NPR Film
'Flying Swords': Fast, Furious And Now In 3-D
A Tsui Hark movie in 3-D — not to mention the first wuxia film to be shot in the format — ought to serve up three times the spectacle of the usual Tsui affair. And damned if Flying Swords of Dragon Gate doesn't almost deliver.
In technical terms, Flying Swords features some of the most gorgeous 3-D effects of any live-action film yet made, James Cameron's Avatar included. It's the storytelling and characterization that fall short: Even for a movie that sits squarely in a genre known for its complicated plots, Flying Swords is ultra-cluttered with narrative details, and its most charismatic figures — including a character played by the marvelous Jet Li — get lost in the whirl.
The trick is to let yourself swoon into the picture's visual embrace and not get too hung up on its myriad sticky plot points. Li shows up early on, in the movie's magnificent opening sequence, set in a shipyard: His character, a shadowy crusader and stalwart defender of peasants, swoops down seemingly from nowhere to rescue a group of perceived traitors from the clutches of a government despot (played deliciously, if all too briefly, by wuxia legend Gordon Liu).
Li does away with the wily villain amid a symphony of swirling robes and high-kicking limbs, and after a great show of slashing, slicing and dicing. But meanwhile, an even stronger group of adversaries gathers elsewhere: A nasty eunuch (Chen Kun) sets off to find and kill a pregnant palace maid (Mavis Fan) who has been taken under the protection of a butt-kicking, flute-toting female warrior (Zhou Xun).
He tracks them to a desert inn — wuxia fans will recognize it as a version of the famed Dragon Gate Inn, from King Hu's 1966 picture of the same name — where a fierce Tartar princess with an extravagantly tattooed face (Kwai Lun-mei) is already holding court. A bandit girl (Li Yuchun) and her mild-mannered sidekick — who coincidentally looks just like the nasty eunuch (both are played by Kun) — also drop in.
It turns out that a major sandstorm, one that comes around every 60 years, is just about to blow into the area and reveal a buried treasure. But that may be more detail than you can handle right now. The one thing you can count on is that any object or body part that can be made to poke or fly out from the surface of a 2-D movie screen — swords, daggers, droplets of blood, bits of splintered wood, various limbs — can and will be comin' at ya, via the magic of 3-D. (Chuck Comisky, who supervised the 3-D effects on Avatar, lent a hand here as well.)
The second half of the movie features more action than the first, and these sequences are extravagantly staged. But in visual terms, the first half is much more opulent: That's where Tsui makes the best use of elaborately carved and painted dragons and Buddha statues, and the embroidered silk costumes seem so vivid and tactile you'd swear you could reach out and touch them.
Flying Swords of Dragon Gate is raucously entertaining, though it doesn't have the go-for-broke craziness of Tsui's last picture, the 2010 Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame. (Unlike that picture, this one, alas, does not feature a mystical talking deer.)
But the biggest problem with Flying Swords of Dragon Gate — which was inspired by Hu's Dragon Gate Inn and the 1992 New Dragon Gate Inn (produced and co-written by Tsui) — is that there just isn't enough Jet Li. Li is still a graceful and compelling physical performer. But in pictures like 2005's Danny the Dog (released in the United States as Unleashed), he proved that his face — as noble and expressive as that of a silent-film star — is an even greater asset than the agility of his limbs.
We don't get to see enough of that face in Flying Swords of Dragon Gate. Three-dimensional technology is all about making movies larger than life; maybe that's what keeps it from ever getting beneath the surface. Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.
Source: NPR
Resources
More on Movies
-
NPR Film : 'Fast 6': Silly, Speedy, And Certain To Cash In
-
NPR Film : 'Into Darkness,' Boldly And With A Few Twists
-
NPR Film : Polley's 'Stories': A Family Saga Strikingly Spun
-
NPR Film : 'Love Is All You Need,' Unless Character Matters
-
NPR Film : 'Gatsby's' Jazz-Age Excess, All Over The Screen
Multimedia | May 25, 2013
YouTube's Comedy Week a Mixed Bag
YouTube celebrate its 8th birthday with a week full of new comedy videos and a "Big Live Comedy Show". By Emily Eifler
Noise Pop | May 24, 2013
Indie Songs to Set the Mood
Listen to the newest Noise Pop picks for you and your partner's listening pleasure, featuring Liars, Future Islands, Beach House, Jessie Ware, and The Weeknd. Note: this episode contains adult language and situations.
NPR Film | May 24, 2013
Greta Gerwig, Blithely Spirited As 'Frances Ha'
The indie darling returns in a winning collaboration with Noah Baumbach that tracks her developmentally arrested dancer heroine through the transition from protracted adolescence to reluctant adulthood. (Recommended) By Ella Taylor
NPR Film | May 24, 2013
'Fast 6': Silly, Speedy, And Certain To Cash In
Fast 6 pits Dominic's crew against a wily terrorist in a high-tech battle royale -- but it has a devil of a time explaining why everyone should hop into their cars. By Scott Tobias
The Do List | May 23, 2013
The One About Dear Elizabeth And Radiation City
Suzie Racho and David Wiegand scout the Bay Area for things to do this coming weekend and turn up Puerto Rican flavor, a pair of poets, and much more!
Movies
-
Two Songs That Led Keith Carradine From Screen To Broadway
One of Keith Carradine's most famous roles in recent years was as Wild Bill Hickok on the HBO TV show Deadwood. But Carradine is also a musician, and it was a song that jump-started his career — and another that drew him to his latest Broadway role.
-
More Time Together, Though 'Midnight' Looms
Julie Delpy and Ethan Hawke return for the third in Richard Linklater's loosely peerless Before series, and they've never been more persuasive — nor has the storytelling. (Recommended)
-
Horror Film Takes Cues From Roman Catholic Church
Horror director Rodrigo Gudino grew up Roman Catholic in Mexico, but now he calls Canada his home. He's no longer a practicing Catholic, but he's brought the aesthetics of his childhood into his movies, including his latest, The Last Will and Testament of Rosalind Leigh.
-
Are Women Really Missing From Film Criticism?
Are women really being shut out of film criticism? One recent study claims that they're worse off in the online world than they were in print.







