...even if it is bad or doubled...it still makes me smile like a kid in a candy store. Definitely would have enjoyed a version without dubbing and had the Mandarin parts actually IN Mandarin. But it's all good I guess. Since some of the English speaking parts are certainly dubbed over as well (meaning the English was SO bad some else did the voice) it all fits in with the ultimate cheese factor of this film. The film is very much cheap and schlocky. The worst part is it is BORING. The actors speaking "English" is just BAHHHHHHHD. My good guesstimate is you can start fast forwarding around 35 minutes until about 1 hour 5 minutes. You miss NOTHING and get right into the last action sequence, which is pretty fun and well done.
If you want a good Stanley Tong film go rent Supercop or the cheesy-but-awesome Rumble in the Bronx. If you want good Marc Dacascos rent Drive, Only the Strong, or the amazingly-cheesy-but-super-awesome Cradle 2 The Grave. If you want good Coolio...well...this is an awesome Coolio film. If only they had more Coolio in this film it would have been just amazing but his awesome fight scene at the end almost makes this film worth it. Almost. Wednesday, December 2. 2009Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: bruce lee, chen zhen, chin woo, donnie yen, fist of fury, fist of legend, jet li, kung fu reviews, the chinese connection, yuen wah
Kung Fu Reviews: Fist Of FuryKung Fu Reviews: Fist of Fury Reviewed by Ryan McLelland
Fist Of Fury (AKA The Chinese Connection) is Bruce Lee's finest film for so, so, so many reasons. The biggest reason is the film really kicks major ass in every single way. Bruce Lee is untouchable in the film - he is a man who will take no shit from no one and kick the crap out of EVERYONE who stands in his way.
Lee is Chen Zhen - a fictional character in a fictional story with other real life characters interweaved. Zhen is a student of the famous Chin Woo school and its master Huo Yuanjia (these are the real elements - Yuanjia even died of suspicious circumstances like in the film. There are several films and TV shows about Yuanjia most famously is Fearless starring Jet Li in the titular role). Chen Zhen returns to Chin Woo just as they are burying Huo Yuanjia. Zhen knew his master was not ill and immediately suggests foul play. The death of his sifu also brings trouble from a Japanese karate school who show up at the funeral with an insulting sign. Zhen brings the sign back to the Japanese dojo and ends up beating up EVERYONE. This in turn angers the Japanese (who wouldn't...getting beat up sucks) who go to Chin Woo, starting a riot, and insisting they turn over Chen Zhen. Zhen then must stay hidden but then goes off to solve the history of who exactly killed his sifu. Surprisingly enough the film keeps you to the very last moment, with an amazingly unhappy ending. There's so much to mention about this film. From The Big Boss to Way of the Dragon alot of the supporting cast remains the same throughout the films including total hottie Nora Maio and American heavy Bob Wall. Some of the Seven Little Darlings appear in this film: Yuen Wah confronts Bruce Lee when he tries to enter a garden and Jackie Chan appears in stunt work only doubling for a Japanese master getting kicked HARD.
The film would have a sequel called New Fist of Fury that was ABYSMAL. The film would also create a folkhero in Chen Zhen who, although not a real person, would go on to feature in several more movies and television series. Donnie Yen would star in a television series titled Fist of Fury and Jet Li would star in a remake titled Fist of Legend. Directed by Yuen Wo Ping - Fist of Legend is a sheer masterpiece and is Jet Li's finest film. Of course he had great source material. Bruce Lee SHINES in Fist of Fury and his charisma really shoots forth in a way that wasn't seen in The Big Boss. The film still plays wonderfully - even forty years later. Perhaps it is being set in the early 1900s, so as already being a timepiece, that helps Fist of Fury as nothing seems dated as some things do in Big Boss or Way of the Dragon.
When asked what my favorite Bruce Lee film is, this is the one I always recommend. It is a dynamite picture that I'm still amazed at years later. The film changed the Hong Kong film industry all together and paved the way for many new stars to come. And let's face it...Bruce Lee kicks ass!!! Monday, November 30. 2009Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: dragons forever, jackie chan, jackie chan's project a, kung fu reviews, project a, project a part II, ryan mclelland, sammo hung, wheels on meals, yuen biao
Kung Fu Reviews: Project AKung Fu Reviews: Project A Reviewed by Ryan McLelland
Project A is just a fun movie all-around. Jackie Chan wrote, starred, and directed the film which also featured his brother Yuen Biao and Sammo Hung. It's the first of their three collabs together and this is not the best of them (actually Wheels on Meals and Dragons Forever are perhaps tied in this category) but the film finally gets the three box-office stars together for a great film.
