Dragon Blade

Another CNY Box Office blockbuster for Jackie

Jackie’s still got it. :cool:

Dragon Blade tops CNY box office in China

By Kevin Ma

Thu, 26 February 2015, 10:30 AM (HKT)

Box Office News
After taking the number position on the first day of the Lunar New Year holiday with its huge opening, period action epic Dragon Blade (pictured) held the top of the box office over the seven-day holiday.

In its first six days, the Daniel LEE film earned RMB451 million (US$72.1 million) from approximately 10.1 million admissions. Starring Jackie CHAN , John CUSACK and Adrien BRODY, the film accounted for approximately 22.7% of all screenings nationwide during the holiday.

The next most successful films of the holiday were WONG Jing 's From Vegas to Macau II and Jean-Jacques ANNAUD’s Wolf Totem . The two films were the only releases to increase in revenue on each day of the entire holiday period.

After opening with RMB61.7 million (US$9.86 million) last Thursday, From Vegas to Macau II earned RMB417 million (US$66.6 million) from approximately 10.1 million admissions for a second-place finish over the six-day holiday. The action comedy accounted for approximately 18.1% of all screenings.

Last year, the first From Vegas to Macau made RMB182 million (US$29.1 million) over the new year holiday. It earned a total of RMB525 million (US$86.8 million) during its theatrical run.

Despite a soft opening last Thursday, Wolf Totem remained strong over the holiday with RMB243 million (US$38.8 million) from approximately 6.02 million admissions over six days. Including the gross from a week of early previews, the 3-D drama – which accounted for approximately 11.8% of all screenings — has made RMB298 million (US$47.5 million) in total.

3-D fantasy adventure Zhong Kui: Snow Girl and the Dark Crystal opened in third place, earning RMB263 million (US$42 million) from approximately 6.38 million admissions. The ZHAO Tianyu and Peter PAU film accounted for approximately 15.3% of all screenings.

Where Are We Going, Dad? 2 , the second feature-length version of the popular reality show, opened in fifth place. With approximately 13.7% of all screenings, the film made RMB167 million (US$26.7 million) from approximately 4.37 million admissions.

Last year, the first Where Are We Going, Dad? earned RMB474 million (US$75.7 million) during the holiday. It earned a total of RMB696 million (US$111 million) during its theatrical run.

Triumph in the Skies , the feature-length continuation of the Hong Kong television series, earned RMB105 million (US$16.8 million) from approximately 2.85 million admissions. The romantic drama accounted for approximately 9.18% of all screenings.

Emperor’s Holidays – a comedy starring the cast of Where Are We Going, Dad’s first season and film – opened in seventh place. With approximately 6.68% of all screenings, the WANG Yuelun film earned RMB74.5 million (US$11.9 million) from approximately 2.01 million admissions. It is the only major holiday release to not pass the RMB100 million (US$16.0 million) mark.

Opening on Saturday, Legend of a Rabbit: The Martial of Fire earned RMB4.5 million (US$719,000) from approximately 131,000 admissions over four days.

THR review

‘Dragon Blade’ (‘Tian Jiang Xiong Shi’): Film Review
11:11 AM PST 2/26/2015 by Clarence Tsui


Courtesy of Intercontinental Film Distributors

The Bottom Line
A small victory, given the restrictive context of mainstream Chinese cinema

Opens
Feb. 19 (China)

Director
Daniel Lee

Cast
Jackie Chan, John Cusack, Adrien Brody, Lin Peng

Jackie Chan and John Cusack play English-speaking warriors fighting a common enemy in China’s western hinterlands more than two millenniums ago

Beyond its fantastic premise of a Hun-Chinese fighter befriending a Roman warrior in English in Central Asia in 48 BC, Daniel Lees Dragon Blade is perhaps one of the more measured Jackie Chan blockbusters to have emerged in recent years. While the stars acrobatic action sequences remain eye-catching as ever, the films narrative also positions Chan in between his wildly swinging registers of po-faced drama (Shinjuku Incident or The Karate Kid) and passé cops-and-robbers comedy (the Rush Hour films, Chinese Zodiac).

Lee (14 Blades, White Vengeance) and his mostly Hong Kong-originated crew have helped prevent Chan (who is also producer and action director here) from falling back on convenient caricatures of himself and his slap-happy shtick. Exerting significant control over the film from a screenplay filled with modern resonance to very effective production design Lee just barely manages to overcome the jarring problem posed by its (mugging) American cast.

Having set Chinas box office ablaze over the Lunar New Year holidays with its takings at US$72.2 million as the week-long festivities, which began on Feb. 19, draw to a close Dragon Blade should play well with action-film genre enthusiasts and the still-prevalent pockets of Chan fans worldwide. With Nicolas Cage having set a very bad recent precedent with his catastrophic Crusader-in-China car-crash Outcast, however, international distributors might think twice before playing up the films Hollywood presence.

In the film, Cusack plays Lucius, a Roman general fleeing eastwards to protect his young ward, Publius (British-Chinese child star Jozef Waite), from falling victim to a coup at home. Standing between him and China is the Yanmen Gate, a Wild West-like border outpost where Huo An (Chan) and his troupe of peacekeepers (translated as Silk Road Protection Squad in English subtitles) have been sent on forced-labor exile after being framed for a gold smuggling scam.

Noting the physical frailty of Lucius troops, Huo elects to open the gates to the invaders an invitation which leads to feel-good friendships, not just between Lucius and Huo, but also the myriad ethnic minorities working within the city and across the region. Its a united stand that comes in handy when the tyrant finally arrives, attempting a geopolitical power-grab that reaches far beyond the throne in Rome.

The film, according to on-screen text, is inspired by true events." Lee might be pointing to the documented westward travels of Han Dynasty emissary Ban Chao. But one can sense the Canadian-educated Lee reflecting on more contemporary and international concerns than ancient Chinese history; his villains pronounced master plan is to invade and occupy a resource-heavy foreign land under the pretext of pursuing a fugitive. In addition, theres the presence of the Parthian Empire the historical precursor to Persia and then Iran as a force of good, a rebuke of the cultural representations found in the 300 films, for example.

Somehow, all these statements are made without the film falling into the jingoism which Chan himself is prone to these days. Given the context of a national cinema slipping fast toward high-budget, low-quality sensationalism, Lee and his team have scored a small victory within the constraints imposed on them by their stars power, as well as the censorship and public tastes of mainland China.

Opens: Feb. 19 (China)
Production companies: A Visualizer production in collaboration with Fable House, in a presentation by Sparkle Roll Media, Huayi Brothers, Shanghai Film Group
Cast: Jackie Chan, John Cusack, Adrien Brody, Lin Peng
Director: Daniel Lee
Screenwriter: Daniel Lee
Producers: Jackie Chan, Susanna Tsang
Executive producers: Jackie Chan, Wang Zhongjin, Ren Zhonglun, Zhou Moufei
Director of photography: Tony Cheung
Art directors: Daniel Lee, Thomas Chong
Costume designer: Thomas Chong
Editor: Yau Chi-wai
Casting: Zheng Caijing
Music: Alvin Lai
International Sales: Golden Network Asia
In Mandarin and English

No rating; 127 minutes

A small victory? $72.1 million the first week ain’t that small…

At least THR didn’t pan it, which bodes well as THR reviews go.

If people are cursed for being a patriot, please curse me

Jackie Chan Touts Success of ‘Dragon Blade,’ Declares His Patriotism


Courtesy of Intercontinental Film Distributors

by Clifford Coonan
2/27/2015 4:50am PST

Hong Kong action legend Jackie Chan celebrated the success of his latest historical action movie Dragon Blade, which this week passed the $80 million threshold in China, and responded to accusations of nationalism by saying he was a proud patriot.

