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March 31 Flashpoint - DVD reviewIn a departure from the kind of roles that made him famous, Donnie Yen is back on our screens in a brutal cop thriller. Flashpoint is set in Hong Kong just before the 1997 handover, for no other reason perhaps than it helps bring to mind Jackie Chan movies but there is no humour to be found in this Police Story. Instead Donnie doffs his rage to one of his favourite movies Fist Of Fury and his hero Bruce Lee. This he does with gusto. Our hero swaps swords for guns and pigtail for a pair of shades as a modern day cop on a quest to bring three psycho brothers to justice. And of course even before Hong Kong was handed back to the Chinese, it had cops who knew kung fu! Hamstung with red tape and officials who seem more on the side of the Triads than justice, Donnie is driven to extremes when his undercover pal's identity is blown. "You will not have seen moves so fast and furious or such swaying swagger since the great Bruce Lee himself. Donnie must be proud." Yes you've heard it all before and despite treading a fine line between gloss and realism, the movie is little more than average for the first 40 minutes. But if you can hang tough like Donnie asks his pal Louis Koo, you will be rewarded with an Ong Bak influenced chase scene and one of the most hardcore MMA (Mixed Martial Arts) fight scenes yet committed to celluloid. It all kicks off quite literally when Donnie gets down to business with Triad boss Colin Chou who played Seraph, the Oracle's protector, in Matrix Reloaded. You will not have seen moves so fast and furious or such swaying swagger since the great Bruce Lee himself. Donnie must be proud. And there's even a nod and a wink to Jackie Chan as the titles roll but instead of the funny out-takes, we get the hard as nails training fights the actors put themselves through. I'm not convinced yet that Flashpoint will become a classic but for the big fight scene alone, it's a must-see. March 26 Martial Arts master Donnie Yen swaps swords for gunsThis week's big news is the imminent DVD release of Flashpoint, the new movie choreographed by and starring Donnie Yen, which is out on Monday.
If you don't know Donnie where have you been? Since making a name for himself as Jet Li's opponent in Once Upon A Time in China 2 he has starred in countless kung fu classics including one of my all time favourites Iron Monkey, and more recently as Sky, in the memorable rain soaked sword fight in Hero.
In Flashpoint, Donnie swaps swords for MMA (Mixed Martial Arts) and John Woo style gunplay as he plays a detective who take on the Triads to rescue an undercover cop.
I'll be reviewing the movie next week. March 25 Oscar winner Theron is new Lady Vengeance
Charlize Theron is to produce and star in an English language remake of 2005 South Korean movie Sympathy For Lady Vengeance. The remake is due out next year. Theron won the Oscar for Best Actress in 2004 for her role in Monster but you may have seen her in the adaptation of sci-fi animated series Aeon Flux (pictured) or opposite Mark Wahlberg in the remake of The Italian Job. The former model is also famous for appearing in Playboy. Lady Vengeance was the final installment in Korean director Park Chan-wook's Vengeance Trilogy starring Lee Young Ae, most famous for its middle installment Oldboy. Which version of the film will Charlize follow? The original is famous for its additional 'Fade to Black and White' version which progressively loses colour as the protagonist loses her humanity and becomes the murderous Lady Vengeance of the title. March 23 Stormriders return in 300 style blockbuster
Ekin Cheng and Aaron Kwok are to reprise their roles as Whispering Wind and Striding Cloud in a sequel to The Stormriders ten years after the original was released. Produced by legendary Hong Kong film studio Golden Harvest, The Stormriders was a huge box office success based on a series of comic books by Fung Wan, which were in turn highly praised for their depiction of swordplay. The first Stormriders movie was a special effects extravaganza directed by Andrew Lau whose earlier work Young and Dangerous also starred Ekin Cheng and spawned 4 sequels and a prequel. The Pang twins whose horror flick The Eye has just been remade for Western audiences had (inevitably) been linked with the role of directors. Veteran actor Simon Yam, Cheng's co-star in Young and Dangerous 1, 2 and 3, is set to replace Japanese martial arts icon Sonny Chiba as the new villain. Trivia fans might remember Chiba playing Hattori Hanzō, the world's greatest sword maker in Kill Bill. Chiba is also the hero of Christian Slater 's character in True Romance, also scripted if not directed by Tarantino. Stormriders II, reported to have a budget of $12 million, is to be shot exclusively on blue screen in an effort to emulate the most recent successful graphic novel adaptation, 300. Expect it in cinemas in 2009. March 19 Lionsgate have Jessica Alba's Eye out
The English language version of eye-popping Hong Kong/Thai horror movie The Eye is out in UK cinemas on April 24th. The remake of Oxide and Danny Pang's creepy classic stars the Fantastic Four's Invisible Woman, Jessica Alba, in the leading role as the blind violinist who sees dead after a double cornea transplant. The movie is released by Lionsgate home of all those Marvel Comics animes. For more info on the original see my last blog entry. Meanwhile if you're an Alba addict, watch this trailer...
