- Actors: Donnie Yen, Wang Baoqiang, Simon Yam
- Director: Raymond Yip
- Disc Format: Dolby, Surround Sound, Widescreen
- Language: Cantonese (Dolby Digital 5.1), Cantonese (DTS 5.1)
- Subtitles: English
- Region: Region A/1
- Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
- Number of discs: 2
- Rated: Unrated
- Studio: Well Go USA
- Release Date: February 19, 2019
- Run Time: 88 minutes
What do you do
when you make a film that ends with a cliffhanger, but absolutely nobody has
any interest in seeing the resolution in a sequel because of how awful the
original was? If you are the producers of Iceman,
the 2014 martial arts action film starring Donnie Yen, you push forward with a
sloppy sequel that makes the first look like a masterpiece in comparison. Even
if you can get past the ridiculously bad CGI effects used throughout the film,
the characters are silly and 2-dimensional, built for action scenes and dumb
comedic relief rather than any true character development. Between Iceman and The Monkey King, 2014 was an awful year for Donnie Yen, and Iceman: The Time Traveler somehow
surpasses both of those films as his worst.
After a lengthy
recap of the first film, (which takes up 10-minutes of the 88-minute run-time) Iceman: The Time Traveler begins where
the last film left off. Ying (Yen) is a palace guard from the Ming Dynasty who
was frozen in an avalanche and is thawed out in present day China , only to
find that history has a record of him as a traitor and the death of his entire
home village. In order to correct the wrongs of the past and discover why he
was framed for a treasonous act he did not commit, Ying must travel back in
time to the Ming Dynasty with the help of The Golden Wheel of Time.
If you had no
trouble accepting the fact that these men survived being frozen in time, it
shouldn’t be too difficult to buy into the concept of time travel. If only that
were the most ridiculous aspect of the film, it might have worked on some
level. At the very least, the action needed to be far more impressive. There
are a few decent scenes, mostly choreographed with the camera and CGI rather
than any decent action choreography, but it is still the highlight of a very
disappointing film. Each scene feels more aimless than the last, and nearly
every character is more obnoxious than endearing.
The Blu-ray
release of Iceman: The Time Traveler
also contains a DVD copy of the film. This is more than anything contained on
the actual disc, in terms of special features. There is an English-language
track, if you want to make a bad film worse, but this is the only extra on the
disc other than trailers.
Entertainment Value:
3/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 2/10
Historical
Significance: 1/10
Special Features: 1.5/10
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