Publicity
Stills of "Balls of Fury"
(Courtesy from Shaw)
Genre: Action/Comedy Director: Ben Garant Cast: Christopher Walken, Dan Fogler, George
Lopez, Maggie Q, Robert Patrick, Thomas Lennon RunTime:
1 hr 30 mins Released By: Shaw Rating: PG (Some Coarse Humour) Official Website:http://www.ballsoffury.com/
Opening Day: 27 September 2007
Synopsis:
Randy Daytona (Fogler) is a skilled and charismatic ping-pong
champion whose mental break down in the 1988 Seoul Games leads
to the murder of his own father. Crippled by guilt and regret,
the once mighty phenom becomes a has-been. But all that changes
when the FBI calls on him to infiltrate the dangerous and
deadly underground ping-pong organization headed by his father’s
killer, the flamboyantly evil Feng (Walken). The stakes are
life and death, but Randy is determined to bounce back. To
prepare for this ultimate showdown though, he must seek the
guidance of Master Wong and his beautiful daughter Maggie
(Mission Impossible III’s Maggie Q) to rediscover the
game he loved and to learn the true meaning go and Pong…
Movie Review:
Once in a while, you catch a trailer that makes you laugh
out loud, and you find yourself anticipating the movie but
wondering whether the best bits have already been crammed
into that short, 3-minute promotional stint. As such, you
quietly manage your expectations so whatever you end up watching
doesn’t disappoint. With this in mind, I think you’ll
find that Balls of Fury actually delivers. Touted as this
year’s answer to the genuinely hilarious Dodgeball,
Balls serves up some genuine laughs, as long as you’re
clear about the sort of film you’re catching –
while it’s better than the slightly contrived Blades
of Glory, we’re not likely to see this winning big at
the Oscars anytime soon either.
With
a name that mimics the sound of the sport when it’s
actually being played, it’s easy to see why most people
don’t take table tennis or, in this case, ping pong,
seriously. Then again, it’s hard to accord respect to
a game that has grown men crouching over a table with ridiculously
undersized bats while chasing after even tinier balls. Then
again, why a comedy poking fun of a sport that’s obviously
primed for ridicule took so long in the making, we’ll
never know. My best guess is that the producers probably couldn’t
convince Jack Black that starring in something like this would
be good for his career, therefore finally settling for Dan
Fogler, who in every aspect resembles a poor man’s copycat
- right down to his moniker Randy Daytona’s supposed
penchant for Def Leppard tunes.
When
the movie begins, we see Randy the ping pong child prodigy
whose momentous defeat at the 1988 Olympics costs him his
reputation, his supporters, his dad, and pretty much ruins
his life thereafter. Fast forward to present-day Vegas and
we see a defeated, has-been Randy who ekes out a living as
a dinner spectacle, complete with stage introduction by a
parrot and a rented glitzy tuxedo. His past catches up with
him in the form of FBI agent Ernie Rodriguez (George Lopez),
who convinces Randy to go undercover for him to smoke out
ultra evil baddie Feng, who is wanted for various sinister
operations and, most conveniently, the reason behind Randy’s
dad’s mysterious death so many years ago.
To
whip the now-pudgy Randy into shape, Rodriguez brings him
to Master Wong’s (James Hong) ping pong training school,
which opens up a pandora’s box of ha-ha material complete
with goofy kung-fu moves, corny Asian jokes and an entire
battalion of blind man gags. Wong’s niece Maggie (Maggie
Q) is tasked with the virtually impossible task of training
Randy, which of course in movies like this she effortlessly
does, along with falling for him in the process. Perhaps the
most painful part of this entire segment is watching poor
old Jason Scott Lee (playing Siu-Foo) spout mangled English
throughout, especially since we know the dude’s as Americanized
as they come. To prevent yourself from cringing so often you
develop a permanent crick in your neck, we strongly suggest
you leave your brains at the door.
After
adhering pretty much to conventional linear plot development
in the first half of the movie, all hell breaks loose once
Randy meets Feng, played by the inimitable Christopher Walken
who’s made up to look Asian. While it’s usually
the case for Asians to feel offended when Caucasian actors
play Asians in movies, I seriously doubt anyone will begrudge
Mr. Walken his role in this particular movie. Decked out in
ridiculously elaborate hairpieces and costumes that wouldn’t
look out of place in a campy version of The Last Emperor,
Walken remains the easiest focal point for the audience to
train their eyes on while pandemonium explodes all round in
a mishmash of seemingly-unconnected incidents that neither
do justice to further the plot, nor do much to retain the
audience’s interest.
Perhaps
the biggest laughs come from the fact that we know some of
the people in this movie have absolutely no business doing
in it – simply because they are considered to belong
to a higher strata of films. We laugh because the truly magnificent
James Hong doesn’t consider himself beneath lowbrow
humor, and also because he delivers his lines with great panache.
Other appearances include the genuinely hilarious Thomas Lennon
in his stint as Randy’s creepy Kraut arch-nemesis Karl
Wolfschtagg, Terry Crews (who always makes me laugh), Diedrich
Bader, as well as a blink-and-you-miss cameo by current TV
darling Masi Oka. While adding nothing whatsoever to plot
development, these people lend star glamour to a considerably
plebian screen effort, and while we do have the occasional
“What were they thinking?” moment, we’re
gratefully thankful for it.