The Children of Huang Shi Movie Review
The Children of Huang Shi Review
"The Children of Huang Shi" Overview

Rating: NR
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Roger SpottiswoodeProducer : Arthur Cohn,Wieland Schulz-Keil
Screenwiter : Jane Hawksley,James MacManus
Starring : Jonathan Rhys Meyers,Chow Yun-Fat,Michelle Yeoh,Radha Mitchell,Guang Li,David Wenham
Roger Spottiswoode's limp The Children of Huang Shi sounds, looks, and feels like a
chapter torn from a dusty history textbook that was relevant somewhere in the mid-1960s.
Every revelation feels like a lesson being thrust upon the viewer, every character
a simple metaphor for their nationality's opinion toward (and hand in) the Japanese
occupation of China that culminated in the Rape of Nanking in the winter of 1937.
Here, the Chinese were honorable soldiers from a conflicted country, the Japanese
were buffoonish barbarians who still took their shirt off before they decapitated people,
the British were naive and in way over their heads, and the Americans just wanted
to get married.
As the film's pre-script enlightens us, Children follows the life of George Hogg
(Jonathan Rhys Davies), a British journalist who steals the identity of a Red Cross
worker to sneak into Nanking and get the story and the pictures of the massacres.
After being captured, he almost meets the business-end of Tokyo steel before Hansheng
(Chow Yun-Fat, not having fun with a mostly-American dialect), a resistance fighter,
saves him from the blade. Hansheng sends Hogg off to the titular village, which serves
as a sort of city for lost children, held in check by Dr. Pearson (Radha Mitchell),
an actual Red Cross medic.
Romance stirs between the doctor and Hogg, Hansheng and the resistance flare up when
the children are attacked, and the healthy 1930s Chinese drug trade is partially
evoked through the wealthy merchant Mrs. Wang (Michelle Yeoh). The meat and potatoes
of this is fascinating history, but the audience can't be roused to care. Blame Spottiswoode:
The film is all schematics. The narrative's scaffolding, infrastructure, and engineering
are so blatantly on display that any action or character development that might have
engaged the viewer in a more fluid, elegant film is absent. It's all ably shot but
there's no heat, no complexity. It's a cold, dry movie with all the taste of water
and white bread.
Most unfortunate of these grievances is the casting of Jonathan Rhys Meyers as Hogg.
Though he's nothing short of magisterial in Showtime's The Tudors, Meyers has taken the
excitement from his excellent performance in Woody Allen's Match Point and wrung it dry
in performances that accentuate his looks over his physicality and delivery. Here,
his chiseled, bony face and wide eyes are used only as a barometer for Hogg's nervosa.
It's a miserable waste of talent. This goes double for Yun-Fat, the erstwhile paradigm
of Eastern gravitas who has traded all the craftsmanship of his work with John Woo
and 2000's graceful Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon for this sort of mundane mediocrity.
If Mitchell comes off better, it's only because she knows this role like her ZIP
code and she looks good in a dress.
Getting his start with 1980's Terror Train, though he's probably best known as a Bond
director (Tomorrow Never Dies), Spottiswoode hasn't so much proven himself a talentless
director as a compulsively rigid one. With the exception of the childhood favorite Turner
& Hooch, Spottiswoode has taken to a self-seriousness that borders on pathological, and
it ultimately bruises Huang Shi's fluidity, though editor Geoffrey Lamb certainly has
blood on his hands. What is left is history as drivel, rebellion as Sunday-morning
hangover.
We don't need no stinkin' burros.
Reviewer: Chris Cabin





