DRAGON BLADE (天将雄师)
Director : Daniel Lee
Cast : Jackie Chan, John Cusack, Adrien Brody, Choi Siwon, Wang Ruoxin, Lin Peng, Jozef Waite
Genre : Action/Martial Arts
Run Time : 127 mins
Opens : 19 February 2015
Rating : PG13 (Violence)
Chinese
New Year movie season is here again and to usher in the Year of the Goat,
Jackie Chan takes us on a cross-cultural journey down the Silk Road. In this
historical action epic, Chan plays Huo An, commander of the Protection Squad of
the Western Regions – a Han Dynasty CHiPs of sorts. Framed for treason, he is
sent to a labour camp on the outskirts of China, where he crosses paths with
Roman general Lucius (Cusack). Lucius is being pursued by the cruel Tiberius (Brody)
who, having killed his father and poisoned his young brother Publius (Waite),
wants the 36 districts around the Silk Road to bow to him. Huo An and Lucius
form an unlikely alliance against the tyrant, choosing unity over discord as
numerous armies gather in the desert to face off.
Dragon Blade begins with a proclamation
that it is based on a true story – it’s based more on fanciful conjecture than
anything else. The premise requires heaps of suspension of disbelief to swallow
but over the course of the film, most anyone would find it hard to suspend
their disbelief. Many viewers might in fact become best friends with their
disbelief. Writer-director Daniel Lee has delivered an uproarious celebration
of unintentional hilarity. With a USD $65 million budget, the most expensive
film production in the history of Chinese cinema is a lavish, ill-conceived
mess. While the costumes designed by Thomas Chong are meticulously crafted and
shooting on location in the vast expanses of the Gobi Desert lends the picture
sufficient production value, this does little to give weight to the hokey story
and generally terrible performances. A 15 minute stretch of the film in which
Lucius’ and Huo An’s men put aside their differences to collaborate on an
ambitious construction project feels like the plot is being put on hold, until
one realises that is supposed to be the plot.
Upon
first meeting Lucius, Huo An asks “is there any way no fight?” Let’s break this
down: the Romans all speak English – fine, it’s hardly the first movie to do
that. Huo An is supposed to have somehow learned English and his halting
command of the language is meant to establish a communication barrier. That’s
iffy. Finally, the Romans are all shown singing in Latin. Then again, would
Jackie Chan mangling Latin dialogue be any better? Because the proceedings are
so melodramatic and possess no real tension or weight, this reviewer decided it
was more fulfilling to decipher the logic behind why anyone in this movie
speaks the way they do. Later on, Huo An gets to deliver the gem of a line “you
look down on human”, as if extra-terrestrial invaders have entered the fray –
which might as well be the case, given how ridiculous the plot already is
anyway.
Judging
from interviews, career choices and his philantrophy, Jackie Chan views himself
as a beacon of understanding between cultures and indeed, most of his movies
can be enjoyed by anyone regardless of cultural background, the controversy
surrounding Chan’s personal politics notwithstanding. Here, this translates
into an awkward preachiness, the film’s heavy-handed message of joining hands
and singing “kumbaya” around the campfire coming off as equal parts simplistic
and pretentious. Huo An is a stoic leader with a tragic past – while Jackie
Chan has excelled at more serious roles before, that is clearly not his forte.
Points for trying something different and while he still excels at the
sword-fighting sequences, he seems ill-suited to the part and his signature
childlike playfulness and unique approach to screen fighting is sorely missed.
After
decades of Asian actors struggling to cross over into the American film market,
it seems high time we get more Hollywood actors floundering about in Asian
movies. John Cusack truly looks like he doesn’t want to be there – he famously
divides the projects he chooses into “one for them” and “one for me” and it’s
plenty obvious which category Dragon
Blade falls into. Adrien Brody doesn’t do much for most of the film,
snarling and issuing threats in menacing tones. While Brody has done some good
work in smaller films as of late, he still very much is the “Oscar Curse”
incarnate. Here’s it’s painfully clear that playing a scary Ancient Roman
villain, ala Joaquin Phoenix in Gladiator,
isn’t for everyone. As the young prince Publius, Jozef Waite delivers one of
the most awkward, stilted performances we’ve seen from a child actor in recent
memory.
Bad
movies are a denarius a dozen. Movies that are bad in as fascinating and novel
a way as this one is are rarer. Sitting through Dragon Blade was the most fun this reviewer has had in a theatre in
ages, many moments sure to elicit howls from audiences. From the superfluous
framing story featuring Vanness Wu as an archaeologist to the United Colours of
Benetton moral to the most eclectic cast of the year (which manages to fit in a
Korean pop idol, a French singer, a China-based British child star and an Oscar
winner), Dragon Blade is nothing if
not entertainingly bizarre. It may only be February, but we’re calling this the
funniest comedy of 2015.
Summary: A “so bad it’s good” novelty in the extreme, Dragon Blade is a baffling
cross-cultural mishmash that has to be seen to be believed. Highly recommended
in the most ironic sense.
RATING: 2 out of 5 Stars
Jedd Jong
Jedd Jong
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