Showing posts with label Yun-Fat Chow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yun-Fat Chow. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Hard Target: The Extended Director's Cut

"Don't hunt what you can't kill." If only the hunted was someone other than Jean Claude Van Damme.
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It looked like a John Woo film. It sounded like a John Woo film. It even felt like one sometimes. I kept looking for Chow Yun-Fat. There was something just a little off about the proceedings in Director John Woo's Hard Target [1993]. Well, two things really. A little thing called Hollywood got in the way of a visual master. Even funnier, in an odd sort of way, a fellow named Jean Claude Van Damme was cast in the lead. The actor wasn't the least bit Hollywood or even the least bit talented enough to carry the film. I've been informed Kurt Russell was once considered for the part. Oh the insanely criminal injustice of it all.

First, let me extend my thanks to Leopard13 [Lazy Thoughts From A Boomer]for being gracious enough to take time and mail me his sole copy of Hard Target: The Extended Director's Cut. Muchas gracias amigo! I've never taken the time to see the original cut of the film, but I suspect there isn't a need as I'm told this is THE best version of the film hands down. That's too bad too, because I imagine no extension of additional action footage will ever replace the fact Van Damme is in the lead. I thought the least I could do is share a few of my thoughts on the film, thanks to Leopard13, and my ongoing exploration of John Woo.

My desire to check out the John Woo picture stems from viewing John Woo's classic The Killer [1989]. To be honest, I had no intention of writing about it, but writing about film is like a sickness. You simply can't resist. Resistance is futile. No matter how hard you try or how certain your intentions, the next thing you know you find yourself with finger to keypad typing away as if touched by madness.

Van Damme: Rattlesnake Killer!
John Woo fans are a generally fierce and ferocious bunch, like fans of Star Trek or fans of just about any form of popular culture or artform. I'm not certain where Hard Target falls in the pantheon of Woo pictures, but it was definitely a solid notch below The Killer. I won't get into the picture with great length or too many details, but I'll attempt to point out the highlights and lowlights of this particular film for me.

"Watch how my mullet can dodge the bullet!"
Beginning with the lowlights, Jean Claude Van Damme is a questionable actor at least based on the evidence here. When you select a lead for an action film, the man must have the pre-requisite cache to carry the picture or it will ring hollow like Hard Target does without the charisma of someone like Chow Yun-Fat. Yun-Fat had charisma in aces with some to spare and it's no wonder Woo relished working with the actor. Van Damme simply doesn't have alot happening behind the eyes or in the face. He's fairly stoic, but more or less like a stone. Kurt Russell's expressive face worked better in Director Paul W.S. Anderson's dialogue-free Soldier and that's not saying much. There's an almost forgettable quality to Van Damme's presence in the film, ironically as forgettable as his character's name, Chance Boudreau. When you watch a film like The Killer there is an abundance of electricity and emotion in the air based on physical presence alone thanks to the caliber of actor like a Yun-Fat. The Belgian-born Van Damme simply doesn't have it at least for this picture. I feel it's not fair to label or hatchet Van Damme. I've not seen one of his films until now. Not one. He has a massive CV and I'd love to hear from folks out there who would recommend or defend one of his pictures. I understand JCVD [2008] was a fine picture, but on the whole when I see Van Damme in the credits I tend to run and run far away, which explains why I'm viewing this for the first time.

I'm making the exception based on the fact it was recommended by friends and that it's a Van Damme film directed by John Woo. Apart from the fact Van Damme is so limited as the film's lead, the role originally considered for Kurt Russell -oh the pain, there were other minor issues. What is going on with that hair on Van Damme's head? The mullet-type doo with salon gel was almost as disturbing as his inability to capture my imagination or attention when he was on screen. The excessive hair gel and floppy mullet was excruciating to watch. In fact, had Kurt Russell upped the ante with his presence, but retained this stye [or lack thereof] I would have been hard pressed to love that target too. I could certainly envision a Russell look a la Escape From New York or The Thing, but not this atrocity and affront to Tabatha's Salon Takeover.

Now, I love Wilford Brimley [The Thing, Our House], but the French accent was almost too much to bear and nearly as weak as the bizarre accented accent of Van Damme. What were the people thinking when they cast this film? It's bizarre. The romantic or female lead, Yancy Butler [Drop Zone, Kick-Ass], is also serviceable at best, but she does capture the semi-cheese factor that inhabits the John Woo world. After all, this is essentially a Woo action movie.