The plot is simple: Jackie plays Sergeant Dragon Ma - platoon sergeant for the Coast Guard. The Coast Guard is looking to take down a squad of pirates who are terrorizing the Hong Kong seas. Just as the Coast Guard is getting ready to go out and take down the pirates, the pirates sink all off the Coast Guard's ships. With no ships the Coast Guard is disbanded and Sergeant Ma and his men are transferred to a police force special missions squad. Unfortunetly for Ma his officer is Inspector Hong, played by Yuen Biao, who the Coast Guard just had a big fight with in a local bar. On Ma's first assignment to capture a criminal he ends up caught in burcreacratic bullshit. He gets the bad guy but decides to quit the force. Right afterwards he runs into his old friend Fei (Sammo) who is a smuggler, smartass type. Fei's trying to steal guns that are being sold to the pirates and enlists Ma to help. They pull it off but Ma then thinks Fei is going to sell the guns anyway, so he gets the guns and gives them back to the army. The rest of the movie then has Dragon Ma avoiding the pirates, teaming with his old unit, Hong and Fei, and going undercover to the pirate's HQ to try and rescue a slew of captured British including a Rear Admiral sent to help with the pirates. The plot is simple and the choreography complex. The beauty of Project A is the teaming of Sammo, Biao, and Jackie together for an entire film. Each had amazing careers up to this point already and each had been in each other's films but never together. It's the big draw of the film and it does not disappoint on ANY level.
There is a scene where Jackie climbs a flagpole while handcuffed. He gets to the roof and has a battle inside. Then he has to jump off the top (actually "slipping" off a clock's hand) and falls down to the ground. No stunt doubles here - these are stunts that Jackie actually did. Watching the take you see Jackie fall all the way down and land ON HIS HEAD. After reading Jackie's biography I actually know that he did this dangerous stunt not once BUT TWICE. HE WAS SIXTY FEET UP IN THE AIR!!! It's the kind of attention to detail and lack of wire work that makes Project A incredible. One other great scene is Jackie riding a bicycle through back alleys trying to avoid the pirates. Using alleys and the bicycle itself Jackie takes down all the pirates in an effort to escape. The results are simply mind-blowing. Of the three films the Three Dragons did together this one I like the least. Is it bad? NO. Are the other ones that good? YES. All three have terrific chemistry here and are quite fun to watch, especially with their different personalities. It's a shame that neither Biao nor Sammo came back for the sequel. BE WARNED: If you are watching an American release it is probably dubbed. The dubbing SUCKS. Find this badboy in Cantonese to truly enjoy the film as it should be. Nothing worse than lines like, "Hey! It's your old pal, Fats!" Thursday, November 26. 2009Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Kung Fu Reviews: Knockabout
My favorite martial artist of all time is Yuen Biao. The man is just a phenomenon - especially when he was young. The man is just fluid and amazing - performing aerial stunts that border on near impossible. Biao may not be as famous as some of his counterparts but, to me, there is no one more fun to watch on-screen. 1979's Knockabout is not Biao's first film - he had been doing stunts and co-starring in films for a couple years before this film. Knockabout IS Biao's first major screen role and it truly shows off his acting ability and his phenom martial arts. Of course it certainly helps that he is directed by Sammo Hung - the man knows how to direct a motion picture. Add him as a co-star to the mix and you have a kickass flick.
