google.com, pub-1996401214588839, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 Asian Drama Queen: Asian cinema

The Queen of Asian Drama is Back with more Irreverent Reviews and Snarky Commentary.

Showing posts with label Asian cinema. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asian cinema. Show all posts

Friday, April 23, 2010

Shinjuku Incident




A 2009 China release that stars Jackie Chan, Naoto Takenaka, Daniel Wu, Xu Jinglei, and Fan Bingbing.
Even as over-rated as he became at one point in his illustrious career, I can still never pass up a chance to watch Jackie Chan star in a movie.
Especially a movie that ignores his old, stuck-in-a-rut ways and forces him to portray a character unlike any he's done in the past.
Shinjuku Incident is about an everyday Chinese man whose fiance decides to leave the country in search of a better life.
He can't get her out of his mind, and when she stops replying to his letters, he hops a freighter and illegally enters Japan in an effort to find her.
The creepy factor aside (he looks so old now, it's not funny - and they cast him beside Xu Jing Lei, a girl more than half his age), this movie did well to suck me in and keep me wide-eyed for the duration.
No Jackie Chan humor, no death-defying Gung fu, and if I'm not mistaken, he got his ass kicked a few times!
Apparently, Shinjuku is a place where illegal, Asian immigrants hang out, and though the problem is real and the hatred against immigrants of any race is a cultural phenomenon in Japan, the story concentrated more on Steelhead and his own, personal issues with trying to survive in a foreign land after he finds out that his beloved is married to an up-n-coming Yakuza boss.
He struggles at the start, but his fellow illegals rely on him to make things better and to help out.
Eventually, he makes good - but his goofy friends can't handle their success and start to fall back on their old, bad ways (yea, right).
Daniel Wu traveled to Japan with Jackie, and he's a goofy, young kid with no talent or drive.
Jackie buys him an almond cart and Daniel is really happy about it until the day a Yakuza thug does something really mean and ruins the kids life forever.
The ending is an anticipated bloodbath, but I still think this movie was decent and worth the watch.



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Sunday, September 07, 2008

Warlords (2007)

Tóu Míng Zhuàng


This bloody piece of work stars Andy Lau, Jet Li, and Takeshi Kaneshiro. Leading up to it's premiere, this dark and dismal flick garnered much in the way of anticipatory excitement in Asia and abroad, but I have no idea about what occurred afterward.

It's the story of a soldier who survives a bloody battle, and after he wanders into a filthy and desolate encampment, he manages to encourage the men to follow him into battle against his foe.

Jet Li is that soldier, and he not only cried, but he behaved like a naughty boy when he had sex with & fell in love with Andy Lau's common law wife!!!

Andy's character was the only one that stayed true to form, because Takeshi Kaneshiro's character was even more far-removed than Li's! Li portrayed a bad boy (for a welcome change, and now that he's too old for it to matter anymore), but Tak's character was ... well, he was insane, to put it mildly.



Such a refreshing change, and yet the movie was far, too brutal for me to actually enjoy. I'm sure the writers & directors kept to the script & tried to portray reality as best as they could, but ... ugh. I think I took a hot shower after it was over.

Andy's so cool, Tak is so hot, and Li is ... well, he's someone I don't think I know anymore! And, don't get me wrong, because I think it's great when actors can step outside themselves like this and shock the hell out of their fans! You need to watch the movie in order to understand where my confusion & unenthusiastic review stems from.


It was good, but in a depressing & bone-chilling sort of way that I'm not, too fond of. The acting was superb, and the storyline was quite interesting. It's just that Warlords is probably the exact opposite of Hero, and maybe that's where my depressed emotions lie.