Showing posts with label Tiger Chen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tiger Chen. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Triple Threat: Starring Everybody Cool


You could call it the Expendables of action movies, except the original Expendables were action movies to begin with. Those were big budget films, featuring big name stars, who were arguably on the downswing of their careers. This is the opposite: a scrappy production, featuring some of Asia’s best martial arts stars, alongside some direct-to-DVD-ish fan favorites, all of whom are in their absolute peak screen-fighting condition. Forget boring stuff like plot and focus on the martial arts when Jesse V. Johnson’s Triple Threat releases today on DVD.

Once Collins’ crew of mercenary terrorists break him out of a MI6 black site in the jungles of Southeast Asia, he can get down to the business of killing Chinese heiress Tian Xiao Xian. She has a lofty plan to fight crime in Maha Jaya, a fictional country that looks suspiciously like Thailand, with massive grants for education and social welfare. Frankly, the country’s crime syndicates would actually be delighted with such a scheme, because they would find a way to divert and appropriate funds from her program until it was nothing but dry bones, but fine, we will play along with the Macguffin.

Collins’ right-hand man Devereaux breaks him out, but he leaves three incredibly disappointed witnesses for dead. Payu and Long Fei were Indonesian guides, hired to guide them to the jungle prison, under the false pretext of a humanitarian rescue. Naturally, they quickly became loose ends. Jaka was a contractor hired by the British, whose wife died during the raid. Despite a rocky introduction, the two brothers will team up with Jaka to protect the heiress and get some payback. Admittedly, Jaka isn’t all that concerned about Tian, but Payu and Long Fei are more heroically inclined.

Presumably, the triple team refers to Jaka, Payu, and Long Fei, played by Iko Uwais, Tony Jaa, and Tiger Chen, respectively (all of whom are in fine form.) They are more than fairly matched by Collins and his band of marauders, featuring the brawn and chops of Scott Adkins (as Collins), Michael Jai White (as Devereaux), JeeJa Yanin (as Mook), and Michael Bisping (as Joey). Add in Celina Jade portraying the helpless heiress and nutty cameo from Michael Wong and you have yourself a movie.

Seriously, do not even worry about the story. Johnson is a pro at staging credible, visually legible fight scenes, having previously directed Adkins in a number of films, including The Debt Collector, Accident Man, and Savage Dog. He knows how to deliver what fans what and he has the ensemble to work with.

In fact, this is some of the best work Uwais and Jaa have done over the course of their last few films or so. Adkins is one of the few action stars who plays heroes and villains with roughly equal regularity, probably because he really looks like he is enjoying himself, strutting and sneering through the picture as Collins. Of course, White is all kinds of hardnosed as Devereaux. As an added bonus, Jennifer Qi Jun Yang shows promising action potential as Liang, Tian’s embassy-assigned body guard. Unfortunately, Yanin is given short shrift as Mook.

You really can’t go too far wrong with this cast, especially when Johnson has them do what they do best. Everyone is at the top of their games, except maybe the screenwriters, but they hardly matter. Highly recommended for martial arts fans, Triple Threat releases today (5/14) on DVD and BluRay.

Monday, October 28, 2013

Man of Tai Chi: Keanu Reeves and Tiger Chen Show Their Chops

It was Tiger Chen who really knew kung fu.  He was the stuntman responsible for Keanu Reeves’ martial arts training during the production of the Matrix trilogy and he made quite an impression.  For his directorial debut, Reeves introduces Chen to the world with his old school beatdown, Man of Tai Chi (trailer here), which opens this Friday in New York.

“Tiger” Chen Lin-hu is the last student of Master Yang, a great Ling Kong Tai Chi teacher.  In contemporary Beijing, Tai Chi is mostly associated with old men doing their “soft” qigong in the park.  However, Chen is starting to get noticed in the above board MMA world for his traditional “hard” practice of the ancient discipline.  He also catches the eye of the shadowy Donaka Mark.  When shady developers conveniently threaten to condemn his master’s temple, the lowly deliveryman becomes easy prey for Mark’s overtures. 

Initially, Chen truly does not understand what he is getting involved in.  However, as he notches victories in Mark’s underground fight circuit, Chen starts to enjoy the money and adrenaline.  Unfortunately, the matches make him more aggressive, jeopardizing his relationships with his master and Qingsha, the cute-as-a-button paralegal helping him save the temple. Nonetheless, he cannot help noticing the stakes escalate with each bout. 

Hong Kong police captain Sun Jing-si knows where it all leads: fights to the death broadcast over secure online connections for Mark’s exclusive clientele.  Always a step behind the malevolent mastermind, she needs an informant to take the place of the one Mark just killed, someone like Chen, if she can find him.

With Tai Chi, Reeves had the good sense to make a film he would enjoy for his maiden directorial outing.  Frankly, he shows serious action helmer chops, staging fight sequences that are crystal clear and easy to follow.  There are no barrages of close-ups here.  Reeves gives us the full Fred Astaire body shots, precisely so we can appreciate the technique of his main man, Chen.

The results are convincing.  While Tai Chi is not the most original narrative under the sun, it deliberately harkens back to the gritty low budgets classics that launched the careers of legends.  Chen maybe is not the most expressive actor you will ever see (after all, Reeves is his thesp-mentor), but his earnest gee-whiz persona works well in the context of the film.  Oddly enough, Reeves is a bit of a surprise here, making a dynamite villain with his piercing stare and apparently insatiable appetite for the scenery around him.

Karen Mok is also seriously hardnosed as Sun, bringing real supporting heft to the film.  Simon Yam adds further HK action cred as Superintendent Wong, her suspiciously unhelpful superior.  Qing Ye is not exactly a natural on-screen either, but she still represents Chen’s lost innocence rather effectively.  Yet for genre fans, nobody tops Shaolin veteran Yu Hai, doing his thing with stately gravitas as Master Yang.  Bizarrely though, The Raid’s Iko Uwais is completely wasted in a mere tease of a cameo.

Reeves might not be Clint Eastwood’s successor as the next great actor-director, but Tai Chi is a pretty slick calling card.  If need be, he should easily find a second career as a straight-to-DVD action director, which is considerably higher praise than it sounds (those cats actually have to be good).  Likewise, Chen might not be the next Daniel Day-Lewis, but watching him kicking butt is hugely entertaining.  Way better than you think, Man of Tai Chi is recommended for martial arts fans and Karen Mok admirers when it opens this Friday (11/1) in New York.