- Actors: Louis Koo, Dongyu Zhou, Bea Hayden Kuo
- Director: Andrew Lau
- Disc Format: Dolby, Subtitled, Surround Sound, Widescreen
- Language: Mandarin Chinese (DTS 5.1)
- Subtitles: English
- Region: Region A/1
- Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: NR
- Studio: Well Go Usa
- Blu-ray Release Date: October 8, 2019
- Run Time: 104 minutes
One location, bad CGI, and a storyline that
feels made for a pre-teen audience; these are the defining elements of Andy
Lau’s Kung Fu Monster. It is
disappointing in a way that a lot of Chinese cinema has become in recent years,
and a way that should be familiar to American audiences. Try as they have to
make this film entertaining to as broad of an audience as possible, the end
result is too childish for adults and may even be too monotonous for the
attention span of the modern child. It is hard to believe this filmmaker once
made Infernal Affairs.
Taking place at
the end of the Ming Dynasty, this period fantasy film involves a mystical
creature that is captured to use in an assassination plan. When a member of the
Imperial Secret Police (Louis Koo) discovers the plot and releases the beast to
the wild rather than letting it be used for violence, he is imprisoned. Then,
in an unlikely series of events, the prisoner transport is hijacked at a remote
outpost by a band of bandits and outcasts led by his love (Bea Hayden Kuo). The
monster also finds its way to the outpost, where nearly all of the film takes
place.
The monster
itself is clearly designed to elicit a specific response from the audience, and
that is not terror. When angry, the creature does magically grow in size and
change its demeanor to be more frightening, but it spends most of the film as a
cuddly little creature that looks a bit like a gremlin in its cuddly form. The
problem with the monster is that the film never seems to know what to do with
it, and it spends most of the narrative on the outskirts as a result, seeming
to exist merely for the occasional cute insert shot. And this is likely for the
best, because interactions with the cast often feels forced as a result of the
monster being entirely computer generated.
The Blu-ray
release for this generically bad fantasy film includes a making-of featurette
and trailers. The extras are fitting for the film, given they don’t seem to
have been given much thought. There are better monster movies. There are better
martial arts movies. There are also better Chinese films, though clearly not as
many as there once were.
Entertainment Value:
4/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 3.5/10
Historical
Significance: 0/10
Special Features: 2/10
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