Here comes Mullet boy!
Speaking of the action, and getting to those highlights, the action sequences when they do appear, are arrousing and choreographed as only John Woo can based on his Hong Kong experience. There are some stellar, trademark, slow-motion moments from the hand of Woo and they are breathtaking in their Killer-esque style. [But, and oh boy there's that but.] But, the thing about those action sequences, in my humble opinion, is that they are only as good as the lead propelling them to fruition. Presence is everything in action. Hence, Van Damme does take me out of the picture a bit as he lacks the kind of radiating leading man presence that Chow Yun-Fat has in spades. The action sequences in Hard Target still aren't as good as the classic The Killer I'm sorry to say. Hard Target is still effective and solid in delivering John Woo's American-stateside action debut, but he definitely lost some control in wowing the audience.

"I really hate his mullet! He must die!"
Another high point is Lance Henriksen who easily delivers one of the most sinister bad guy rolls within the cliched genre. Henriksen is perenially underrated, but he is so damn good in the part and in most parts he accepts. He's frightening. There's a reason he inevitably landed the role of Frank Black for the Chris Carter series Millennium. His career is a fascinating one. This is yet another footnote on his amazing resume of films.

Supporting actor Arnold Voosloo [The Mummy] is also solid as Henriksen's right hand henchman. It's never a good sign when the supporting actor is more memorable than the lead.

In the end, I actually enjoyed Hard Target on its face. And like anything on its surface, you need to dig a little deeper for a film to get under your skin. The Killer achieved that for me. Hard Target lacks the masterful touch of an unencumbered John Woo. It also lacks some choice casting decisions. The film truly suffers as a result of these two factors. Despite my mixed reaction to the movie, I liked Hard Target and would recommend this particular Extended Director's Cut for a viewing. I'm told the action sequences are more intact as a result of this cut. Without those sequences, Hard Target would suffer. As it is, I would have liked more action to compensate for the film's shortcomings. This is clearly the only cut to find.

Check my mullet move boy!

Despite my conservative ways, I'm reminded of the brilliant line by late Democratic Vice-Presidential nominee, Lloyd Bentsen, delivered to Republican Vice-Presidential candidate Dan Quayle, "I served with Jack Kennedy. I knew Jack Kennedy. Jack Kennedy was a friend of mine. Senator, you're no Jack Kennedy" [in response to Quayle's comparison of himself to Jack Kennedy]. Well, I've seen The Killer. I've experienced The Killer. The Killer is a personal favorite of mine. Hard Target my friend, you're nothing like The Killer. Chow Yun-Fat is also a far more fascinating hard target. I'm simply unable to avoid comparison. Still, for what it is, Hard Target is a decent action film thanks to John Woo. It's success rests squarely with Woo and the work of Henriksen. I don't know, maybe I have a thing against stocky, muscular Belgian leads running around the bayou as my hero, but was there not a more viable alternative to Jean Claude Van Damme? Getting that particular target right might have made the difference. Did I mention the plot? Really.

Hard Target: B

Actor Footnote: Jean Claude Van Damme [1960-present]. I do use the term actor loosely. His action highlights include: No Retreat, No Surrender [1985], Bloodsport [1988], Black Eagle [1988], Cyborg [1989], Kickboxer [1989], Death Warrant [1990], Lionheart [1990], Double Impact [1991], Universal Soldier [1992], Hard Target [1993], Nowhere To Run [1993], Street Fighter [1994], Timecop [1994], Sudden Death [1995], Maximum Risk [1996], The Quest [1996], Double Team [1997], Legionnaire [1998], Knock Off [1998], Universal Soldier: The Return [1999], Inferno/Desert Heat [1999], The Order [2001], Replicant [2001], Derailed [2002], In Hell [2003], Wake Of Death [2003], The Hard Corps [2006], Second In Command [2006], Sinav [2006], Until Death [2007], The Shepherd: Border Patrol [2008], JCVD [2008], Universal Soldier: Regeneration [2009] and The Eagle Path [2010]. His career path has been interesting working with Roland Emmerich, Peter Hyams [and his son], Tsui Hark to eventually directing himself. Have you noticed the box covers to these films look an awful lot alike? Perhaps I will give Van Damme a second chance with JCVD.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

The Killer

Finally took time out to tackle Director John Woo's much lauded, highly acclaimed The Killer [1989]. It's been one of those films I've always wanted to see, but never had the opportunity to do so. Part of the reason the film has been so evasive is its availability [legally speaking]. An official copy of the DVD was scarce. A quality Criterion Edition of the DVD was issued in 1998. Fans absolutely adore that cut of the film and some consider it to be the quintessential DVD to own still. Well, that Criterion Edition is out of print and fairly scarce. In order to get that DVD on ebay or on Amazon one would need to shell out over 100 greenbacks. I just couldn't pull the trigger on it [appropriate phraseology given the film's content]. I sometimes wonder about ebay buyers [and I'm no exception]. What buyers won't dole out for items speaks to two points: either money is no object or we're completely out of our minds. Still, fans know no boundaries when it comes to the things they treasure.