Biao plays Yipao, a con artist who works closely with his 'brother' Taipao. The two work together performing small cons on a village circa late 1800s/early 1900s China. The two are decent enough conmen who usually end up on some bad luck once a con is pulled off, usually using fast talking and subpar kung fu to get them out of situations. The duo end up seeing a man in a restauraunt and decide to steal his bag. When the plot doesn't goes as planned Yipao and Taipao jump the man in the woods, only to find themselves beat the fuck up. The two see an opprotunity: get this man to become their sifu and get a chance to learn some real kung-fu. So they hound Chia until he decides to take them on as his students. Chia is not what he seems and the boys soon learn their master is Old Fox - a criminal being sought after by the authorities. Not only does Old Fox kill a policeman but he turns on his own students, kiilling Taipao as well after Yipao witnesses the death of the cop. Yipao barely escapes and ends up running into the Blinking Beggar (SAMMO!!!!) who has been turning up throughout the film. Of course the beggar is a kung-fu genius and agrees to teach Yipao everything he knows so he can avenge his 'brother'. Certainly the script is not important - it is your basic 'Young Master gets trained by bum/drunk to avenge someone in the end' plot that plagued many of the 70's kung fu films. Again it is Biao who shines. You watch him do 10 flips in a row and you are dumbfounded. You watch him do these flips atop a small table and you are simply...without words. Later films would showcase his acrobatics better (the end scene from Dragons Forever amazes me every single time I watch it) but considering this is Biao's first lead film he couldn't have started off better. Knockabout is a kung-fu classic - a shame that it isn't truly recognized as such. The film has a very silly feel to it at the start which is good - the comedy leads you to care for Yipao and Taipao. By the time Taipao dies and Yipao starts training, the film takes a more serious turn. It feels like two different films put together, as if two different directors show 1/2 a film each. But I don't feel that the shift is a bad thing. The beginning shows Yipao in a free carefree lifestyle only to be forced to grow up very fast. You can also tell by his hair and build why the producers of Game of Death chose to use Biao as one of the 'Bruce Lee' stunt doubles in the film. The man just looks MAD Bruce Leeish in Knockabout. This is probably my second favorite 'solo' Yuen Biao film - the flick The Prodigal Son (again directed by Sammo) would take the same-ish plot and just do it WAY better. But Biao was a bit bigger then and because of this more money and time was probably spent on the film. Wednesday, November 25. 2009Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: b13-u, banlieue 13 ultimatum, cyril raffaelli, david belle, district b13 ultimatum, kung fu reviews, luc besson, parkour
Kung Fu Reviews: B13-U
B13-U (aka District 13: Ultimatum) is the new sequel to the incredible Banlieue 13 (which I reviewed right here). Does it live up to its amazing predecessor!?!?!?! The original B13 had one of the most amazing starts to a film ever. EVER. The film was superb because it had minimal plot and maximum action. B13-U has alot of plot and not as much action, but the action it does have is phenom. Cyril Raffaelli and David Belle are both back for the sequel, both showing off their amazing Parkour and martial arts abilities (former porn star and beautiful actress Dany Verissimo, unfortunetly, did not come back for part 2. Writer/producer Luc Besson is back!). The two work swimmingly together - it is as if every buddy cop movie should feature this phenom duo. When twenty guys show up to beat Cyril up, you truly believe he can take them all down. Just look into his eyes during the film and you just KNOW he is ready to kick some major ass. As for Parkour creator Belle, any excuse to take his shirt off and use every wall as a weapon he'll take.
The plot? Internal secret police DISS is plotting to have the slum District 13 destroyed. By destroyed I mean have the entire slum blown to the ground and rebuild from scratch. Where do the people who live in the slum go? Who cares!!! Damien (Raffaelli) is setup on a drug charge and arrested. Luckily he gets a call to Leito (Belle) and the man breaks him out of jail. Together the two recruit some of the most kickass gangmembers from the slum and decide to take down DISS and the government once and for all. Will the gangmembers win? Of course they will - that's not giving any of the plot away. But how they do it is surely something to watch.
That's it...that's the entire plot. The film actually does have WAY too much plot even though it is very simple to explain. Once that plot is setup it is onto the non-stop action. But the action is spread out in this sequel where the original just kept going until it felt like your eyes are bleeding. You can't take away from Ultimatum - it is truly one hell of a sequel. I really can't wait to sit back and watch it again, it is a film I'll watch over and over, again and again. Will they make a third film? One hopes so because this franchise really can make your eyes bleed with kung-fooey pleasure. |
CategoriesRyan's TwattingsI see that DC Comics used my quote for the trade paperback collection of @thatkevinsmith 's Batman: Cacophony. Kewl! Wednesday, April 28 2010
Watching Ren & Stimpy with Tyler...they still look horrible, these early episodes...but he is loving them. Sunday, April 18 2010 @bessrogers We'd love to have you and Leila down on May 1st to promote your show if you guys are up for it...!!! Sunday, April 18 2010 @thatkevinsmith Not to be a dead horse...but what's going on with the Big Helium Dog DVD??? Sunday, April 18 2010 What the hell is a Chelsea Handler and why does it like move #78 out of the Kama Sutra? Friday, April 9 2010 Another week...with no Jamiroquai news. They are just doing this to spite me. Wednesday, April 7 2010 Happy Zombie Jesus day people...don't forget that Jesus came back today to prove a point...that Jew brains are YUMMY! Sunday, April 4 2010 Just updated my info on Bess Rogers's fan list via @FanBridge. You should join it! - http://fburls.com/37-fJDmEplb Sunday, April 4 2010 @aishatyler - the gamertag is RyanDMC - when you are ready to get schooled like a 4 year old playing Ms. Pac Man hit me up for some Halo. Thursday, April 1 2010 No an April Fools joke...first day of being vegan. I hope soy milk is good... Thursday, April 1 2010 Calendar
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