The Legend of Drunenk Master
This is the English-dubbed version of a superb 1994 Hong Kong film also known
as Drunken Master 2. Jackie Chan plays a master of the disfavored
Drunken Boxing school who tries to stop a British Embassy creep and his
myrmidons from looting Chinese antiquities. The film starts as if in a hurry
but soon acquires purpose, pace, and style. The fights get more and more
inventive. The filmmakers -- Chan himself replaced credited director Lau Ka
Leung -- know that to work as a comedy, a movie must be serious about some
things. Thus the plot, though tossed off, is rich in thematic tensions:
son/father, national pride/foreign greed, labor/management, booze/herbal
medicine.
Above all, The Legend of Drunken Master is a success of form.
Characters pair off in combat as briskly, and with the same triumphant shift
between levels of reality, as leads in a musical join in song. For the big
numbers, choruses of fighters storm elaborate sets -- a collapsible two-story
wooden pavilion; a steel mill that looks as if it had been designed by Hammer
Films for a zombie remake of Oliver! And the rubber face of Anita Mui's
comic stepmother is as quick and funny as Chan's acrobat body. At the
Flagship and Showcase cinemas.
-- Chris Fujiwara
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