In the end, The Killer was issued on Blu-Ray, at a reasonable price, by Dragon Dynasty and it's easy to visually understand the grumblings and general gripes by fans over its technical flaws. Techies want pristine. I prefer it myself, but when you're a beggar you simply can't be a chooser, and in this rare case I fell somewhere closer to the former camp. The Blu-Ray was my one and only option without filing for bankruptcy and for what it's worth I'm pleased to own this piece of cinema history.

My initial reactions to Director John Woo's film in the first quarter of the film were varied. There were moments of cringe-inducing 80s cheese complete with the noteworthy fashions of the day. There were even a few moments where the film semmed to crackle along with a kind of amateurish energy. This combined with the slightly dated look and technical imperfections forced me to proceed with some caution after years of building high expectations. But, as the Cantonese-based film rolled along I found myself slowly won over by Chow Yun-Fat's character, the emotional subtext that first felt mildly cheesy as well as John Woo's approach, style and pacing. It became apparent this was an actioner with a dose of sincerity and heart. While there was a distinct 80s sensibility to the fashion and soundtrack it seems something of a minor miracle this film looks as astounding as it does hailing from Canton, Southern China home to Hong Kong. This sequence is where the worm really turned for me in the story. How often does an action film pause like this? Wonderful.



Truthfully, one of the things that drew me to the film, was not so much the amazing or much heralded resume of Director John Woo [Mission: Impossible 2, Face Off, Hard Target, Hard Boiled], as deserved as it may be, but rather my affection for actor Chow Yun-Fat. Woo's work is certainly notable, but I am more deeply enamored with actor Yun-Fat's resume [see below]. Like actors Kurt Russell, Ian McShane, Christopher Walken or Rutger Hauer, I was immediately taken by the actor's screen presence upon my first personal introduction to his work. Since then, like the films of those aforementioned actors, I have been a close observer of the work of Chow Yun-Fat ever since.

My first exposure to Yun-Fat was not with a Woo picture, but rather Director Antoine Fuqua's debut feature film The Replacement Killers [1998]. While Yun-Fat and Woo clearly created a beautiful artistic marriage working together on a host of films, the two ultimately broke into the American markets in the 1990s to varying degrees of success, but ultimately both would make their marks internationally. The Replacement Killers stylish action instantly spoke to me, but was hardly original. In fact, it's clearly a far inferior work to many of the Woo/ Fat productions pre-Hollywood.

Fuqua's The Replacement Killers captured the essence of The Killer with a seemingly bigger budget including sequences [Mira Sorvino with Chow Yun-Fat] that look like copies of scenes extracted directly from The Killer [Chow Yun-Fat with Danny Lee]. Fuqua was a fan. The concept of a hired assassin was applied for Fuqua's film with a twist. Instead of Yun-Fat's character, another assassin, carrying out an assassination tasked to him, he opts out of his assignment due to the age of his next young target. His affection for the innocent would not allow him to cross such an ethical/ moral boundary. His personal code would not allow for such a violation. These moral codes are also at the heart of many of Woo's own Cantonese pictures. Following his decision, Yun-Fat's assassin character is primary target number one. Ultimately, the direction of both films are setups for Yun-Fat to act the part of an assassin on the run. The stories are essentially told by image and through visceral action complete with wonderful slow motions shots. Fuqua even takes a page from Woo's pictures and applies them to his own Hollywood production. The Replacement Killers [28 million budget] was Yun-Fat's introduction to the American marketplace and it's is a terrific little Honk Kong-styled action gem without actually being one. One thing is clear, The Killer's influence on Director Fuqua and others is undeniable.



The Killer is indeed one of John Woo's original best for its pure, single-minded focus. At the heart of the action is a simple tale about two men at odds with their own personal codes of conduct and their relationship fused with a love story and a few guns. The Killer is an extremely violent action picture with a heart. It's easily a template for much of Woo's oeuvre. It may not be a technically perfect film a la Hollywood, but for an overseas picture with a limited budget it achieves a visionary style that is unrelenting and influential. Like Antoine Fuqua, Quentin Tarantino and Luc Besson both clearly absorbed much from Woo. Woo's style is vivid and he clearly compensated for any limitations he might have experienced in the film's making to bring a classic to the screen.
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It was also clear to me by the end of the picture that my adoration for Chow Yun-Fat is not unjustified. The man is clearly the uncontested agent of cool. He is the man. In fact, while The Replacement Killers is very good, The Killer has an emotional resonance within its moral narrative that had me connected to the characters that much more. Chow Yun-Fat's character, Ah Jong, becomes embroiled in a cat and mouse game opposite Li Ying [played by Danny Lee], a police detective that dogs him at every turn perhaps more determined than the assassin himself. While certainly not wholly original the pairing of the two actors adds real depth to the story intercut with minutes of splendidly choreographed action. You begin to understand the worlds of these two men. You also begin to realize they are not that different. Both men are persistent, intelligent, professional with a healthy respect for loyalty and honor. Both are subject to variations in code and beholden to external expectations and pressures. In fact, later in the film, Ah Jong points out these similarities and the exposition spelling out their connection is entirely unnecessary for the audience. There are complex moral questions in play as the film reaches its rousing conclusion. The complicated nature of the two men keep things from devolving into stereotypical cardboard cutouts between the action sequences. Ah Jong doubts his commitment to the assassin's life and yearns to escape it; Li Ying doubts his commitment to the law without support of the institution and yearns to escape it.

