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GRANDMASTER OF KUNG FU – Review – We Are Movie Geeks

Review

GRANDMASTER OF KUNG FU – Review

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Du Yuhang in THE GRANDMASTER OF KUNG FU. Courtesy of WellGo USA

For fans of Chinese martial arts movies, THE GRANDMASTER OF KUNG FU offers a variation on a very familiar theme. Set in the early 20th century while Japan is occupying much of China, national pride for both seems to hinge on whether kung fu is superior to karate, and the question will be determined in a winner-take-all match.

The invaders strive and scheme to assert dominance by demoralizing the local fighters and, consequently, the populace. The Chinese must win to keep their martial arts schools open to maintain its cultural identity despite the occupation. This premise has been recycled a zillion times ever since the Hong Kong action boom of the 1970s, often incorporating historic heroes like Ip Man or Wong Fei Hung. Western viewers will primarily associate Donnie Yen with the former, and Jet Li with the latter. This member of that vaunted fraternity of oft-filmed icons is Huo Yuanjia, who was also played by Jet Li in FEARLESS (2006).

So why spend your time on yet another iteration of a plot and premise you’ve likely seen before? Several reasons. Du Yuhang, who replaced Yen in the latest extensions of the IP MAN franchise, does a fine job here as the modest hero, reluctantly rising to defend the honor of his fighting style and country. He resembles Yen not only in looks, but in conveying that essential aura of quiet dignity and integrity between and during his fights – like Gary Cooper in most of his Westerns.


Since the star was an actual Wushu champion before his acting career, action sequences are artfully choreographed and more natural in scale than many others. Very little wire work; no exotic weapons; the slow-mo insertions accentuating highlight moves are deployed to good advantage. Lighting and camera angles are above average, allowing viewers to follow what‘s happening more clearly than is often the case. Fights are also more reasonable in duration, unlike many others in which the protagonists suffer absurdly prolonged beatings before prevailing, as we always knew they would

Perhaps the best facet is that director Cheng Si-Yu knew he was telling an oft-told tale, and pared this incarnation to a tight package running under 80 minutes. Also, as one who has endured subpar audio and visual elements (often including horrid English dubs) in dozens of streamed vintage chopsocky flicks from the Shaw Brothers and other studios of the 1970s-80s, it’s a pleasure to watch the new generation of these films with excellent production quality. Japanese viewers will likely feel otherwise, since, as always, those invading characters are portrayed as mostly devious and excessively brutal, with only the occasional warrior of honor among them. But the country that makes the movie gets to write the script the way it wants.

THE GRANDMASTER OF KUNG FU, in Mandarin with English subtitles, is streaming now on Hi-YAH!, and available on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital formats as of Jan. 31.

RATING: 3 out of 4 stars