Chan stars as the commander of the Protectorate of the Western Regions who teams up with Lucius to protect China’s borders and sovereignty, which has prompted accusations that Chan is playing the patriotic card in the hunt for box-office success.

“I have always been a patriot. Is it wrong? If people are cursed for being a patriot, please curse me,” Chan told M1905, the official web site of state broadcaster CCTV’s movie channel CCTV6. “Seven years ago, I wanted to do this film. I didn’t make the film because the government policy wants to protect the Silk Road. I am ahead of them. I hope chairman Xi (Jinping) gets to watch this film.”

Dragon Blade was the big winner of the Lunar New Year holiday to welcome the Year of the Goat, taking $72 million in its first six days in the country.

Starring Chan, Cusack and Brody and directed by Daniel Lee, Dragon Blade is based on a story about a missing legion of Roman soldiers that traveled into China in 48 BC. The cast also includes South Korea’s Choi Si-won, member of the K-pop band Super Junior, who previously appeared in Battle of Wits.

Cusack plays Lucius, a Roman general who led a legion of 1,000 soldiers into Han Dynasty China. Brody plays Tiberius, who after assassinating Rome’s Consul Crassus chases after Lucius with a force of 100,000 soldiers.

Chan was speaking at an event in Beijing to celebrate Dragon Blade passing the 500 million yuan ($80 million) mark. Chan went on to say that he doesn’t care about box office or online promotion. “I don’t understand e-commerce. After I finish shooting, it’s finished,” he said.

Chan recently welcomed his son Jaycee home from jail by giving him a haircut. Jaycee Chan’s long locks seemed to have survived his six months in jail after being convicted of drugs charges, having been caught up in the government’s aggressive anti-narcotics campaign.

I’m dying to see this, but still no word on a U.S. release :confused:

Variety gives it a decent review

Here lies the next question - “Already slated for a U.S. release…” When?

Film Review: ‘Dragon Blade’

February 26, 2015 | 04:14PM PT
An unparalleled meeting of Eastern and Western talent, writer-director Daniel Lee’s historical blockbuster is entertainment on a grand scale.
Maggie Lee
@maggiesama

A sumptuously realized war epic about Romans getting embroiled in Chinese military and architectural shenanigans on the Silk Road, “Dragon Blade” plays as recklessly with classical history as “300” did, but is far less butch and bloody, treating East-West friction with as much ambassadorial goodwill as an UNESCO fund-raising ball. Toplined by Jackie Chan, with John Cusack and Adrien Brody chipping in substantial screen time, the $65 million megahit flexes China’s Brobdingnagian filmmaking muscle and sees Hong Kong helmer-scribe Daniel Lee stepping up from a uneven portfolio to execute a colossal entertainment with solid technique and terrific storytelling smarts. Already slated for a U.S. release, the pic grossed $54.8 million domestically in four days, making it champion of the Chinese New Year blockbuster coliseum. International play may be less impressive, but the film will still be profitable on ancillary.

Touted as the first Chinese film to feature Romans as its main topic, “Dragon Blade” doesn’t exactly fit the sword-and-sandal mold; like its more facetious Japanese predecessor, “Thermae Romae,” the film filters classical civilization through the cultural perspective of Asians. The local family audience, despite having watched their fair share of gladiator movies, have never seen those genre conventions mashed up with Chinese martial arts and battle maneuvers. Nor have they seen many solely Chinese-produced films with such extensive participation from Hollywood stars, other than perhaps Zhang Yimou’s Christian Bale starrer, “The Flowers of War.” Add in a few exotic ethnic tribes who were once powerful invaders but are now yoked to Chinese sovereignty, and mainland audiences get an entertainment on par with a major studio blockbuster, infused with a hefty dose of national pride.

In a corny prologue set in 2015, two archaeologists (Vanness Wu, Karena Lam) discover the lost city of Regum, built by Romans during a fabled expedition to China. We are then transported back to 48 B.C., when China was under the reign of Emperor Xuan of the Han Dynasty, with 36 tribal nations vying for dominance at the country’s northwestern border. Huo An, a Hun orphaned during a skirmish, was adopted and raised by Han Chinese general Huo Qubing (William Feng Shaofeng), who taught him ideals of racial harmony; now (played by Chan), he tries with difficulty to maintain order as captain of the Silk Road Protection Squad.

While arbitrating a dispute, he inadvertently lifts the veil of warrior Cold Moon (Lin Peng), who now considers herself his betrothed by folk law. That Huo is already married to Xiuqing (Mika Wang), a gentle Uyghur teacher of Chinese, is less of an issue than his being framed for smuggling, which leads to him being exiled to Wild Goose Gate to help repair a fort city. Upon his arrival, he’s besieged by a renegade Roman legion under Gen. Lucius (Cusack), who has fled the capital with a blind boy, Publius (Joey Jozef). An unexpected sandstorm brings the road-weary soldiers under Huo’s wing. In return for his hospitality, they help reconstruct the city in 15 days. However, Publius’ brother, the Consul Tiberius (Brody), is marching toward them with an 100,000-strong army.

Just as he turned history upside down in his “Three Kingdoms: Resurrection of the Dragon” and “White Vengeance,” Lee again dispenses almost entirely with accuracy. (Gen. Huo Qubing massacred Huns rather than spreading the gospel of peace, while Brody’s Tiberius is nothing like the emperor who reigned from 14-37 A.D.) Fortunately, the writer-director has overcome his tendency to weave florid plots that quickly run out of steam, here forging a coherent narrative that’s strong on physical and emotional drive. Yau Chi-wai’s editing has a brisk Hollywood tempo, while the packed screenplay ensures there’s always a duel, rumble or chase scene in between wordy lulls. The action choreography by Chan and frequent collaborator He Jun may not beat Chan’s death-defying acrobatics, but still achieve an exciting interplay of kung fu and gladiator fighting, mixing Asian nomadic cavalry movements with Roman infantry formations.

Ultimately, what gives “Dragon Blade” an edge over all Chan vehicles since 2009’s “Shinjuku Incident” is the drama — whether it’s the patriotic Lucius and humanist Huo finding common ground as exiles while also sharing codes of honor, or an episode of Roman architectural ingenuity which has the exhilarating momentum of an Amish barn-raising scene. Notwithstanding Huo’s constant advocacy of peace, some critical viewers may detect a tone of cultural chauvinism in the film’s patronizing attitude toward Occidentals (“You’re trained to kill, we’re trained to keep peace,” Huo says to Lucius), and its representation of ethnic minorities as belligerent, fractious primitives in need of Han Chinese civilization.

Chan has continued to peddle a nice-guy image ever since, well, “Mr. Nice Guy,” but thanks to the tight pacing, the actor’s weakness for sententious preaching onscreen is limited to terse platitudes (“Turn foe to friend,” “War kills families”) while displaying more energy than he did in his frazzled turn in “Police Story 2013.” Saddled with an undemanding heroic role, Cusack nonetheless displays an earnest zeal in the combat sequences and strikes up a genuinely warm affinity with Jozef.

As if trying to overcompensate for Tiberius’ garden-variety treachery, Brody seethes, glowers and recites his lines as though rehearsing for a production of “I, Claudius” at the Old Vic. Despite the only brief scenes allocated to female characters, Lin shines through with an assertive and indomitable air, especially when showing off her archery skills. Her Moon’s unshakeable belief that Huo is hers makes her a laughingstock at first, but as she repeatedly comes to his aid, she matures into the story’s most touchingly drawn figure.

The 3D conversion, done with an on-set stereographer throughout the shoot, is unobtrusive but not outstanding. Tech credits are otherwise accomplished, with Lee’s longtime partners delivering career-best efforts. Taking charge of production design, as per his last few films, the director makes sure the generous budget is right up there onscreen, both in the main mise-en-scene of Regum, and in the smaller but no less meticulously detailed sets, like Huo’s village or a prison chamber.