The Killer makes James Bond look like child's play. The gloves come off in the final act and the bloody shoot out echoes a kind of Asian version of Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid [1969]. I immediately felt the connection to that film especially when Ah Jong references the idea of shooting his way out of the church. In fact, as much as The Replacement Killers owes a debt of gratitude to Woo's The Killer, there is clear evidence Woo is paying homage to Director George Roy Hill's Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid [1969] among others.


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Apart from a slight bit of melodrama,a syrupy Cantonese pop number and the cheesy synthetic Asian score my wife dubs as porn music that runs the course of the film, The Killer is positively epic. It's easy to account for the hordes of fans that love the cinematic style of The Killer. I would rank myself among them along with the work of Chow Yun-Fat. He has a unique charisma that is very physical. There isn't a great deal of dialogue and with Yun-Fat none is required. His guns speak for him. Dancing throughout a thrilling ballet of violence, the stunning Yun-Fat is a consummate professional killer with a heart. I always knew the 80s had it in spades, film, music, you name it. In fact, there's a lot more going on in The Killer than The Replacement Killers, which is higher on style than substance. While that film was a stylistic achievement, this one is the original with a more substantive plot. So, my mission to learn more about the vast world of Yun-Fat and to experience for myself this long heralded classic that is The Killer proved to be a revealing and rewarding one. The film was everything and a bit more. The Killer is a classic piece of cinema history.
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One final point, the Triad [the criminal syndicate from which Ah Jong and his friend, Fung Sei, hailed] is changing. The concept of honor and loyalty and respect is dying. I loved this aspect of the film and it reminded me of The Syndicate from Cowboy Bebop [1998-1999], clearly influenced by the Hong Kong pictures, and how the elders were wiped out by the younger replacements like Vicious who had no respect for honor. Honor and a code of ethics are by-gone aspects of the criminal life in film and this is underlined in both Cowboy Bebop and The Killer. Good and evil are represented by the symbolic flight of birds [doves or crows]. There were moments in Cowboy Bebop that reminded me of The Replacement Killers, but it was clearly The Killer and other Hong Kong cinema that influenced the aforementioned anime series and other contemporary action films. There's nothing Hollywood about The Killer and the fates of its principals. It's modern Asian tragedy with stylish excess. Still, how does the killer load those gun clips so quickly? Guns would seemingly empty their chambers in seconds, but miraculously continue to fire. Okay, maybe that's asking a bit too much. The Killer is a wild, sometimes messy, ultimately beautiful triumph of style and images as a vehicle for telling Woo's emotional story that weaves like a stream of visual poetry. This combination of action and story produced a clearly universal message, which may explain its wide international appeal. This is pure, complete, unscripted [literally shot without a finished script] classic John Woo [with little to no outside influence]. Together, with Chow Yun-Fat, The Killer remains one of their Hong Kong best and one of their best films period.
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The Killer: A
Writer: John Woo
Director: John Woo
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The Cast:
Chow Yun-Fat [Ah Jong]
Sally Yeh [Jennie]
Danny Lee [Detective Li Ying]
Kenneth Sang [Sgt. Tsang Yeh]
Paul Chu Kong [Fung Sei]
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Chow Yun-Fat [1955-present]. Cantonese born. His film highlights include: A Better Tomorrow [1986], A Better Tomorrow II [1987], City On Fire [1987], The Killer [1989], A Better Tomorrow III [1990], Full Contact [1992], Hard Boiled [1992], Once A Thief [1994], The Replacement Killers [1998], The Corruptor [1999], Anna And The King [1999], Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon [2000], Bulletproof Monk [2003], Curse Of The Golden Flower [2006] and The Children Of Huang Shi [2008].
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DVD Extra highlights include an exclusive interview with Director John Woo [25 min], an American Cinema Q&A on The Killer [2002] and Hard Boiled [2002].