Shanghai Noon Movie Review
Shanghai Noon Review

"Shanghai Noon" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Tom DeyProducer : Jackie Chan,Owen Wilson,Lucy Liu,Roger Yuan,Xander Berkeley
Screenwiter : Alfred Gough,Miles Millar
Starring : Jackie Chan,Roger Birnbaum,Gary Barber
The American movie studios are bastards when it comes to taking highly talented
Asian directors and actors and pushing them into the American consciousness,
invariably stereotyping and watering down the raw talent and energy of the
individuals to increase their acceptance in American culture. Jet Li, Tsui
Hark, Ringo Lam, Chow-Yun Fat, Michelle Yeong, and John Woo have all fallen
victim to this epidemic, either starring in bad Joel Silver action movies,
playing sinister villains in bad Joel Silver movies, seducing James Bond, or
directing Jean Claude Van Damme in films stamped with one of his patented
roundhouse kicks.
Jackie Chan represents the grand amalgamation of all of these actors combined.
With the embarrassment of the re-release of a slew of his old Asian films,
re-cut and dubbed in English, Jackie Chan was headed to the land of Jim Kelly
(aka Black Belt Jones). But with the success of last year’s Rush Hour, Chan
was saved from the abyss of Don “The Dragon” Wilson by the mighty mouth of
Chris Tucker and a $100 million dollar domestic gross. So, what’s Chan’s next
move – let’s take the same story as Rush Hour, make it a Western, throw in the
well-established TV actress Lucy Liu, and added the wise-cracking Owen Wilson
as his partner. And watch the money pour in.
The scary thing about all of this is that Shanghai Noon actually works and is
one of Chan’s best American efforts to date. I am big Chan fan and my main
complaint with all of his films is that I have not witnessed any of his
trademark “super-stunts” in most recent years. The last great one is when he
jumped from one building to another in Rumble in the Bronx.
Shanghai Noon gives us many great Chan fight sequences. Director Tom Dey does
an admirable job of capturing all the tremendous agility of Chan. It almost
seems like Sammo Hung, one of Chan’s best Asian directors, was working in
tandem with Dey.
Chan is fast and furious when he has the most innocent of objects in his
possession, like a piece of rope and a horseshoe that he snaps faster than a
gunslinger. Shadows of the Three Stooges are echoed strongly in Chan’s movies
and his moves. Chan also uses a bit of his patented Drunken Master techniques
defending the honor of a woman. Slow-motion shots also further highlight his
magic moves. (For the first time in an American production, Chan employs
fellow actor and fight choreographer Biao Yuen, who has worked with Chan since
the days of Project A and Meals on Wheels.)
The most important ingredient in the film is Owen Wilson. He is one of the
only actors that can move from such films as last year’s The Minus Man, in
which he played a quiet serial killer with a conscience, to a gun-toting train
robber who prefers the ladies over the gun. Ever since his debut in the quirky
indie film Bottle Rocket, Wilson has become a solid character actor. His role
as “that guy” in The Haunting, Armageddon, and Anaconda was the highlight of
each of those films.
Shanghai Noon will be Wilson's breakthrough role. Wilson brings a wonderful
subtlety to the film and his dry wit works well with the wonderful comedic
timing of Chan. Most of the laughs come from Wilson's own insecurities and
trepidation about being an “outlaw.” One of the best scenes in the films is
when he rides into town and sees a wanted poster with his face on it. His
reaction is, “This will surely make the girls want me more!”
One of few problems with the film is that it draws a bit too much inspiration
from early Asian films such as the Jet Li vehicles Once Upon a Time in China
and Once Upon a Time in China and America and Jackie Chan’s Who Am I? The main
bad guy, Roger Yuan (who was also seen in the Once Upon a Time movies) is a
cardboard, stereotypical Asian bad guy. The subplots, involving social
commentary on the state of Chinese immigrants and an annoying love interest
with Chan, tend to drag. Overall though, these are minor elements within the
broad canvas of the film’s stronger moments.
Shanghai Noon is an enjoyable film. You get great laughs that creep in under
the cover of sarcasm, wonderful action sequences, beautiful cinematography, and
a horse that enjoys a good bottle of whiskey. The film also employs a typical
theme of Chan movies: People are beaten to a pulp by high flying kicks to the
head, rabbit punches to the gut, thrown through glass windows, hit by cars, run
over by large animals – and they never die.
Jump! Jump!
Reviewer: Max Messier





