+ another review of Romeo Must Die by Jonathan Beller
I Know Hip-hop
At one point in this strange mishmash of high tech martial arts
and oldschool feuding families, the two starcross'd leads Han
(Jet Li) and Trish (Aaliyah) are trying to gain entrance into
a trendy Oakland nightclub. Trish being the daughter of local
gangster Isaak O'Day (Delroy Lindo), as well as being, you know,
Aaliyah has instant cache. But her companion, hot on the
trail of his brother's murderer and fresh off the plane from Hong
Kong, obviously doesn't fit in. And so they come up with a
disguise: Trish lends Han her baseball cap to wear backwards and
pulls a lock of his hair to show through the front (gangsta meets
our gang?). He smiles. "I know hip-hop," he says, then tugs at
his pants so they ride about a quarter of an inch lower than
before, slumps his shoulders, and pushes his pelvis forward.
He knows hip-hop all right. Or rather, he knows what passes for
hip-hop in mainstream movies, where it's typically reduced to
designer-label baggy pants and too-cool-for-school smirks.
Despite its claim to marry hip-hop and martial arts (and excellent
soundtrack, produced by Stanley Clarke and Timbaland), Romeo Must Die really doesn't pay much attention to hip-hop, except as
a means to get a young crossover crowd into theater seats. At the
same time, however (and almost in spite of itself), the film acts
out and explicitly frames some of the very politics that hip-hop
tends to highlight (if not always constructively analyze or
counter), having to do with racism and socioeceonomic power
structures.
Consider, for instance, the cultural and financial geography
imagined by Romeo Must Die. Its Oakland waterfront is "prime"
real estate for a planned NFL stadium, but of the eight lots that
will seal the deal, four are owned by blacks and four by Chinese.
The film makes much visual hay out of the fact that the deal is
being sealed and orchestrated by a white (maybe Jewish) guy
named Roth (Edoardo Ballerini). Roth appears repeatedly assuming
rich-white-guy attitudes, on the golf course (deriding Isaak for
hitting his ball into a sandtrap) and in his tastefully appointed
loft office (where a camera tracks him across its spaciousness,
pausing to admire an expensive architectural model of the
stadium). In other words, for all the violence wrought by the
Chinese and black contingents (and there is a lot of it), the
real power still resides with the usual suspect. (And it will be
Isaak's tragic error that he imagines he can muscle his way into
an "owner's box.")
While this three-way raced dynamic fuels much U.S. penal rhetoric
concerning the need for (urban) order and containment (a rhetoric
that tends to blame victims), in Romeo Must Die, the dynamic is
reframed. It's not about gangs in the hood, but about families
wanting to secure legacies. Han's father, Mr. Sing (Henry O,
known in Asia as Xi Reng Jiang) and Isaak battle one another for
the biggest chunk of the waterfront-becoming-stadium-property
pie, passing on their rage and frustration to their eager-to-please but never-loyal-enough children (not Han and Trish, who
Fall In Love instead: more on that later) and untrustworthy
underlings (who, of course, seek other options and pay dearly for
their selfishness).
The film opens with a long shot following a fancy car into
Oakland, with DMX's blood-pounding lyrics: "Life is a lesson, and
I am the teacher (What!?!)." And yes, lessons start coming fast
and loud. Han's brother Po (Jon Kit Lee) is introduced making
trouble at a club owned by a gangsta named Silk (DMX, who appears
briefly, wielding a large automatic weapon, not really teaching
anyone anything). When Po is killed, Han hears about it back in
Hong Kong (where he's serving time due to some crime committed
and ducked by his father). Han turns into Jimmy Cagney in White Heat, losing control in the cafeteria, he slams some guards in
the face with his fried rice; he soon finds himself hanging in a
cell surrounded by guards looking for revenge. What follows is a
spectacular fight scene, with Han swinging on his chain and
bouncing off the walls like he's in Thunderdome.
