Dragon [Wu Xia] - Movie Review
Rating: 4 out of 5
Combining a period drama, police procedural and raucous wu-xia action, this superbly made Chinese thriller grabs our attention from the outrageous opening scene and never lets up. Not only are the fight sequences exceptionally inventive, but the acting is first-rate, stirring up emotional resonance as well as lots of mysterious intrigue.
It's set in a sleepy village in Yunan province in 1917, where the mild-mannered Jin-xi (Yen) lives with his family. But when two ruthless killers attack his stationery shop, something about the way Jin-xi "accidentally" defeats them looks suspicious to big-city detective Xu (Kaneshiro). As he pieces together the events, he begins to suspect that Jin-xi is simply too skilled at battle. Could he even be the nation's most-wanted criminal: the missing commander of the notorious Demon gang? If this is true, Xu knows that Jin-xi will do almost anything to protect his family and maintain his tranquil new life.
Director Chan cleverly peels apart the opening assault as the Sam Spade-like Xu investigates it, using slow-motion and freeze-frames to reveal secrets in ways that are both fascinating and thrilling. This also cleverly lets us know right off the bat that there's a lot more going on here than meets the eye. And all of the actors fill their scenes with churning subtext, which not only adds spark to the interpersonal drama but also makes the action sequences that much more exciting.
As Jin-xi's past comes back to haunt him with a vengeance, the plot takes several unexpected turns involving both his wife (Tang) and a crazy plan Xu comes up with to get them all out alive. So by the time the nasty Demon master (Wang) appears, the stakes are very high indeed, and how it plays out is pretty shocking. Some of the fight scenes are shot in ways that feel a bit hard to see, but the film is otherwise so skilfully made that we barely even realise that this movie reveals a rather intriguing truth about human nature: if you're a truly good person, you'll have little choice but to do the right thing.
Rich Cline
Facts and Figures
Year: 2011
Genre: Foreign
Production compaines: Dingsheng Cultural Industry Investment, JSBC Eudemonia Blue Ocean TV & Movie Group, We Pictures, Yunnan Film Group
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 4 / 5
Cast & Crew
Director: Peter Ho-sun Chan
Producer: Peter Ho-sun Chan
Screenwriter: Oi Wah Lam
Starring: Donnie Yen as Liu Jin-xi, Takeshi Kaneshiro as Xu Bai-jiu, Tang Wei as Ayu, Jimmy Wang Yu as The Master, Kara Hui as Shi San Liang, Yin Zhu-Sheng as Xu Kun, Zheng Wei as Liu Fang-Zheng, Li Jia-Min as Liu Xiao-Tian, Yu Kang as Yan Dong-Sheng, Kenji Tanigaki as Xiao Ge Zi, Wu Jiang as Detective, Li Xiaoran as Xu's wife