Tony Cheung’s sweeping widescreen lensing conveys the seemingly infinite span of the desert, while capturing the imposing scale of Roman tools and buildings with a deep sense of perspective. Compositions in the mass combat scenes, however, are often untidy and unfocused. Composer Henry Lai provides enlivening percussion during the action sequences, plus effective contrasts between classical music and plangent Shanxi folk tunes. Thomas Chong’s costume designs feature a dazzling array of ethnic attire, making each tribe instantly distinguishable. The Chinese title translates to “Celestial General, Heroic Army.”
Film Review: ‘Dragon Blade’
Reviewed at UA KK Mall, Shenzhen, China. Feb. 24, 2015. Running time: 126 MIN. (Original title: “Tian jiang xiong shi”)
Production
(Hong Kong-China) A SFC Film Distribution Co. (in China) release of a Sparkle Roll Media, Huayi Brothers Media, Shanghai Film Group Co., Sparkle Roll Culture & Entertainment Development presentation of a Visualizer production in association with Home Media and Entertainment Fund, Shenzhen Tencent Video Culture Communication, China Film & TV Capital, Alibaba (China) Co., Lu Le Bao. (International sales: Golden Network Asia, Hong Kong.) Produced by Jackie Chan, Susanna Tsang. Executive producers, Jackie Chan, Wang Zhongjun, Ren Zhonglun, Zhou Maofei. Co-producers, Aie Yan, Chang Bin, Wang Sen, Li Shoujing, Zhang Liangwu. Co-executive producers, Qi Jianhong, Wei Jie, Sun Zhonghuai.
Crew
Directed, written by Daniel Lee. Camera (color, widescreen, HD), Tony Cheung; editor, Yau Chi-wai; music, Henry Lai; production designer, Daniel Lee; art director, Eddy Wong; set decorator, Ge Yinan; costume designer, Thomas Chong; sound (Dolby 5.1, 7.1), Phyllis Cheng, Steve Burgess; visual effects, Digital Idea, Run Studio; action director, Jackie Chan; stunt coordinators, He Jun, JC Stunt Team; line producers, Sam Shia, Along Sun, Qian Jianping; associate producers, Bernard Yang, Helen Li, Tony Cao, Ding Yong; assistant director, Nicky Shih.
With
Jackie Chan, John Cusack, Adrian Brody, Joey Jozef, Lin Peng, Mika Wang, Choi Si-won, Xiao Yang, Wang Taili, Sammy Hung, Steve Yoo, Vanness Wu, Karena Lam, William Feng Shaofeng, Lorie Pester, Sharni Vinson. (Mandarin, English, Hun, White Indian, Uyghur, Kusan, Saklar, Turkic dialogue)

I was skeptical about Brody after the initial trailer…

…but now, given this film’s box office success, I must say to Brody ‘well played’.

Adrien Brody Scores In China, Fosters Global Ambitions With Local Partners
by Ali Jaafar
March 4, 2015 7:58am

EXCLUSIVE: With seemingly all of Hollywood eager to get a piece of the increasingly lucrative Chinese pie to help fuel their global ambitions, Adrien Brody has succeeded in doing just that by embracing the local biz. The Oscar-winning actor-turned-producer is currently riding high at the Chinese box office, thanks to a starring role opposite Jackie Chan and John Cusack in the epic Dragon Blade. The film, which opened at No. 1 during the Chinese New Year celebrations, is close to grossing more than $100 million after only two weeks of release.

Dragon Blade‘s success is even more noteworthy for coming the same month box revenues in China exceeded those in the U.S. for the first time ever. In February, the U.S. box office grossed $640 million compared to China’s $650 million — albeit the latter figure was boosted by a host of Chinese New Year releases.

The success is no accident for Brody, who fought hard for the role. Already well-versed in Chinese culture, and having worked with renowned Chinese filmmaker Xiaogang Feng on the 2012 drama Back To 1942, Brody set out to get Chan’s attention, using his newfound connections in the Middle Kingdom to get him in the same room as the diminutive superstar.

“I feel a deep connection to Asia,” Brody tells Deadline. “I’ve been able to develop close friendships with a core group of extremely talented filmmakers and financiers, who have opened many doors.”

The result is that Brody is now at the helm of a well-capitalized company, Fable House. Brody, who shot five films in 2014 including passion project Manhattan Nocturne on which Fable House is involved, has big ambitions for the company. “We have access to an enormous amount of financing if it appeals to my partners’ sensibilities,” says Brody. “A lot is going to transpire following the success of Dragon Blade.”

Fable House will naturally look to projects with global appeal as well as Chinese elements although that will not be a restriction on the company, rather a guiding light. The company is staffing up in both the U.S. and China and expects to announce its first slate shortly.

Made People magazine

5 Things: China’s No. 1 Movie Dragon Blade Stars Adrien Brody and John Cusack
By Alex Heigl
@alex_heigl
updated 03/04/2015 AT 02:05 PM EST
•originally published 03/04/2015 AT 12:55 PM EST

//youtu.be/WC9iTKUCGjQ

China’s box-office gross in February was $650 million, which is (a) a lot; and (b) significant because it beat the U.S.'s gross for the first time ever, by $10 million.

And the No. 1 film in China? A little historical epic called Dragon Blade that’s grossed over $100 million after only two weeks of release.

But Dragon Blade isn’t just any historical epic: It stars Jackie Chan, Adrien Brody and John Cusack as Roman soldiers in China. Here’s a quick primer to the film.

  1. It’s a Passion Project for Brody


Adrien Brody in Dragon Blade

Brody worked with Chinese filmmaker Xiaogang Feng in 2012 on the drama Back to 1942, and he set his sights on working with Chan next. “I feel a deep connection to Asia,” Brody told Deadline. “I’ve been able to develop close friendships with a core group of extremely talented filmmakers and financiers, who have opened many doors.”

  1. It’s Inspired by a True Story


Jackie Chan in Dragon Blade

The film is inspired by the story of a missing Roman legion that supposedly wound up in China during the the Han Dynasty, seeking control of the Silk Road trade route. Variety does note that the film “plays as recklessly with classical history as 300 did,” though, so don’t expect a history lesson.

continued next post

continued from previous

Actually I just posted this because I wanted to post the Siwon vid

  1. It’s Got a Variety of International Celebrities

//youtu.be/q_krT35dgDM

Besides Cusack, Brody and Chan, the film also stars Choi Si-won, member of the South Korean K-pop band Super Junior. He was previously on the silver screen in Battle of Wits. It also stars the Chopsticks Brothers.

  1. It’s Been a Work in Progress


John Cusack in Dragon Blade

Chan had wanted to put Dragon Blade together for seven years, telling The Hollywood Reporter, “I didn’t make the film because the government policy wants to protect the Silk Road.”

“I am ahead of them,” he added. “I hope chairman Xi [Jinping] gets to watch this film.”

  1. It Will Be Coming Stateside
    Variety adds that the film is already slated for a U.S. release, though no one seems to be able to churn up a specific date.

Also because I wanted to reaffirm that I’m not the only one who can’t find a U.S. release date.

First forum review!

I’m still ruminating over Dragon Blade. It’s very Jackie Chan, especially if you’ve kept up with his more recent efforts like Chinese Zodiac or Little Big Soldier. He has distinctive style of storytelling that is complex and interwoven that leads to some great moments, but has a strange rhythm, more akin to the tempo of Bollywood film than Hollywood. It doesn’t lend itself well to American audiences. I was thoroughly engaged by Dragon Blade, but I’m so biased. Jackie has been entertaining me for nearly four decades now. At some point in every one of his films, he always delivers for me, even the horrible ones. I wouldn’t recommend to many however, because the style of film-making will be to alien for most, and that will just get written off as lousy, especially because of the nature of the story. Nevertheless, Dragon Blade has several surprisingly poignant, even poetic, moments, stand-out scenes amongst the action and overdone melodrama. A few scenes have really stuck with me, not because it was a great fight or anything, more so because the film reached an emotional point that was touching despite so many absurd plot issues. Maybe that’s just me, my admiration for Jackie, messing with my perspective on it.