After his unbelievable and inevitable escape, Han lands neatly in
Oakland, where he promptly and neatly meets Trish, rebellious
daughter, boutique owner, and stylish dresser (she's always in
midriff tops, no matter what the occasion: clubbing or chasing
assassins). This meeting allows her to mistake Han for a
cabdriver named Akbar, apparently so they can share several
unfunny immigrant cabbie jokes, usually at the expense of her
inept bodyguard Mo (Anthony Anderson). Han finds several reasons
to show off his Jet Li moves: he spars playfully with his
father's Number 2, Kai (Russell Wong, of TV's Vanishing Son)
with a Naya water bottle as their prominent prop (a friend of
mine noted that they could have been doing a Naya commercial,
their bottle-holding poses are so well-framed and their smiles so
on-cue). Or again, Han runs afoul of Isaak's Number 2, a player
unimaginatively named Mac (Isaiah Washington, a consistently
charismatic performer with not nearly enough to do here), who
challenges him to an informal football game in the park. At
first Han doesn't understand that when he has the ball everyone
is supposed to hit him. Once he construes this detail, he
kickboxes his way through the multi-manned black crew, whomping
and kicking and punching each, as long as he's got the ball in
his hands. Han wins the game.
Han should also win the girl, but this the most troubled and
troubling aspect of Romeo Must Die: it can't figure out a way
to make him a Romeo (except as one character briefly refers to
him, thus presumably motivating the title) to Aaliyah's Juliet.
She's burning charisma and Jet Li's no slouch, but they barely
come into physical contact, much less kiss. At film's end, after
they've lost family members to murder and suicide, and witnessed
or caused the deaths and maimings of several worker bees, they
literally walk off screen with arms barely around each other's
waists, looking for all the world like that "beautiful
friendship" just starting at the end of Casablanca. What's up
with that?
It would seem that the film scripted by Eric (Surviving the Game) Bernt, based on Mitchell (The Whole Nine Yards) Kapner's
story, and directed by Lethal Weapon 4 cinematographer Andrzej
Bartkowiak can't quite imagine its way out of the "cultural
boundaries" it establishes as its political framework. While
warring Italian families might produce sexed-up, impetuous, and
passionate children (think Olivia Hussey, Claire Danes, Leo
before the big ship), the "kids" here are considerably more
measured in their responses to the insanity around them.
Granted, Jet Li is 35 years old and his Han is determinedly
oldschool about codes of honor (and righteously furious at his
father for turning "native" in the U.S., that is, becoming a
fervent capitalist). And granted, Aaliyah is at 20 already
a seasoned, self-aware performer (her first record, Age Ain't Nothing But a Number, went platinum when she was 14), and the
film presents Trish as level-headed and moralistic, not the type
to jump into bed with just anyone, even if the screenplay
(positioning her as a "Juliet") would seem to ask for it.
But the more immediate problem is not the players or even the
characters, but the perversely ahistorical "historical"
situations the film envisions, the impassable rifts between
cultures and races and nationalities. And, it's possible that
all of these rifts come back to gender expectations in a U.S.-made action film. It's plain that anxieties about seemly or
respectable masculinity are everywhere in Romeo Must Die
(perhaps the title is a kind of edict to virtuous boy lovers: you
gotta ball to survive these days). Kai is a ruthless mercenary
with a nice ride, but the black men have the hugest weapons and
make the biggest noises. Trish is willing to shoot down
villains, but she'd rather not get into her dad's lousy business
(and her most "emotive" moments are spent in her childhood
bedroom, amongst her stuffed animals). Her brother Colin (D.B.
Woodside) wants so badly for his dad to treat him "like a man,"
that he's willing to betray his dad to get his attention. Mac,
well, he's a beautiful stone killer with major ambition and a
grudge against Isaak (another father hang-up, in its unsubtle
way). And Han, he's such a gentleman that he can't "hit a
woman," so when he has to take out a vicious woman biker
(Francoise Yip, the brilliant Hong Kong action star), he has to
use Trish's body as a weapon: it's dazzling choreography but lame
gender politics.
If all of the above sound like racist stereotypes, that's the point.
Familiar by definition, they're included here to appeal to that tried and
true action-movie fanbase, the adolescent male viewers who supposedly
"don't know any better" (in fact, most of them do know better and frankly
disdain the simplistic pap with which action films seem so enamored).
But the stereotypes make the romance impossible. There's no way that a
Chinese guy can ride off into the sunset with a black woman and make it
look convincing, despite Newsweek's recent article proclaiming that
"Asian men" are "on a roll" (because, as good wage-earners and polite
persons, they are now optimum objects of desire for white women in the
U.S.), despite the fact that he's someone as charismatic as Han or Jet Li.
And this is the rub in a film that means to combine hip-hop and martial
arts which, by rights and by Wutang dictates, should allow the most
complex transformations and interactions of gender, nationality, and
power. Romeo Must Die, by contrast, embraces the least innovative male
roles in each, the tortured macho thug and the tortured honor-bound son,
and finds itself unable to breathe.