Advertising for The Monkey King 2
(with a cameo by Deadpool ;b )
The Monkey King 2 (Mainland China-Hong Kong, 2016)
- Soi Cheang, director
- Starring: Aaron Kwok, Gong Li, William Feng Shaofeng, Xiao Shenyang, Him Law
Two Chinese New Years ago, Donnie Yen had the lead role in -- as well as was the action choreographer of -- star-studded fantasy actioner The Monkey King
while Aaron Kwok had second billing as the villainous Bull Demon King.
Although that majorly ambitious cinematic rendition of 16th century
writer Wu Cheng'en's Journey to the West
was a mega commercial hit in Mainland China (and also performed well at
the Hong Kong box office), it also was the recipient of many critical
brickbats. Consequently, it looked to have been decided by the
powers-that-be that some things had to be different when making its
promised sequel.
Perhaps
the most noticeable change with regards to the follow-up production is
that this time around, Donnie Yen is no longer in the picture; replaced
as action director by Sammo Hung and as Sun Wukong (aka the Monkey King)
by the man who had played the first film's chief antagonist. Absent
too from The Monkey King 2 is Louis Koo; this despite the
character he looked to have been slated to play, master monk Tang
Sanzang, having a prominent role in this movie along with his two other
disciples besides Sun Wukong, Bajie (Xiao Shenyang) and sand demon Sha
Wujing (Him Law) -- who I had known as a kid (via the 50 volume Journey of the West comics I eagerly devoured) as Pigsy and Sandy respectively.
In
normal circumstances, one would think that William Feng Shaofeng has
the greatest chance to shine of all the film's cast; seeing that, his
role as the idealistic holy man tasked with going to India to get a set
of Buddhist scriptures is the least encumbered by weird makeup and
prosthetics of any of the movie's principal characters. But Feng ends
up being upstaged not only by Aaron Kwok but also Xiao Shenyang (who is
fun to watch both as the handsome version of Bajie and the one with
piggy ears and snout!) -- and, most of all, Gong Li, who is absolutely
mesmerizing as the White Boned Demon out to ensnare and eat Tang
Sanzang, whose flesh she believes will make her immortal.
While
the likes of Chow Yun Fat (who played the Jade Emperor) and Gigi Leung
(who appeared as the Moon Goddess) helped give viewers of the first
Monkey King film lots of familiar faces to gaze at, none of those
luminaries put in the kind of truly commanding performance that a
genuine megastar can when he or she chooses to really light up the
screen. Gong Li, however, does precisely that in The Monkey King 2, and the production benefits ever so much from her doing so.
Also
much improved from the first film are the visual effects. While the
2014 offering appeared to have been overly rushed to be ready for that
year's Chinese New Year slot, director Soi Cheang and Co look to have
been given more, and sufficient, time this time around to get things
right. And although the tiger that appears in the opening minutes of
this fantasy adventure epic would have benefited from more work, other
fantastic creatures like the dragon that get turns into Tang Sanzang's
steed as well as the White Bone Demon's CGI accoutrements are several
steps up in quality from what was on view in the earlier Monkey King
movie.
Less
successful, however, were the changes effected in such as the
scriptwriting and editorial departments -- with the personnel being
different but the old problems of an overly simplistic story and
plodding pacing remaining. Thus it was that even though there were
times during The Monkey King 2 when I did marvel at the amazing
imagery unfolding on the big screen on which I viewed this movie, there
also were moments when I was unable to stifle my yawns and certain
occasions when I couldn't help rolling my eyes at certain elements in
this work (including Kelly Chen's reappearance as the Goddess of Mercy).
To summarize then: The Monkey King 2
is an improvement on the first Monkey King movie, particularly in terms
of its visuals. But while it entertains in places, it's still far from
being the monstrous success that its pedigree (in terms of source
material, star power, etc.) should pretty much guarantee that it would
be. Furthermore, this second film's final scenes point to a third Monkey
King movie being in the offing but I think we've already been shown that
things don't always go to plan -- and sometimes it may be better that
this is so!
My rating for this film: 6.0
2 comments:
Going to see this on Saturday. It'll be only the second 3D film I've ever seen - I hope I'll enjoy this one.
I haven't seen the first Monkey King film yet - I'm planning to watch it before the weekend.
Hi Lissa --
I don't think you need to see the first Monkey King movie before you view "The Monkey King 2". But since the second is better, I think you'd enjoy your viewing of the first "The Monkey King" if you watch it before you check out this year's installation! ;b
Post a Comment