This film is utterly massive in scope. Set on the Silk Road, there are eye-popping panoramic vistas (and some mediocre CGI that probably looks better in 3D). The money was spent on lavish costumes - the armor is to die for. Of course, there’s some absurdity in the idea that anyone would wear full battle armor in the scorching desert while moving refrigerator-sized stones to rebuild a city wall, but the armor is so cool looking, we’ll just overlook that. There also are some impressive set pieces, but I’d have to see it on the big screen to see where the sets really end and the CGI begins. I will try to see this on the big screen if possible. This is not a humorous film. It gets a little preachy with its moral stance about how different people can come together. Large portions are in English. There’s a lot of music too. John Cusack really shines as the Roman General. The more I think about Cusack, the more I admire his body of work. After his surprisingly enjoyable fight with Benny the Jet in Grosse Pointe Blank, he does a serviceable sword fight with Jackie (but the armor covers a multitude of stuntman sins). Adrian Brody hams it up as the villain. He’s actually not in it that much until the end. Siwon is pretty good too. His role isn’t big, but neither is it dismissible. The film is book-ended by a modern day story arc where a couple of archeologists are seeking the ruins of an ancient city (the setting of the film) that is entire superfluous and I hope that is cut when it is released in America (still no word on when that might happen but it is supposed to get a theatrical release).

As for the action, it’s enjoyable. Lots of sword fights. For Jackie, it’s nothing new choreographically or stunt speaking. In fact, he even recycles a few moves like the catch-the-falling-babe-by-copping-a-double-feel that he did with Michelle Yeoh in Supercop as well as the keep-adversarial-swordsmen-from-drawing-juggling-act from Young Master. There are no long uncut action pieces, but the dialog of the fight is clever and agile, signature Jackie choreography. Remarkably, the best action piece is an archery sequence, which leads me to think Jackie is poaching from K-flicks as they have done so many thrilling archery battles. The final battle is huge, like Lord of the Rings huge, but with live actors instead of CGI orcs. It gets super sanguineous, but not that gory - no entrails, but lots of blood spitting, arterial sprays and one hand chopped off. A lot of characters die in the end.

It’s not a must-see film for martial arts aficionados. Nor is it some major cross-over film for China, even with Cusack and Brody. But if you’re a Jackie fan like me, or if you’re fascinated with what’s happening in Chinese film (like me), you must see this.

Opening 17th Far East Film Festival in Udine

Just an excuse to ttt this in hopes that there’s news of a U.S. release…

Jackie Chan period epic to open Udine

By Kevin Ma
Thu, 09 April 2015, 09:45 AM (HKT)
Festival News

The 17th Far East Film Festival (24 Apr – 2 May 2015) in Udine, Italy, one of Europe’s largest Asian film events, will screen over sixty feature films at its 2015 edition later this month.

The event opens with the international festival premiere of Dragon Blade . The period epic — about exiled Chinese soldiers partnering with Roman soldiers to protect China’s borders — stars Jackie CHAN , John CUSACK and Adrien BRODY.

The festival’s closing film is TSUI Hark 's The Taking of Tiger Mountain 3D , a period action-adventure in which Communist soldiers infiltrate and raid a bandit group’s mountain base. It stars ZHANG Hanyu , Tony LEUNG Ka-fai and LIN Gengxin . The festival will screen the 2-D version of the film.

Five other films will have their international festival premiere in Italy: Parasyte: Part 1 from Japan, Miss Granny from China and, from South Korea, gangster epic Gangnam Blues , romance thriller My Ordinary Love Story and palace drama The Royal Tailor .

This year’s lineup includes 13 international premieres, including Hong Kong thriller Helios , Chinese romance The Old Cinderella , Japanese boxing drama 100 Yen Love , Japanese alien invasion sequel Parasyte: Part 2 and Yubari award-winning comedy Make Room .

(One year ago, the festival’s audience prize went to The Eternal 0 (2013), the period drama by YAMAZAKI Takashi , director of this year’s Parasyte films. The Korean-language Miss Granny also screened last year.)

25 films will have their European premiere, including China road movie The Continent , Vietnamese horror Hollow ot Hn and Cambodian youth drama The Last Reel. It is the first time that a Cambodian film has screened at the Italian festival.

The programme includes a six-film retrospective dedicated to Hong Kong martial arts films from the 1970s and 1980s. The festival will also screen two restored classics, China’s Two Stage Sisters (1964) and samurai drama The Tragedy of Bushido (1960) from Japan.

On the evening before the festival begins, on 23 Apr, organisers are hosting a special concert event featuring Joe HISAISHI . The Japanese composer is best known internationally for his collaborations with KITANO Takeshi and MIYAZAKI Hayao .

A Jackie interview

Some rehash as Jackie gives the same interviews in English, but a few new morsels.

Jackie Chan on Why Hollywood Isn’t Producing Good Martial Arts Films Anymore
By Tara Karajica | Indiewire April 28, 2015 at 1:36PM
The world’s best known martial arts star spoke to Indiewire in Udine, Italy about his new film “Dragon Blade” and his wish to be the Asian Robert De Niro, but also about his preoccupation for his legacy and the transformation of action films.


Jackie Chan at the Far East Festival
Far East Festival Jackie Chan at the Far East Festival

The Hong Kong actor, director, producer, martial arts stunt choreographer and star of “Drunken Master,” “Rush Hour,” and “Shanghai Noon” attended the Far East Film Festival as one of its guests of honor and the recipient of the Living Legend Award. In honor of the achievement and as part of a retrospective of Hong Kong Martial Arts films, the festival screened some of the genre’s most important films such as “The Young Master,” “Once Upon a Time in China,” “The Way of the Dragon,” “Spooky Encounters,” “Duel to the Death” and “Righting Wrongs” but also the international cut of his new hit, Daniel Lee’s “Dragon Blade”, that served as well as the festival’s opener and that also stars John Cusack and Adrien Brody.

You have an exceptional career as an actor. You started it as a stuntman, doing combat scenes and karate. Lately, however, your films are much more philosophical and have an educational aspect that highlights a peaceful China. Can you talk about that?

Before, I wanted to make money But later on, in 2000, I changed. I changed my character because I am not young anymore and also because I don’t want to always make “Rush Hour,” “Rush Hour 2,” and “Rush Hour 3” I am tired. I want to change myself. I want to be a true actor. I want to be like the Asian Robert De Niro! Even this morning, I was walking around in the small town [of Udine] and you could see the children saying “Oh Jackie Chan!” Why can nobody see Robert De Niro in me? I wish that in ten years time people would say “Oh! Jackie Chan, he’s a good actor!” I want to be a true actor because for an action star, life is very, very short. So, that is the reason why, for the last 15 years, I have tried to change myself. I want my audience to know that I am the actor who can fight and not the fighter who can act. Also, why am I always making Chinese films? Well, because it’s the only thing I know! This is the only thing I can do so I do the best I can to promote my own country and my own culture. That’s what I’m doing!

You worked on “Dragon Blade” for seven years. Can you talk about the genesis of the project and its filmmaking process?

