[JOURNEY
TO THE WEST: CONQUERING THE DEMONS
opens in Cleveland on Friday March 7th exclusively at the Capitol
Theatre.]
Review
by Bob Ignizio
Loosely
based on a 16th century Chinese novel considered one of the four
great novels of Chinese classical literature, Stephen Chow and Derek
Kok's JOURNEY TO THE WEST: CONQUERING THE DEMONS
feels anything but literary. Rather it is, like most of Chow's work
as a director (SHAOLIN SOCCER, KUNG FU HUSTLE, etc.), a lighthearted action/adventure romp full of
improbable situations and slapstick humor.
As
the film starts, a fishing village is being terrorized by a fish
demon, a sequence which alludes to JAWS
when a dubious demon hunter kills a giant stingray, only to be told
by “unshaved monk” Tang Sanzang (Wen Zhang) that he got the wrong
critter. Indeed this turns out to be the case when the real fish
demon returns to gobble up a few villagers. Sanzang tries to subdue
the monster by reading it nursery rhymes, which he believes will
bring out the good in the creature. When this fails, it's up to yet
another demon hunter, the striking Miss Duan (Shu Qi) to save the
day. From here on, the film is a series of vignettes in which Sanzang
and Duan track down and do battle with other dastardly entities,
Sanzang coping with both his own self doubt and the unwanted advances
of Miss Duan.
In
many ways JOURNEY TO THE WEST
recalls the sort of fantasy films I grew up watching as a kid that
adapted various Greek myths and the adventures of Sinbad, and which
featured stop motion monsters created by special effects wizard Ray
Harryhausen. Here the legends are of Chinese origin and the monsters
created on a computer, but the sense of fun and wonder is largely the
same. But there are also significant differences in tone, with
JOURNEY TO THE WEST
being more broadly comedic as well as a bit more violent and,
occasionally, ribald. I wouldn't go so far as to say it's family
unfriendly, but it definitely earns its PG-13 rating. As long as you
and your kids aren't bothered by a little sexual innuendo and some
light gore (say on a par with an INDIANA JONES
movie), and provided you're okay with subtitles, this JOURNEY
should prove an enjoyable one. 3 out of 4 stars.
No comments:
Post a Comment
We approve all legitimate comments. However, comments that include links to irrelevant commercial websites and/or websites dealing with illegal or inappropriate content will be marked as spam.
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.