THE MONKEY KING 2 (西游记之孙悟空三打白骨精)
Director : Soi Cheang Pou-soi
Cast : Aaron Kwok, Gong Li, Feng Shaofeng, Xiao Shenyang, Him Law, Kelly Chen, Kris Phillips
Genre : Action/Fantasy
Run Time : 119 mins
Opens : 5 February 2016
Rating : PG13 (Brief Nudity)
Sun Wukong broke Chinese New
Year box office records two years ago in 2014’s The Monkey King, but in-universe, 500 years have elapsed since he
wreaked havoc in the heavens. The deity Guan Yin (Chen) charges Wukong (Kwok)
with protecting the monk Tang Sanzang (Feng) on his voyage to retrieve ancient
scriptures from a faraway monastery. Wukong is initially reluctant, and finds
that he is duty-bound to guard Sanzang, “shackled” by a tiara that grips his
head. Along the way, Wukong and Sanzang are joined by Zhu Bajie (Xiaoshenyang),
a pig-man with a weakness for beautiful women, and Sha Wujing (Law), a strong, blue-skinned
warrior. Sanzang is being pursued by Baiguzing (Gong), a demon who believes
that consuming Sanzang’s flesh will grant her immortality. Our band of
travellers must defeat deception, supernatural threats and overcome their own
in-fighting if they’re to reach their goal.
Wu Cheng’en’s 16th Century classic Journey to the West is comprised of 100
chapters. The first seven chapters were the basis for the 2014 film and the
titular “journey” begins proper in this sequel. The Monkey King 2 is an improvement over its predecessor in that
while it lacks coherence and trades in overblown bombast, it’s nowhere near as
cringe-worthy as the 2014 movie. For one thing, the visual effects work has
improved and the opening sequence in which Wukong blasts his way out of his
mountain prison while fighting a white tiger kicks the film off on the right
footing. Because more of the story takes place on an earthly plane than the
“Havoc in the Heavens” of the first one, the environments are altogether less
phony, with a portion of the film shot on location in New Zealand. Some of the
computer-generated creatures and effects are passable if not great, but the
horde of reanimated skeletons that Zhu Bajie and Sha Wujing must fend off looks
like they stepped out of a PlayStation 2 cutscene. It pales in comparison to
the similar sequence in Jason and the
Argonauts, released some 53 years ago.
Kwok played the villainous Bull Demon King in the first
film and takes over as Sun Wukong from Donnie Yen. It’s slightly odd, like if
the new series of Sherlock suddenly
starred Andrew Scott as Sherlock Holmes. Kwok does a fine job and even though
he doesn’t have the same martial arts background as Yen, Wukong engages in a whole
bunch more fighting in this one. Sammo Hung serves as the action director and
for the most part, the wire-fu is neatly executed. Kwok’s take on the character
is more bearable, mostly because Wukong does less wanton harassment at this
point in the story.
Gong has played many a femme fatale in her time and calls on those wiles as Baigujing.
It’s not an inspired performance by any stretch of the imagination, but it
works. This version gives Baigujing three sexy minions, a bat lady, a snake
lady and a hyena lady. They all hang out in a lair which has the same interior
designer as Superman’s Fortress of Solitude. Similarly, the characterisations
of Tang Sanzang, Zhu Bajie and Sha Wujing are pretty much how they’ve been
portrayed in decades of film and TV shows. Sanzang is idealistic, well-meaning
and naïve to the point of stupidity, Zhu Bajie is the comic relief and Sha
Wujing is the dumb muscle. Sha Wujing is typically portrayed as just a burly
dude, but is given more of an other-worldly appearance, with blue skin and
bulging muscles.
The Monkey King 2
has its entertaining moments and it doesn’t stray too far from the source
material, but there’s a noticeable lull in the middle and several action
sequences go on for too long without sufficiently advancing the plot. The
visual effects are surprisingly competent in spots, but a significant lack of
polish on the whole is still evident. An emotional sequence at the film’s
conclusion is melodramatic and there’s the sense that this would-be tearful
moment is not earned. It’s better than the 2014 movie, but then again, most
things are.
Summary: The Monkey King 2 is an improvement on its predecessor and packs in a healthy amount of action, but the quality of the visual effects work is a very mixed bag and it’s still quite the mess overall.
Summary: The Monkey King 2 is an improvement on its predecessor and packs in a healthy amount of action, but the quality of the visual effects work is a very mixed bag and it’s still quite the mess overall.
RATING: 2.5
out of 5 Stars
Jedd Jong
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