I had heard of Daniel Lee although I had never met him before. My cameraman thought I should meet him and because I trust my cameraman, I called Daniel up and because in Hong Kong everybody calls me “Big Brother” I said, “Daniel, I am the Big Brother, Jackie Chan” and he said “Haaa… the Jackie Chan?” I said, “Yes!” and he went, “What can I do for you?” and I said, “I want to meet you, I want to know you”. I said, “Where are you?” and I drove to his office and we talked about finding something special. So, a month later, he called me up to do another Kung Fu cops story but I told him that I had heard of this story. So, we did a lot of research and decided to do it.

And, for the filmmaking process, because we needed Romans and don’t have enough Caucasians in China, we had to go all over China to look for students in International Schools to hire them. The shooting was hard, the hours were long and we had to walk to the Gobi desert because we couldn’t drive because of the tire marks because of all the aerial shots. We also invited the press to the desert to take a look at how we were making the movie. I asked the director at times, “Why aren’t we using the green screen today? We are wasting about a hundred-twenty buses every single day!” and he said, “No! I want the real feeling, the people’s feeling!” Then, I realized that only two directors had made their films in the Gobi desert! The first one is Daniel Lee and the second is also Daniel Lee! Nobody else! He just loves the desert! When the sand storm would come and everybody would hide, he would just sit there in his director’s chair with loud music on. Lalalaaaa [Chan sings] He was just so happy! He enjoyed it so much!

As the director of choreography on the film, can you talk about how you devised and executed the fight scenes?

Well, before we started shooting, I asked the director what kind of style we wanted. We wanted everything to be real. The Roman fighting is very tough, very strong and there are not too many tricks. But in China, there’s a lot of flying. It’s a different kind of fighting. Also, we didn’t want to use special effects and flying around like in “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.” I don’t think the audience likes this kind of things. But, right now, there are too many movies; modern movies, period movies in which everybody is flying around it’s ridiculous! So, I said that we had to make a realistic movie. Nobody can jump and fly from one horse to another! Nobody can jump and fly from one roof to another! So, when you see “Dragon Blade,” everything you see is real! We just wanted something humanly possible. Something that everybody can do but actually not everybody can do; only a stunt guy or me or some people who trained can do it! But, you believe it!

In that sense, in this digital world where technology prevails, do you think there is still space and future for the real thing, for stunts like yours and the purity of the gestures of martial arts?

I think, slowly, slowly, the real action’s gone. Really. Because, now we still have a few people who do the real stunts, the real action like Hong Bang, like me, like Sammo Hung and others. But, when these people are gone, when we retire, I think it’s going to be difficult because the real action is really, really difficult! But, in America they’re so good! They’re so clever! They can use special effects and computer graphics to make everybody become an action star. Even you can be an action in America! But, I wanted to do this kind of things when I was young. We didn’t have money and we had to do the real stunts. We had to jump from one building to the other I cracked my feet, I broke my finger, I broke everything. But, when I made money, I had money to do special effects but the audience didn’t like it! They wanted to see Jackie Chan hurt himself! They wanted to see Jackie Chan do the real thing. They just don’t like to see Jackie do Superman. Spiderman is so easy, right? I want to do it! Directors hire me! But, no director wants to hire me to do this kind of thing. They want me to do “Rush Hour,” “Rush Hour 2” and “Rush Hour 3.” They still want me to do this kind of things but I think that after Sammo Hung, these guys and me after we retire, the young generations will slowly change because they have already learned how to use special effects, how to use the tricks. Poor me! I will continue to do that for another five years I think, and then after five years, adios. Then, I’ll do a romance film!

continued next post

continued from previous


Jackie Chan at the Far East Festival
Far East Festival Jackie Chan at the Far East Festival

How do you feel about the Americanization of Chinese culture? For how long do you think it would be possible for China to preserve its unique Ancient culture?

A long time ago, I tried to bring the Chinese culture to America but that wasn’t a success. I mean, at that time there was “Cannonball Run,” “The Protector.” And I used Chinese action and Chinese culture but it just didn’t work. I think it was the wrong timing but now, over thirty years later, I went to America because America invited me. So, when I go to America, I still do the same kind of action, the same kind of comedy and it’s the right timing, the right moment and the right mood. But, I think America is a free country; they like everything but when you bring something in, are you bringing it at the right time, at the right moment? That’s all. And, right now, China is probably – I don’t know yet – the biggest market in the world. I think it’s time to bring not only American culture to China, but whole Asia. Everything in China should be like a collaboration movie with Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Malaysia. Film is the international language and we should combine everything together.

How do you feel about the fact that Wuxia and the tradition on martial arts you were raised on have become the predominant style of action across global cinema?

Of course, I am very happy! Because, we’re talking about a long, long time ago, about Wong Yue, Bruce Lee, and so many who have followed in their footsteps and continued to promote our culture throughout the world and I believe that after me, there will still be a few more people who will continue in my footsteps. And, just like there are so many American directors and actors who promote American culture to the world, it’s the same thing; we accept our culture, we learn it and we try to return something to it. If everybody knows everybody’s culture, there would be no more wars and no more misunderstandings. I think culture, film and music are very important.

My impression, and you have confirmed it, is that Hollywood is producing less films involving real martial artists than in the past. What, in your opinion, has changed in the world of action films?

Because martial arts films are difficult to shoot, it’s not easy, you know. You have to have an actor who can really fight and then you can do “Papapapapammm” [Chan shows a move] and use a sword for everything. But, honestly, in Hollywood, not many actors know martial arts! Maybe they know action like Tom Cruise, Sylvester Stallone – they like boxing, that’s a different kind. So, if they use a special effect, like in Batman or Superman, good, they can use a special effect to do all kinds of action.

Sometimes, the action is even better than my action! Like in “300,” I was like “Wow! That’s so good!” So, they spend a lot of money to create this kind of action and I think it’s ten times better than mine but they don’t really use the action. Liam Neeson, for instance, is not an action star, but they can use a small shot and make him become an action star. There’s actor action star and there’s action star. It’s different. Now, Liam Neeson is an actor action star. First, he can act and his action is easy. There’s easy action and difficult action and easy action is just like Matt Damon and “Bourne Identity.” They can use a camera and “Papapapapammm” [Chan shows a move] and, it’s so good! And, even I see it and I’m like, “Wow! Matt Damon can fight that good!” My kind of action is the difficult action. But, the audience doesn’t know that. They just want to see good or bad, that’s all!

In “Shanghai Noon,” for instance, the two tomahawks were real tomahawks! Eeeeyyyuuuuu! [Chan does the motion of throwing a tomahawk in the air] When I use explosions, I want to use a real explosion behind me. Sometimes, when I make a Hollywood film, they say “Jackie! Action! Act scared!” And there’s nothing behind me! They just use pretend scare… When you see the Asian films that I make, I am really scared! You can tell from the face! Maybe I like the excitement! I’m stupid, that’s all. But, sometimes I like stupid and also the audience, they like to see Jackie stupid!


Jackie Chan at the Far East Festival
Far East Festival Jackie Chan at the Far East Festival

Nowadays, the success of a film is measured by the success of its box office results. There are some films that have had a poor result at the box office but have nonetheless greatly influenced pop culture and filmmaking. How do you measure the success of a film?

For me, when I was young, a long, long time ago, the box office result was very important because if there were no box office, nobody would invite me. And, making money came first, and then the quality because I had to feed my family and myself. And, slowly, when my movies were successful, then I would think about being an actor, a producer, a director. We do have the responsibility towards society, towards the world and this is why, for example, when I made “Drunken Master,” it was only drinking, fighting, drinking, fighting – and when I got older, I realized it was the wrong message! So, I made “Drunken Master II” and the message was: don’t drink, don’t fight.
“Today, I don’t need money. I have enough money already.” Jackie Chan

I had to correct myself and now, when I am making a movie, it’s about not the box office anymore. I want to make the movie I want to make. I want to speak out the things in the movie. I want every movie to have a message, just like “Dragon Blade.” Of course, if the box office is good and the credit is good, it all makes me happy and if the box office is not good, it still makes me happy, mostly because I speak out my message. Today, I don’t need money. I have enough money already. I want to do something right for when I pass away, for when, in a hundred years, your grandchildren and my grandchildren can say, “That’s some movie! It’s very good!” and they can forget “Drunken Master” and talk about who I am or “Dragon Blade.” That would make me happy. Some movies made a lot of money and people, boom, they forget… but some movies don’t make any money but people, 20 or 50 years later are still talking about it and that’s what I want!

