Bulletproof Monk
review by Cynthia
Fuchs, 18 April 2003
Inscrutable
It's not impossible to guess why producers Terence
Chang and John Woo might think Paul Hunter was a good choice to
direct Bulletproof Monk. His video for Mariah Carey's "Honey"
does include some actionish scenes, after all, and Michael Jackson's
"You Rock My World" dishes up a few shady characters. But for the
most part, the resulting movie, adapted from the Flypaper Press
comic book, doesn't look slick and kind of burnished (like the
video), but looks haphazard and silly, like it's been assembled from
fragments of other movies, with scant attention to sense.
The action
begins with a brief setup in 1943 Tibet. The soon to be nameless
Monk (Chow Yun-Fat) is training on one of those rope bridges over
yawning abysses that martial arts movies like to feature. A little
flipping and corkscrew spinning, a little pole-wielding, and yes,
his Master (Roger Yuan) tells him he's ready to take on the great
responsibility of guarding the sacred Scroll of the Ultimate (which
will grant whoever reads it aloud power over all the world). With
that, Master must exit and Monk (who gives up his name in order to
indicate his dedication to his task) is on his own. Wise and
inscrutable beyond his years, Monk knows how to escape the Nazis who
come looking for the scroll, by still more flipping and
corkscrew-spinning, so speedy and nimble that he appears to be...
bulletproof.
Needless to
say, the Head Nazi-In-Charge, the weasel-faced Struker (Karel Roden),
is determined to get his paws on that scroll. So, when he misses it
this first time, rest assured he'll be back when the film cuts ahead
sixty years. This next part takes place in Any City 2003 (shot in
Toronto), indicated by the establishing shot on a crowded subway
platform, workplace for cocky pickpocket Kar (Buff Stifler, that is,
Seann William Scott following several months of training). He and
Monk meet cute while running from assorted adversaries (cops in
Kar's case, Nazis in Monk's) and pausing to rescue a hapless black
child who conveniently falls on the train tracks in time to provide
Kar with a test of his moral mettle.
This subway
setting allows for a brief and silly detour to a literally
underground enclave, where Kar shows off his skills (learned, he
insists, by watching kung fu movies at the Golden Palace movie
theater, where he's the projectionist for an owner played by the
venerable Mako). Kar's nemeses in this instance are a pack o' thugs,
led by the self-loving, hard-abbed, much-inked Mr. Funktastic
(Patrick Hagarty) and including Mr. F's lady friend, the
kung-fu-fighting and exceedingly lovely Russian mafia princess Jade
(Jaime King, Devon Sawa's object of affection in the mostly
depressing Slackers). Just why she's in this underground is
not so clear, something to do with hating her dad.
Monk (who, by
the way, has not aged a mite, because of his special spiritual
status as scroll watcher) hides so he can observe Kar, whom he
thinks has "potential" (specifically, to be the next scroll
watcher). Kar, in turn, gamely fights off the gang, kicking and
flipping and pole-wielding. Aha, surmises Monk, nodding wisely and
inscrutably to himself, Kar looks like the one.
Their second
meeting provides the film's most endearing scene: Monk stops by
Kar's abode above the movie theater, where he eats Cocoa Puffs while
schooling the youngster, who has the temerity to pronounce, "I'm
kickin' your freaky ass back to wherever the hell it came from." Um,
this is Chow Yun-Fat he's talking to.
So okay, Little
Faux Grasshopper has a ways to go en route to what he terms "all
that enlightenment stuff." (And, from Raiders of the Lost Ark
to Karate Kid to Kung Fu, from Subway to The
Matrix, Bulletproof Monk has lots of homages to make.)
Monk dutifully takes up the task of teaching Kar to be all he can
be, by posing riddles ("Why do hotdogs come in packages of ten,
while hotdog buns come in packages of eight?") or fortune cookie-ish
profundities ("You should be asking yourself, who you are: your mind
is full of compassion, but your mind is also impure").
Understandably, Kar initially resists. But there's no fighting the
East-West buddy formula.
The plot
jumbles up a little with the reappearance of Struker (now in a
wheelchair and weighted by layers of plastic wrinkles), accompanied
by his minions (now in suits rather than uniforms). Aiding in the
quest for the scroll is his alarmingly Aryan granddaughter, Nina
(Victoria Smurfit); she has devised the brilliant idea to disguise
the Nazis' general and apparently profitable nefariousness under the
auspices of something called the Human Rights Organization.
While the boys
are busy enlightening one another, Jade stumbles on the Human Rights
Organization's museum exhibit, featuring "art" that represents
atrocities and abuses, and yes, someone even calls it "man's
inhumanity to man." Don't you think, muses Jade, that all these ugly
pictures might give people ideas, like how-tos for murder and
mayhem? Nina counters with her own philosophical conundrum: pointing
to the photo of a soldier about to shoot a prisoner, she wonders
whether this pretty little rich girl would rather be the shooter or
the about to be shot.
The movie, in
other words, has a couple of ideas rattling around in its head,
ideas that are -- or could be -- strangely relevant (or perhaps just
eternal): atrocities come variously packaged, some perpetrators
understand PR, and privileged folks can use occasional wake-ups
(even if they do revert to privileged willful blindness when push
comes to shove, which it usually does). But the movie can't quite
get these ideas collected into a memorable shape. Eventually,
Bulletproof Monk resembles a comic book that's missing a few
pages.
By the time
Monk reveals that he's written the scroll onto his body à la The
Pillow Book, Bulletproof Monk is plainly struggling,
caught between those rattling (perverse, somewhat interesting) ideas
and its ostensible action-movie imperative. First Nina and then
Struker must read him: she checks Monk's nether regions as she
"scans" the text off him, granddad prefers to read the characters
off his monitor, perhaps less inclined toward the perverse sexual
domination, at least until he's made his transition back to Younger
Struker, and poking needles in Monk's head serves as his very own
Nazi-experimenting-as-sex metaphor. This sort of unexamined
allusiveness is, in the end, more tedious than provocative.
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Directed
by:
Paul Hunter
Starring:
Chow Yun-Fat
Seann William Scott
Jaime King
Karel Roden
Victoria Smurfit
Mako
Patrick Hagarty
Written
by:
Ethan Reiff
Cyrus Voris
Rated:
PG-13 - Parents
Strongly Cautioned.
Some material may
be inappropriate for
children under 13.
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