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Thứ Tư, 19 tháng 6, 2024

Kung Fu Hustle: Why you will always remember the first time you saw this brilliant action-comedy

OPINION: They say you never forget your first kiss. And that you'll always recall what you were doing when you first heard about whatever global news story defined your early adulthood. But I also reckon, you will always remember where you were, the first time you saw Kung Fu Hustle.


Writer and director Stephen Chow was already a legend of the Hong Kong and Chinese film industries in 2004. His 2001 smash hit Shaolin Soccer had made waves around the world and knocked over critics and punters in Europe and North America, even from outside the usual "film festival crowd".


Shaolin Soccer saw Chow perfect a style of bringing cartoonish action to life. Some of the visuals that Chow puts on screen are as unlikely and outlandish as a Road-Runner cartoon. But Chow and his crew of martial artists and stunt performers somehow get it all onto film with live-action, astonishing wire-work and as little CGI as possible. There's CGI enhancement all over the film, but if you see a human being perform a stunt in a Chow film, then somehow, it was done.


After Shaolin Soccer had made Chow an internationally bankable name, he was ready to make the film he had been dreaming of.


Kung Fu Hustle would be set in 1940s Shanghai. It would have elements of the gangster movies Chow loved, but it would bring in characters from mythology and folklore, setting them against modern day hoodlums with tommy guns. The result was a complete riot that slayed audiences in 2004 and which hasn't really been beaten in the decades since.

In 2004, Kung Fu Hustle broke into the Western box-office like the demented kid brother of Ang Lee's Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and Zhang Yimou's Hero.
SUPPLIED / THE-PRESS


Kung Fu Hustle starts out over-the-top – and then it just keeps on climbing. In Pig Sty Alley, the ferocious Axe Gang have laid waste to all others and now rule the local businesses with fear. Meanwhile, the people of the slum are preyed upon by The Landlady, who owns all the dwellings. If anyone wants to rise up and seek a fairer deal for their family, they will have to go through the gang and The Landlady.

Luckily, there might just be a young fulla who has the skills needed, if only he can reconcile with his past and "reset his qi flow" to release the kung fu within him.

Kung Fu Hustle is the most fun you might ever have watching a movie. It is bonkers. It is non-stop. It is endlessly inventive and ceaselessly funny.

Kung Fu Hustle starts out over-the-top – and then it just keeps on climbing.
SUPPLIED / NOT-FOR-SYNDICATION

But don't take my word for it. Pretty much every reviewer worth taking seriously raved about Kung Fu Hustle. The film broke into the Western box-office like the demented kid brother of Ang Lee's Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and Zhang Yimou's Hero. The always quotable Roger Ebert said it was "like Jackie Chan and Buster Keaton meeting Quentin Tarantino and Bugs Bunny", which sounds about right.


Tarantino and Taika are both fans – and James Gunn (Guardians of the GalaxyThe Suicide Squad) calls it "the greatest film ever made".

Kung Fu Hustle is many things and all of them are fun. It is a lean and hilarious parody of the gangster genre. It is one of the greatest martial arts films ever made, even while it is poking fun at every martial arts film that has gone before. It was a massive financial success for the Hong Kong and the Chinese film industries – still separate in 2004 – that opened Western distribution channels to Chinese films that have never closed. And it is maybe the greatest argument for decriminalising recreational cannabis use that has ever been put on film.

Danny Chan Kwok Kwan plays cold-blooded killer Brother Sum in Kung Fu Hustle.
SUPPLIED / NOT-FOR-SYNDICATION

All of that, and Kung Fu Hustle is on Netflix right now, you lucky, lucky things.

Get in front of the biggest TV you can find, put yourself in a receptive frame of mind and turn the speakers up to eleventy. You can thank me later.

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