You once said that you love action but that you hate violence. This is kind of a conflict of interest, isn’t it? How do you deal with it?

It’s a very big dilemma indeed! People always think that action is violence so it’s quite a dilemma! Yes, you’re right! I just do the best I can to show the whole world, you know, that violence is wrong.

What are your next projects? There are a lot of rumors about a sequel to “The Karate Kid.” Can you talk about that?

I think that, in a way, I have already planned the next eight years of my life, almost. Next month, I will start a film called “Railroad Tiger” or something like that. Later on, the title might change… I just translated literally “Railroad Tiger”… Then, I’m doing a Kung Fu yoga film in India, and after that, “Civilian” and the director will probably be Peter Segal and then probably something with Michael Campbell and then again something with Daniel Lee; then “Chinese Zodiac 2” with myself directing again and after that, “Police Story 2.”

There are just so many things going on! I think that I just like the challenge! Every movie is different! I want the audience to see every year a different Jackie Chan. This year, at Christmas, “Skiptrace” will be released. It’s an action comedy with Johnny Knoxville. And, for “The Karate Kid 2,” right now, it’s almost the third or fourth draft and Will Smith is concentrating very seriously on it. Every time he gives me a call and says that the script is almost ready, I tell him, “Hurry up! Otherwise, your young son will be taller than me!” Also, there’s probably a “Shanghai Dawn” coming to and “Rush Hour 4” – no, I’m just joking!

Alas, the Hollywood Jackie flicks…:rolleyes:

Huading awarded

Adrien Brody, Jackie Chan Among Winners at China’s Huading Awards


Huading Film Awards

by Abid Rahman
6/1/2015 9:49pm PDT

Adrien Brody and Jackie Chan were among the winners at the 16th Huading Film Awards that took place in Hong Kong on Sunday.

The stars of the Chinese historical action film Dragon Blade picked up awards for best supporting actor (Brody) and best original song (sung by Chan). The film, that’s made $120 million in China alone, also picked up the award for the best action director.

Brody greeted the audience with Mandarin when accepting award and thanked Chan and Dragon Blade director Feng Xiaogang. Also at the ceremony, Chan performed the winning song “The Heroes of the Gobi”, and upon accepting the award joked that “the lyrics sold the movie, not my voice.”

Overall, Hong Kong director Peter Chan’s movie The Dearest was the big winner on the night, winning best picture, best director, and best actress.

The Huading Film Awards are described as China’s version of the People’s Choice Awards as the honors are given out based on public voting. Unlike other awards ceremonies, the location of the Huading Awards is not fixed with previous editions held in Macau and Hollywood. The awards honor stars from around the world and previous winners include Nicolas Cage, Nicole Kidman, Jeremy Irons, Quentin Tarantino, Halle Berry and Chris Hemsworth.

The 18th edition the Huading Awards will return to Hollywood this year the organizers confirmed.

Still wondering about a U.S. release for this film…

Sep 4th for U.S. theatrical and VOD release

//youtu.be/lwMlpp8GIAI

September 4, 2015

Coming to AMC (Wanda) of course. I suspect this release will be akin to what happened with Chinese Zodiac. That’s alright though, as I think this film has even less U.S. appeal than CZ did, and a lot of people hated on CZ.

Dragon Blade

Coming Soon

Synopsis

A massive success this year in its native China, “Dragon Blade” brings action spectacle on a grand scale to US audiences. Featuring an international cast led by Jackie Chan, John Cusack and Academy Award® winner Adrien Brody, the film features the fight for the Silk Road when East and West collide. When corrupt Roman leader Tiberius (Adrien Brody) arrives with a giant army to claim the Silk Road, Huo An (Jackie Chan) and his group of trained warriors teams up with an elite legion of defected Roman soldiers led by General Lucius (John Cusack) to maintain the delicate balance of power in the region. To protect his country and his new friends, Huo An gathers the warriors of thirty-six ethnic nations together to fight Tiberius in an incredible epic battle. The film is written and directed by Daniel Lee (“Black Mask”) and produced by Jackie Chan and Susanna Tsang.

Running Time
2 hr 7 min
Release Date

September 4, 2015

Opens next week

Even made Parade

Jackie Chan on Dragon Blade, Doing Stunts and Conservation
August 28, 2015 – 5:00 AM
By Paulette Cohn


(Getty Images)

Jackie Chan’s name is synonymous with action comedies like the Rush Hour series. But in 2015, the Hong Kong-born actor/martial arts expert is trying something a little different: a historical action film. Dragon Blade, in theatres and on-demand on Sept. 4, is the story of the war between the Romans and Chinese over the Silk Road during the Han Dynasty. Chan, who still does his own stunts, throws fewer punches, but he feels audiences will enjoy it just the same!

How is Dragon Blade different from other Jackie Chan films?

When you look at my previous movies, all I did was fight! From the opening credits to the closing credits. The audience was excited when I jumped from a tall building or leaped from a moving bus. It was all fresh. But now, with this new film, I’ve come to realize that if the plot is really good then the audience will cheer even if there is only one single punch!

Who do you play?

I play Huo An, the adopted son of the legendary general Huo Qubing. He was a real historical figure, the founder and commanding officer of the Silk Road Protection Squad of the Western Regions in China. Huo An is a man who detests war, but he lives in a time when peace can only be gained by fighting.

Have you ever been seriously injured?

The most serious injury I had was during the shooting of Armour of God II. It was actually just a simple stunt, jumping from a slope. But I was seriously injured and had a surgery to my brain. I still have a metal plate in my head and can feel the indentation from the impact.

Do you feel you are making progress in changing attitudes in China when it comes to conserving wildlife?

As an ambassador of WildAid, I have been supporting the saving of all kinds of creatures including tigers, sharks, rhinos and elephants. I think China is undergoing a big change in its attitudes in regards to conserving wildlife, but it will take time.

What is the most important lesson life has taught you?

As I have been injured so many times, I have come to cherish life more. I focus more on environmental protection activities and charity work. I deeply understand that I am very blessed. So I have been actively participating in all kinds of charitable works and contributed myself to help the poor and people in need.

Dragon Blood?

Hope they catch that typo before 6:13 AM tomorrow…:rolleyes:

The world’s 2nd highest paid actor Jackie Chan reveals the truth about John Cusack’s sword skills in ‘Dragon Blood’
Jason Guerrasio Tomorrow at 6:13 AM


Jackie Chan.

Jackie Chan is known best in America as an international action star who does his own stunts and has comedic chops.

In his homeland of China, he’s know for all those things, plus being the owner of a successful theatre chain, merchandise, and a Segway dealership.

All of this has led him to be the second-highest paid actor in the world for 2015, according to Forbes. A striking achievement seeing he hasn’t had a hit in the US since the reboot of “The Karate Kid” in 2010.

But with China being the largest movie market behind the US an actor no longer has to be a viable name in Hollywood to find success.


Jackie Chan in ‘Dragon Blade.’

This is evident with Chan’s latest movie, “Dragon Blade,” which is being released for the first time in the US this Friday after having played all over the world, including China where it’s one of the biggest hits of the year having grossed over $US116 million.

