Posts Tagged ‘Kung-Fu’

Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun Li

Street Fighter: The legend of Chun-Li was really up against it when I started watching. After all, it had serious prejudice to overcome after the last time a movie was made based on the game. The real injustice of the last Street Fighter film wasn’t that it “starred” (I wish text could convey sarcasm better) Jean Claude van Damme, but that it was the last film Raul Julia made. But, back to the question at hand. Could Street Fighter: The Rise of Chun-Li wipe the stain?

Well, No. But it’s not really Street Fighter: The Rise of Chun-Li’s fault. The only way to wipe the stain of the original would be to go back in time and prevent Jean-Claude van Damme from becoming an actor and that would lead to the time-cops hunting you down and oh god it’s a whole bad 90’s movie flashback. And here I thought I’d repressed all those memories.

The plot, is fairly standard Kung-Fu Mobster movie fair, with a little woo-woo thrown in to explain the force balls and stuff in the fight scenes. Basically, Chun-Li’s father is captured by the mob and forced to work for them in return for his daughter staying safe. Chun-Li vows revenge and the rest is fight scenes, explosions and really bad attempts to justify calling the movie Street Fighter. In fact, if it wasn’t for the character names, there would be nothing to link the movie to the game at all.

The film doesn’t really live up to the promise of the video game, and even though fight scenes and laughable intrigure abound, I was unable to give it higher than a 3 on the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man Scale. The dodgiest moment in the film was not a scene as is usually the case, but rather a plot point. Why did the writers have to make it some mystical thing about how Bison became all evil. He couldn’t just be a monster. Noooo. He had to remove all the good things about his soul and put them into his unborn daughter so she could conveniently be used against him later.

Deciding on what to rate this for rewatchability was tricky. I couldn’t in all fairness rate it lower than Dragonball Evolution but then I see that I rated DBE as a 3 and I have to ask “What the fuck was I thinking?” It should have been a 2 at best, then I could have rated this as a 2. And then I remembered. I don’t need to be fair. i don’t even need to be consistent, I just need to not waste anymore time thinking about a movie who’s only redeeming feature was at least it didn’t star Jean Claude van Damme.

Unless you feel the need to feel the full effects of time stretching, when 5760 seconds feels like 2 days, I wouldn’t waste any time watching it.

And Remember, we watch them, so you don’t have to.

Dragonball Evolution

Given that I’ve never really gotten into the Dragonball Z cartoons even though they looked like something that should appeal, I probably shouldn’t have rented Dragonball Evolution.  In retrospect, it was a good thing that I rented it as having it in my DVD collection would be kind of a black mark, and, I’m running out of spaces to put those.

It was watchable, aided by Chow Yun-Fat reprising his all knowing master role from Bulletproof Monk, with a suitable side of dodginess thrown in for good measure.  The prevalence of super- slowmo shots did make me wonder whether the director of 300 had got his claws into another movie, but then I remembered why I didn’t like the cartoon.  It was a result of the super-slowmo drawings which allowed 2 minutes of action to stretch into a 20 minute cartoon.  But, at least most of the slowmo was confined to the fight scenes which made them interesting.

The one thing that did bother me for the whole movie was how Piccolo managed to escape his imprisonment.  After all, seven mystics (hmm, 7 mystics, 7 dragonballs, coincidence or Deus Ex Machina, you decide) gave their lifes to cast the spell that imprisoned him, and yet, here he is floating around trying to get the dragonballs and rule the earth.  And seriously, Piccolo, what kind of a supervillain gets named after the smallest instrument.  Of course he’s going to become a supervillain, he’s got to compensate for something.

I was torn about how dodgy Dragonball Evolution really was.  On the one hand, it probably deserved 5 smiley of dodginess, there was energy being shot from people’s hands, cool fight scenes, and in what was almost the crowning moment, a teenage boy transforming into a giant ape and the “Shadow Crane Strike”.  But, on the other hand, it didn’t really look like much more than a live action version of the cartoon, complete with dodgy orange gi.  So, it got 3 smileys.  The dodgiest moment was a fight scene in which Goku manages to take out 7 kids (there’s that number again) without throwing a single punch or kick, which was an interesting take on defending yourself.

The rewatchability rating was a lot easier, and while it will hopefully never find it’s way into my DVD cabinet, it was worth a watch.  There were amusing fight scenes, reasonable eye candy, and a green villain that reminded me of  locust.  But, I wouldn’t rush out to watch it again, or at least, watch it again while sober.

The only memorable quote from this movie was “The first rule is… there are no rules”  The problem is, I know that this is not the first movie to use it.  Jim Carrey says it in Yes Man right before he punches out the wrong guy.  And even then I didn’t think it was the first time I’d heard it.  You’d think IMDB or Google would be able to help me out here, but no.  So if any of you know, please post it in the comments and end my suffering.

All things considered, Dragonball Evolution was a pleasant diversion, but it’s unlikely to prove to be a diversion after this.

And remember, We watch them, so you don’t have to.

Ooh Shiny
Most Rewatchable Movies
Looking for a Movie - Check Here