Pure Chan
Jackie Chan fans won't need convincing to go see The
Legend of Drunken Master. They would never miss an
opportunity to see their favorite kung fu star on the
big screen. So this review is aimed at the rest of you
folks who haven't yet given Chan a chance. If you
somehow missed Shanghai Noon, Chan's recent U.S.
"breakthrough" film with Owen Wilson, check out this
movie, one of his many terrific pre-breakthrough
efforts.
The movie is based on the true story of Wong Fei-hung,
a legendary martial artist. (Chan is not the first to
film aspects of Wong Fei-hung's life -- there are over
200 Chinese and Hong Kong movies about him.) Wong
Fei-hung was known as the "drunken master" because he
practiced the art of "drunken boxing," in which the
fighter bobs and zigzags as though drunk to put his
opponent off balance. In the movie, Wong (Jackie
Chan) is learning the martial arts and Chinese
medicine from his father, Wong Kei-ying (Ti Lung), who
forbids him to practice drunken boxing. Because the
art involves the use of alcohol to increase
flexibility, reduce pain, and increase physical and
mental powers, his father fears Wong may succumb to
alcoholism.
The film begins with Wong and his father returning
from a trip to purchase medicinal herbs. In an attempt
to avoid paying taxes at the border, Wong accidentally
mixes up his package of a rare ginseng root with
another box. Wong's ensuing efforts to hide the mix-up
from his father and the police result in delightfully
Jackie-Chanian comic fiascoes, such as the release of
a panicky flock of fowl in the first-class dining car,
a series of dives in and out of the windows of the
train, and a precarious run on top of the moving
train. Naturally, Wong inadvertently ends up with
someone else's package, which happens to contain an
ancient jade seal stolen by an evil British
ambassador, sought by a loyal Chinese solider (a cameo
by director Lau Kar Leung), and -- small world --
desired by Wong's own father. The rest of the movie
has Wong cavorting and running about, still trying to
conceal his error from his father, with the aid of his
supportive, mah-jongg-obsessed stepmother (Anita Mui),
while also thwarting the British ambassador's
endeavors to recover the seal.
Chan has enormous talent as an actor, a director,
choreographer, martial artist, and comedian -- if only
he were a scriptwriter, he would have total control
over every project. Critics have raved about the
fighting sequences in this film, and they deserve the
praise, but the content has been glossed over,
presented as something to suffer through between
action sequences, or belittled as incoherent compared
to western plot and narrative standards. There are a
few incongruities -- Chan is simply too old to play
the dependent son, and besides, his stepmother appears
younger than he is (Mui is his real-life
ex-girlfriend, and is in fact younger than he is); the
movie ends abruptly; and, Chan is strangely absent
from the last sequence. But these are minor problems.
What makes this plot worthy of more discussion are its
anti-imperialistic and pro-labor themes.
Chan's movies usually feature a hyperbolically bad bad
guys, and the primary villain of Drunken Master is
no exception. However, the British ambassador's evil
deeds are not typical of Chan's films. He isn't
involved in the drug trade or organized crime -- a
more typical villainous activity in Chan's films -- he
is stealing Chinese cultural treasure for sale to
British museums and exploiting the workers at a nearby
steel factory -- not to mention holding Chan hostage
to force his father to sell his kung fu school. The
daily noise coming from the school, it seems, is
disturbing the ambassador's peace and quiet. His
attack on the school and his theft of the jade seal
represent the ambassador's lack of respect for the
school's long tradition and Chinese traditional
practices in general. In response to this plundering
of history and present-day laborers, Wong, who begins
the film as a cut-up who threatens to destroy his
father's reputation as a healer and martial arts
teacher, comes to the aid of the workers. As he
enters the conflict between the owners and the
workers, he strides onto the scene dressed in a long
white robe, exuding a new calm and purpose, before he
proceeds to kick some serious ass.
Though his antics are comic as ever, what makes this
film stand out are the thrilling and frankly beautiful
fight sequences. They are doubly pleasurable because
there are no special effects, no digitization, no
stunt doubles. It is "pure" Chan -- acting as his own
special effects laboratory. The final fight scene is
perhaps the best, pitting Chan against the great Ken
Lo Houi-Kang (playing one of the film's villains), set
a working steel mill. Twenty minutes long -- it's
something of a tradition in martial arts movies to run
long climactic fight scenes -- it took over four
months to film, due to the care taken to represent
each mind-blowing acrobatic feat. For one instance,
Wong is forced back into a burning bed of hot coals
used to melt steel; he falls into the pit and must
walk through it, emerging in flames on the other side.
He is now firmly on the path of the real Wong
Fei-hung, legendary as a champion of the poor and
oppressed.
The release history of Drunken Master is, if not exactly legendary, famously confusing. Suffice it to say that the rights to Chan's Chinese movies are now owned by a U.S. distributor, Dimension, who is releasing these older films with new names (even though some, such as The Legend of Drunken Master -- previously known as Drunken Master II when it was first released in Asia in 1994 and briefly in the U.S. in 1995 -- have already been available on video.) This explains why Chan looks so young in this picture:
he is young!