“I’ve been very fortunate that my recent films have all been hits in China,” Chan told Business Insider via email. “Audiences are willing to take a risk on me, knowing that I’ll give them something different every time.”

“Dragon Blade” is a period action thriller set on the ancient “Silk Road” desert trade route. Chan plays a leader of a squad that protects the route who teams with an exiled Roman general (played by John Cusack) to go up against evil Roman legion leader Tiberius (Adrien Brody).

The action, big-name stars, and sequence not usually seen in the genre — like when Chan and Cusack sing an old Roman anthem with their troops — made the film number one at the box office in China when it opened in mid-February.

But the film took 7 years to get off the ground. In 2009, Chan met with rising Chinese director Daniel Lee who pitched the superstar actor the period film set on the Silk Road. They agreed that Lee would direct the movie and Chan would oversee the fight sequences as its “action director.” Lee is known in China for action films like “14 Blades.”

Chan takes the blame forthe long delay; he says he had to find an opening in his schedule to take on “Dragon Blade.” But he points out that if it wasn’t for the delay, they likely wouldn’t have gotten Brody as his co-star.

“One day I got a message, out of the blue, from Adrien Brody asking if we will ever have the chance to work together,” Chan recalled. “I told him I was preparing to make this movie and that we could work together right away. I sent him the synopsis in the morning and got a call that night agreeing to work together. It was fate.”


Adrien Brody in ‘Dragon Blade.’

Chan complimented Brody’s dedication to training for the fight sequences. The Oscar winner asked Chan for videos of sword fighting so he could practice the techniques with a broom before he arrived in China.

Cusack, however, needed a little more work.

“John is really good at kickboxing but not very experienced with weapons,” wrote Chan, who said he had to teach Cusack from scratch how to use the swords and knives his character handles in the film.

Though Chan added, “When it comes to acting, there isn’t anything I can teach him.”


(L-R) John Cusack and Jackie Chan in ‘Dragon Blade.’

Chan said the greatest challenge when making “Dragon Blade” was the setting. Shot in the Gobi Desert, the heat and sandstorms took a tole on everyone. “Just keeping your eyes open during the fighting scenes was painful,” said Chan. During the sandstorms, even the actors’ horses needed to be calmed.

Though the US will see Chan in action mode once more with “Dragon Blade,” the 61-year-old says he wants to begin focusing on more dramatic roles next.

But don’t expect him leaving the action genre completely. He said another instalment of “Rush Hour” is not out of the question — if he and co-star Chris Tucker can “find the right story that will satisfy the audience.” US audiences will also see him next in an action comedy opposite Johnny Knoxville titled “Skiptrace.“

“The genre is still important to me because it’s where I came from,” Chan said of action movies. “I will still continue to do [them].”

“Dragon Blade” opens September 4.

Watch the trailer:

//youtu.be/lwMlpp8GIAI

A surprisingly postive review from New York Post

I still don’t think this will play well in the U.S. because it’s outside of the way Americans have typecasted Jackie. Nevertheless, it’s probably better on the big screen.

Jackie Chan and John Cusack’s bromance makes ‘Dragon Blade’ a win
By Lou Lumenick
September 2, 2015 | 6:10pm


John Cusack (left) and Jackie Chan in “Dragon Blade.” Photo: Handout
MOVIE REVIEW
Dragon Blade

In English and Mandarin with English subtitles. Running time: 127 minutes. Rated R (bloody violence).

John Cusack as a Roman general who becomes allies with peacekeeper Jackie Chan in China in 48 B.C.? Daniel Lee’s elaborate Chinese historical action epic “Dragon Blade” certainly gets points for creative casting, as well as its gorgeous widescreen visuals.

It’s not always the easiest story to follow, possibly because of the 23 minutes (including a prologue set in 2015) that have been excised since the film set box-office records earlier this year in China. There it was shown in 3-D IMAX, while stateside it’s just more fodder for the video-on-demand marketplace, supported by a token theatrical release.

Despite some odd tonal shifts, this handsome production deserves better. Top-billed Chan plays Huo An, the head of the Silk Road Protection Squad, whose job is to keep the peace between the 36 races who live in China’s remote Western Regions.

Framed for smuggling, the squad members are sentenced to hard labor at the Wild Goose Gate, where Huo An ends up leading the defense when the remote outpost is besieged by a wandering Roman legion.


John Cusack Photo: Handout

When the siege is interrupted by a sandstorm, the peace-loving Huo An offers shelter to the Romans and their leader, Lucius (Cusack), who are on the run from the evil consul Tiberius (Adrien Brody) and his 100,000-man army.

Lucius and his men lend their Roman ingenuity and brawn to help Huo An rebuild Wild Goose Gate — a beautifully staged montage — just before Tiberius and his legions show up for an even more impressive climactic battle.

Veteran star Chan, who plays it mostly straight, has great bromantic chemistry with Cusack, surprisingly convincing as an ancient Roman warrior trying to protect a child of noble birth.

Brody, who wields both a mean sword and villainous quips with aplomb, makes the most of his limited screen time in “Dragon Blade,” which overall is a lot of fun.

At least this makes our Silk Road thread timely. :cool:

U.S. premiere today!

On the whole, I’m inclined to agree with this review, but I think what it misses is the news above about the impact of this film in China. I’m curious to know how big a release this got here in the U.S.

Review: ‘Dragon Blade’ Features Jackie Chan, Romans and a Lot of Mayhem
By MANOHLA DARGISSEPT. 3, 2015


Jackie Chan as the leader of the Silk Road guard, with Mika Wang as his wife, in this Chinese production from Daniel Lee. Credit Lionsgate

All fighting, all grimacing — though sometimes all smiling, weeping and singing — “Dragon Blade” is the kind of nutsy maximalist entertainment that isn’t content merely to tap a handful of influences. Instead, it stuffs an entire encyclopedia of dicey ideas (visual, narrative, political) into a blender to create a wacky, eyeball-popping and -glazing extravaganza that suggests a Cecil B. DeMille Bible epic, a Chinese military parade and a Busby Berkeley musical, at times all at once. And while it can be tough to find the human pulse amid the spectacle noise, Jackie Chan, John Cusack, Adrien Brody and a trillion horse-riding extras are also part of the very big picture.

The least interesting question to ask about a movie like “Dragon Blade” is whether it’s any good. Of course it isn’t, not especially, but questions of quality pale next to the greater headscratcher: What is it? For starters, it is a Jackie Chan vehicle, a period story, a Chinese production and a huge 2015 box-office hit in the People’s Republic. (It opened in China in February.) Written and directed by the genre-smashing Daniel Lee, who has epic DeMille-level ambitions, the movie takes place in the first part of the Han dynasty, when the court, supported by its elites, ruled its far-flung empire with military muscle and bureaucratic administration. So the movie, which involves a government squad protecting the Silk Road, may be a resonant, topical metaphor — or not.


Adrien Brody plays a Roman general in “Dragon Blade,” set during the first part of the Han dynasty. Credit Lionsgate

Whatever it is, it is also about putting on a really big show with your pals, who here include both the fantastically outfitted constituencies of 36 nations who swirl around the Silk Road and a legion of Roman soldiers who materialize on it one day, having apparently taken a wrong turn on the Appian Way. The clotted story involves how these different groups are juggled with a broad smile and some fancy footwork by Huo An (Mr. Chan), the leader of the Silk Road guard. A jolly, friendly warrior with chin fuzz, some swinging Heidi braids and the kind of intricately detailed costume that turns seamstresses blind, Huo insists on giving peace a chance, even when dodging arrows shot by Cold Moon (Lin Peng), one of the few women in what is otherwise an enormous brotherly be-in.

