- Director : Donnie Yen, Kam Ka Wai
- Actors : Donnie Yen, Chen Yuqi, Cya Liu, Wai Ying Hung, Wu Yue
- Dubbed: : English
- Language : English (DTS 5.1)
- Studio : Well Go Usa
- MPAA rating : R (Restricted)
- Country of Origin : USA
- Number of discs : 1
- Media Format : Subtitled, Widescreen
- Run time : 2 hours and 11 minutes
- Release date : June 13, 2023
Donnie Yen still has the ability to amaze with
his martial arts ability and onscreen charisma, as was recently proved by his
scene-stealing role in John Wick 4. Unfortunately, the films Yen has
made recently in Hong Kong have not been nearly as impressive, though this is
more an indicator of the decline of this national cinema (especially when they
are co-productions with China). Criticisms of Chinese cinema lately is similar
to the complaints many have about the bloated blockbusters of Hollywood. This comparison
is even more apt in Yen’s latest Hong Kong/Chinese co-production, which has the
structure of a classic kung fu film and the visual excess of a poorly made superhero
blockbuster.
The initial
premise of Sakra might very well be lifted from a classic Shaw Brothers kung fu
film, though it is based on the wuxia novel Demi-Gods and Semi-Devils.
Along with directing the film, Yen stars as Qiao Feng, the leader of a clan known
as the Beggars' Sect, who are comparable to a martial arts version of Robin
Hood’s band of Merry Men. When Feng is accused of being a descendant of the Khitan,
who are the sworn enemy of the Beggars’ Sect, he is forced to abandon his post
as leader in search of answers about his past. Feng is also falsely framed for
murdering several innocent people along with the being accused of attempting to
steal a manual containing the sect’s fighting technique when he helps a Morong
servant named Azhu (Chen Yuqi) who has been tasked with the theft.
Along with a
mission to redeem his honor, plenty of sequences where characters heal after being
beaten in battle, and even more training sequences before the final battle for
redemption and revenge, Sakra has all the martial arts film tropes. And these
are the highlights of the film, along with Yen’s consistently charismatic
screen presence, which is why the execution of the fight scenes in the second
half of the film becomes increasingly disappointing. Yen made it no secret that
he intended to make a martial arts film using the formula of Marvel movies as a
blueprint, and he succeeded. Unfortunately, the elements he succeeded in bringing
over from Marvel are only the ones critics often complain about. The worst
aspect is the less than stellar CGI which becomes increasingly overused throughout
the narrative. When the characters suddenly have superpowers, this becomes a
mashup I quickly lost interest in, and the bloated run-time did not help.
The Blu-ray release
for Sakra doesn’t contain any special features worth mentioning, likely
because of how poorly this film has been received. Hopefully this will give Yen
reason to continue making films in Hollywood, where his reputation remains nothing
less than stellar.
Entertainment Value:
7/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 5.5/10
Historical
Significance: 3/10
Special Features: 0/10
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