First there was “Shaolin Soccer”, then “Kung
Fu Hustle.”
Now comes “Shaolin Girl”, the most exciting Kung
Fu film ever!
IN JAPANESE WITH ENGLISH AND CHINESE SUBTITLES
Genre: Comedy/Action
Director: Katsuyuki Motohiro
Cast: Kou Shibasaki, Toru Nakamura, Kitty Zhang,
Tin Kai Man, Lam Tze Chung, Takashi Okamura, Yosuke Eguchi
RunTime: 1 hr 53 mins
Released By: Festive Films & GV
Rating: PG
Official Website: http://www.festivefilms.com/shaolingirl/
Opening Day: 19 June 2008
Synopsis:
Produced by Stephen Chow (Shaolin Soccer, CJ7), Shaolin Girl
tells the story of a girl by the name of Rin, who is compelled
to take over her late grandfather’s kung-fu dojo. She
endures 3,000 days of brutal training at the Shaolin Martial
Arts School in China before returning to her native Japan.
But what awaits her is a dojo that lies in tatters and students
who have abandoned the true discipline of Shaolin kung-fu.
While
struggling to restore her grandfather’s school to its
former glory and spread a genuine Shaolin philosophy, Rin
attends university where she becomes the star member of the
lacrosse team. While Rin’s exceptional physical abilities
being a string of victories to the team, her teammates in
turn come to her aid by helping her reestablish the dojo.
Just as fortune seems to smile upon her, a dark incident from
a past Rin knew nothing about rears its ugly head and throws
her into a fantastic showdown with tremendous evil. Is the
Shaolin Girl up to the challenge?
Movie Review:
The Point (Short Review)
Failing
to balance the formula from the successful Shaolin Soccer
and branching out to something new, Shaolin Girl ended up
as a messy and unfunny Kungfu parody homage. It started with
the wrong choice of unpopular sport and after spending so
much time, the sport element didn’t even matter for
the movie finale. The Kungfu and CGI also felt sluggish and
unspectacular. Lastly, the villain here lacks strong motivation
and characterization to be a badass. Overall, this sissified
version of Shaolin Soccer bores with it’s directionless
homage.
The Rant (Long Review)
It has always been a trend when a movie became
extremely popular that the Hong Kong movie industry will churn
up endless supply of Knockoffs to cash in on fans who just
couldn’t get enough. Surprisingly Japan have also jumped
in the trend by creating this inferior spin-off and even more
astonishing was that Stephen Chow had given it’s blessing
by serving as a producer (and even include his CJ7 co-star
in this mess … maybe he really hates her as the tabloids
are saying).
Beside
the Kawaii (cute) girls galore (something Japan never seems
to be shortage of) and Kitty Zhang to provide the eye candy
to relief the boredom, there are so many things that went
wrong with Shaolin Girl.
Firstly,
the inept copying of Shaolin soccer was pointlessly trivial
and served only as a time waster. Rin (Kou Shibasaki) went
around recruiting people to learn the Shaolin martial arts
like Stephen Chow in Shaolin Soccer but failing to get a decent
laugh from it and it even felt that this clueless girl was
going around begging desperately.
Then
the finding of her fellow dojo mates which shouldn’t
be unfamiliar for fans of Shaolin Soccer. The difference here
is that it hardly matters whether these fellow ex students
return or not because after mentioning them, they fade away
into oblivion and once again, a time waster.
The
biggest blatant attempt in copying would definitely be the
incorporation of sports to guise the teaching of Shaolin Kungfu.
The first obvious blunder here was the choice of a fairly
unpopular sport - lacrosse. I bet that most viewers would
be equally unfamiliar with this sport and this film made no
effort in explaining how this game was to be played, i.e.
the rules and regulation. The second and biggest mistake of
such inclusion would be that while soccer was the crux of
Shaolin Soccer finale, the lacrosse game was abandon after
¾ of the story, successfully telling the audience that
whatever build up it had doesn’t matters and we the
audience had just wasted our time and concentration in following.
Then
coming from a country like Japan which is famously remembered
for Karate, Ninja and kick ass Animation, it’s a numbing
experience to see how the Kungfu and CGI effects are being
utilized in Shaolin Soccer. Initially something felt amiss
but I couldn’t put my finger on it until I saw Tin Kai
Man and Lam Tze Chung getting tired out after fighting a handful
of baddies. Then it strikes me and answer was all so clear.
The action and animated sequences here are sluggish and uninventive,
specially coming right after the likes of Kungfu Hustle and
Kungfu Panda. Particularity the finale fights which one would
notice, the fighters fell into the pool but remain dry when
they are up and fighting. Makes one wonder what kind of water
was in the pool.
Finally
what was absence in this film that was great in Shaolin Soccer
was the villain’s credibility. Patrick Tse Yin was a
delight to watch and although he had relatively short screen
time, it was obvious what his character wanted, what’s
his function in the show and that certain flair that only
Patrick Tse could carry out. In Shaolin Girl, the villain
played by Tôru Nakamura looks menacingly clueless and
basically hanging around until the finale so that he could
extract his objective. Might not be a bad thing as many films
does that but this one never bothered to explain why didn’t
he attack right in the beginning waited for all this while.
It’s also make one wonder how did he became rich (spoiler:”
after he destroy Rin’s dojo and
grandpa”) with the way he chose to run his university.
A
protagonist can only be as good as it’s villain is evil
and don’t get me started on what went wrong with the
female protagonist in this movie. Let just say that Kitty
Zhang steals the scene from Kou Shibasaki every time they
appeared together. There are far too many things going on
in this film; attempts to copy the original movie and attempts
to mutate into something new that resulted in a horrible balance
of story telling and characterization. In the end, this weak
parody of Kungfu just drags on and on, like a pretty girl
who couldn’t stop whining.
Movie Rating:
(Franchise failure to score due to bad adaptation of successful
formula)
Review by Richard Lim Jr
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