Visit the offical website to view the trailer in hi-def, see more pics and to download MySpace skins of the film. March 16 Eye see dead people
The Hollywood remake of The Eye starring Jessica Alba (the Fantastic Four's Invisible Woman) will be in UK cinemas soon so I thought this would be a great opportunity to talk about the original for those who missed it. Released in 2002, The Eye (Gin Gwai) is a spooky yet stylish horror movie in the vein of The Ring and The Grudge (Ju-on) with a bit of Final Destination thrown in for good measure. Like it's esteemed company it has spawned native sequels as well as an English language remake. The plot surrounds Mun, a blind violinst played by Angelica Lee, who undergoes a cornea transplant from a dead Thai girl. Her sight is finally regained after 18 years of darkness but she soon realises that the operation was more curse than cure. Things get creepy as she begins to see people no one else can - ghostly figures that seem to be premonitions of gruesome deaths! As if things aren't morbid enough on-screen, the weirdness extends behind the scenes of the production. It was made by twin brother screenwriter/directors Oxide and Danny Pang and that concept alone always make me picture the girls who haunt the hotel in Kubrick's The Shining! The Pangs were inspired to write The Eye after remembering a report in a Hong Kong newspaper about a 16 year old girl who committed suicide after receiving a cornea transplant. They said they wondered what she had seen that drove her to take her own life. Often described both as a Hong Kong or a Thai movie, it was in fact shot in both locations and is available with Cantonese and Thai soundtracks. To add to the confuson, the Pang brothers although born in Hong Kong, made their names in the Thai film industry with their co-directorial debut Bangkok Dangerous in 1999. A note for collectors - if you're lucky you can still get the special edition DVD from Tartan which includes an animated card of the sleeve artwork. March 08 Jet and Jackie make kung fu history
The offical site has been launched for the new Jet Li/Jackie Chan collaboration The Forbidden Kingdom which is out in US cinemas next month. Forbidden Kingdom is billed as the first onscreen pairing of the martial arts legends, surely the two most famous living martial artists on the planet, and is choreographed by much sought after Yuen Woo Ping (Crouching Tiger, Matrix, Kill Bill, Iron Monkey, Magnificent Butcher). Dressed in all the trappings of a Hollywood blockbuster, this was actually shot on location in China and judging by the trailer looks amazing. Sort of Crouching Tiger meets Bulletproof Monk. The plot takes 21st Century teenager Michael Angarano (last seen in 24) and transports him into Chinese mythology where he must free the Monkey King ... "Born in an egg on a mouuunntain top", everybody! .... from the Jade War Lord. But first he must be trained in 'kung fu' by Silent Monk (Li) and 'drunken master' Lu Yan (Chan). It might look as spectacular as Hero or Curse Of The Golden Flower but this is a movie that doesn't appear to take itself too seriously. Expect lots of trademark Chan comedy as 'J +J' play off each other. March 03 DVD review - Tales From Earthsea (aka Gedo senki )The latest anime dvd from the awesome Studio Ghibli is the first directed by Goro Miyazaki but lacks most of the charm of those directed by his father Hayao Miyazaki (Howl’s Moving Castle, Spirited Away, Princess Mononoke). Adapted from a collection of short stories by American sci-fi and children’s author Ursula K Le Guin, the book shouldn’t be required reading for enjoying the movie, but any clues to the storyline would have helped. "the book shouldn't be required reading for enjoying the movie" As far as I could tell, it is a story about the redemption of a young prince Arren in a land where magic and dragons exist. This is overshadowed by a long standing rivalry between the good arch mage Ged (aka Sparrowhawk) and an evil wizard Cob. Light versus darkness and all the usual gubbings. In the English version, Sparrowhawk is voiced by former Bond Timothy Dalton and Arren by Matt Levin, one of the voice over artists from the Xbox sci-fi game Mass Effect. The story is less comprehensible than Spirited Away and more Westernised than Howl’s Moving Castle but without any of their genius. The drawing style is distinctly Ghibli but has a brighter (younger?) colour palette than usual – I’m not sure why but I kept thinking of Dogtanian and the Muskahounds. "the most Japanese thing about this movie is the villain who looks like a woman yet talks like a man" The viewer can’t help feeling that Ghibli are trying too hard to break the Western market without realising that the essence of their appeal to audiences here is their (for want of a better word) Japaneseness. Yet the most Japanese thing about this movie is the villain who looks like a woman yet talks like a man, as creepy as that is. In all my years of watching Japanese cartoons, I have still to figure out why they do that! Maybe it arose from casting confusion when Manga first started to be dubbed into English? In short, worth renting but not buying. (3 out of 5) |
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