Mr. Chan has slowed considerably since his glory action years, even if he still dodges and darts with elastic grace. His character is on the dull side and is mostly a hub for all the swirling parts that Mr. Lee puts into motion. There are many of these, because Mr. Lee, like Michael Bay and other specialists in the art of cinematic mayhem, likes to throw everything at the screen that a monster budget can give him. And, other than women, “Dragon Blade” has a whole lot of everything, including armies of extras, herds of horses, truckloads of feathered-and-furred costumes, bushels of strikingly styled hair, innumerable crane shots and choreographed fights. There’s also a blind Roman boy with a blond mop who sings a nationalist ditty and brings the multitudes to collective tears.

There are special effects, too, though none as jaw-slackening as the performances from Mr. Cusack and Mr. Brody. Mr. Cusack plays General Lucius, who has ended up on the Silk Road in an effort to protect Publius (Jozef Liu Waite), the warbling babe, from his older brother, General Tiberius (Mr. Brody). Mr. Brody either took his role seriously or can keep a straight face better than Mr. Cusack, whose contortionist expressions tend to suggest someone desperate not to let loose either laughter or bowels. Mr. Brody, by contrast, takes to his villainous role with old-fashioned Basil Rathbone hauteur, swaggering and twirling while leading with his profile. At one point, Mr. Brody even runs his tongue over his bloody hand, as if to acknowledge just how finger-licking good his role is.

“Dragon Blade” is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Swords, arrows, bodies!

Dragon Blade

Opens on Friday

Written and directed by Daniel Lee; action director, Jackie Chan; action choreography by He Jun and JC Stunt Team; director of photography, Tony Cheung; edited by Yau Chi-Wai; music by Henry Lai; production design by Mr. Lee and Thomas Chong; costumes by Mr. Chong; produced by Mr. Chan and Susanna Tsang; released by Lionsgate. Running time: 1 hour 43 minutes.

WITH: Jackie Chan (Huo An), John Cusack (Lucius), Adrien Brody (Tiberius), Lin Peng (Cold Moon), Mika Wang (Xiu Qing), Siwon Choi (Yin Po), William Feng (General Huo Qubing), Jozef Liu Waite (Publius) and Sharni Vinson (Lady Crassus).

An amusing review

Dragon Blade may be slumming, but the future of movies belong to China
Johanna Schneller
Special to The Globe and Mail
Published Thursday, Sep. 03, 2015 4:00PM EDT
Last updated Thursday, Sep. 03, 2015 5:40PM EDT


Adrien Brody, Jackie Chan, and John Cusack taste dumplings during an event to promote their new movie “Dragon Blade” in Taipei, Taiwan.
(Chiang Ying-ying/The Associated Press)

When rival Roman factions aren’t duking it out on the Silk Road along with hordes of Chinese, Huns, Arabs and a dozen other ethnic armies, or slicing and dicing each other in alleyways and palaces, they’re making overly solemn speeches about nations coming together in peace. One minute, they’re lopping off limbs, and the next, they’re having a dance contest.

At the same time, it’s obvious that the work that went into this thing is staggering. Writer/director Daniel Lee spent seven years on it. More than 350 crew members speaking 10 languages traversed 3,200 kilometres across China to film it. Three massive sandstorms and several smaller ones caused damage and delay – the first time because the crew members were so green that they didn’t know to cover the cameras. Chan’s 21-man stunt team, plus three assistant action choreographers, worked 18-hour days. A sizable chunk of the credits is devoted to the Gun Firing Department. Even the production notes call it “a massive and arduous production,” in which “hundreds of crew went crazy.”

And there, standing tall amid the insanity, are these two American actors – one of them, Brody, with a best actor Oscar (for The Pianist, in 2003). He actually fares all right here, because he’s playing the villain. What scenery-chewer worth his SAG card wouldn’t have fun declaiming, “I like people to hate me. Their hatred makes me feel alive”?

Cusack, on the other hand, just looks goggle-eyed and exhausted. He has no idea how to comport himself. It’s as if on the first day of production, he wandered, stoned, into the wrong makeup trailer, and then simply shrugged and went with it. He can never find his eye line, and (spoiler alert) in his death scene, he literally gnashes his teeth.

Of course, bad movies happen to good actors all the time; these two are far from the first, or the only Oscar nominees. Jeff Bridges made R.I.P.D. Julianne Moore is in Seventh Son. Liam Neeson intoned his way into infamy (“Release the Kraken!”) in Clash of the Titans, and then made a sequel. Many A-list thesps have a “one for the soul, one for the paycheque” policy in choosing projects.

It’s not as if Cusack and Brody’s stuff has been roaring up the box office lately, either.

Since his turn-of-the-millennium heyday of Being John Malkovich and High Fidelity, Cusack has made a lot of movies you’ve never heard of (although I did think he was a terrific psycho in The Paperboy, and he’s in Spike Lee’s next film, Chiraq, about racial unrest in Chicago).

Brody (whom I happen to find dead sexy, though I get why I’m in the minority there) practically has two careers: one full of interesting roles with the likes of Wes Anderson and Woody Allen; the other full of inexplicable doo-doo.

So perhaps we can understand why, when someone asked, “Want to hang out in China and learn martial arts moves from Jackie Chan, plus make a whackload of dough?” they grunted yes.

It’s also possible that in a few years they’ll look like geniuses, because Dragon Blade may just be the future of cinema. (The current financial crisis notwithstanding.) About 10 production companies and funding agencies put money into it, including Alibaba (China) – the very agencies American studios are madly courting for co-productions – to the tune of $65-million (U.S.). That might not sound high compared with some Hollywood budgets, but for China, it’s mighty. And believe me, if it was made by an American crew, it would have cost about $300-million. The Chinese crew slept in tents, not hotel rooms, and ate more sand than sandwiches – decidedly non-U.S.-union practices.

When asked by Ain’t It Cool News about Dragon Blade, Cusack said, “You think, ‘Okay, that’s a smart business move, you’re going to be in China – China is a big, booming thing.’ Those Chinese companies are probably going to buy Paramount and Warner Brothers one of these days.”

And Brody, who made a previous Chinese epic in 2012 (Back to 1942, for director Xiaogang Feng), now heads up his own production outfit, Fable House, with staff in the United States and China, and funding from Chinese and Nigerian sources. It gives him, as he told Deadline, “access to an enormous amount of financing if it appeals to my partners’ sensibilities.” So who’s laughing now?

Most important, if Dragon Blade doesn’t cater to North American tastes, that may not matter much any more. Three supporting roles are played by K-pop musicians the Chopsticks Brothers and Si Won Choi, who may be bigger in Asia than Brody and Cusack ever were stateside.

When the film opened in China this past February (the cut was, unthinkably, longer and in 3-D), not only did it rake in about $120-million, it also contributed to the first month on record where the Chinese box office ($650-million) was higher than the U.S. box office ($640-million). I bet it won’t be the last.

I can’t find any box office numbers on the U.S. release. :confused:

Jackie Chan’s Green Heroes – National Geographic

Jackie Chan’s Green Heroes – National Geographic
Sat, September 1 19:00

During the filming of 2015’s Dragon Blade, Jackie Chan grew angry.

The team used 2,000 boxes of bottled water in just five days, and the film star couldn’t believe there wasn’t a solution to turn that waste into something useful.

So he teamed up with green engineer Arthur Huang and they dreamed up the Trashpresso – the world’s first mobile recycling plant.

This one-off follows them as they take the prototype to the Tibetan Plateau to see how the machine fares in one of the world’s harshest environments.

Jackie educates children on the importance of recycling at the Tibetan Plateau

An entertaining, eccentric, but ultimately uplifting story on tackling plastic waste.

TV Times rating: ****

Read more at https://www.whatsontv.co.uk/events/jackie-chans-green-heroes-national-geographic-1-september/#AFeKKCu8mErAlcDr.99

THREADS
Dragon Blade
Jackie’s Charity work