R
E V I E W : New Legend of Shaolin
Reviewed 3/20/00 | Background | Movie
Review | DVD Review | Recommendation

Background
Tai Seng / 1994 / 94 minutes
Directed by Wong Jing
Written by Wong Jing
The film was released in Hong Kong cinemas in February 1994 and did
well at the box office. Subsequently the star, director, and action
choreographer collaborated to much greater effect in High
Risk the following year.
Movie: plot, performances,
production, rating
Plot: Hung Hei Goon is a wanted man. For his part in rebelling against
the Emperor, his wife is killed and he goes on the run with his infant
son. Several years pass. He trains his son Man Ting to follow in his
warrior footsteps. Meanwhile, the Shaolin Temple and the Heaven and
Earth Association have joined together to help bring down the government.
The monks at the Shaolin Temple paint portions of a map on the backs
of five young boys who are training at the temple. The map provides
directions to a secret fortune that will finance the rebellion. The
boys are to meet the leader of the Heaven and Earth Association so he
can find the fortune. The father of one of the boys gets mixed up with
the Notorious Mother and Daughter, a conning and thieving duo. Hijinks
and high kicks ensue.
Performances: Jet Li remains dead serious throughout the entire movie,
playing Hong Hei Goon as a humorless rebellious hero, in contrast to
his more celebrated portrayals of Wong Fei Hung and Fong Sai Yuk. Chingmy
Yau and Deannie Yip are bright and sassy as the (mostly unsuccessful)
daughter and mother con artists. Tze Mui is very good as Man Ting, but
if you've seen this film after the much more successful My Father is
a Hero (as I did), in which this young actor also plays the role of
Jet Li's son, it invites unfavorable comparisons.
Production: An uneasy mixture of Wong Jing humor (involving bodily
functions and similar gags) and already-silly wire-fu may test your
patience. Several sequences are well very imagined and executed (I'm
thinking of a very clever scene involving Jet Li, Chingmy Yau, and thread).
The plot elements hold forth some promise. At the end of the film, however,
I was glad it was over. Too much of the plot seems routine and somewhat
forced together.
Rating: Category II. Many scenes with explicit violence and resultant
bloodshed.
DVD: look, sound, subtitles,
and features
Look: The first and most glaring problem is that the disk is letterboxed
at 1.85 to 1. But the film's true aspect ratio must be closer to 2.35
to 1 - subtitles often run off the sides, and the picture looks like
an enlarged, grainy photograph taken on a toy camera. Black levels are
way too light, colors are murky, and fleshtones look inhuman. The source
print is in terrible shape, with blotches and dirt evident throughout.
I'm no expert, and I don't want to assume I know why Tai Seng released
this disk in such terrible shape. Put it in your player, press "Play,"
and you would be forgiven for thinking a videocassette somehow got jammed
into your DVD player.
Sound: I listened to the Dolby Digital 2.0 Cantonese audio track. To
be charitable, every word and sound can be understood. Beyond audibility,
however, don't expect much. The other audio track provided is DD 2.0
Mandarin.
Subtitles: Chinese and English subtitles are burned into the print.
As noted above, they constantly run off the side of the visible frame.
Other than that, however, they convey the information you need to understand
what's going on.
Features: Nine chapters are provided. Trailers are provided for Dragon
Inn, Running Out of Time, Dragons of the Orient, Hitman, and The Master.
The trailers also play automatically at the end of the movie. No other
features are included.
Buy, rent, or pass?
Rent. Low priority. Be prepared for a disappointment due to the very
poor DVD presentation. Several scenes display a wild sense of imagination,
but overall this is not one of the better results from the teaming of
Jet Li and Corey Yuen Kwai.
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