4/10
Really? 10 out of 10?
22 December 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Yeah, no. This film was awful. The choreography was so forced, and the characters had no depth except for Yat Chor Yuen (which is a shame as this is his last film). Donnie Yen is so blasé that his character is just another "hard cop without any conflict" and Cynthia Khan cannot take over for Michelle Yeoh, no matter how hard she tries.

Yeun plays Luk, a just legalized Chinese immigrant in America who witnesses the CIA murdering a cop who are selling drugs for money to support their Latin American conquests(hang on, it gets better). Yen and Khan, two Seattle detectives, follow Luk to Hong Kong where their captain turns out to be a CIA operative who happens to be undercover as an officer for years, built up a relationship with Yen's character, and is in on the whole affair. Right. Not only that, but he kidnaps Luk's own mother to get at him.

This film obviously hates the CIA, which there is nothing wrong with nowadays, but the story seems right out of a paranoid schizo's mind. Woo-ping Yuen's choreography is surprisingly clichéd and unremarkable given that he would do "The Matrix" and "Crouching Tiger" later. The blood looks like ketchup and hot sauce which was probably the best part considering this film was made in 1989, not 1954 and in Technicolor.

The music sounds like it's from a workout video by Jane Fonda and the cinematography is just static. Lighting is just that, light, and the relationships are forced. In fact, no one seems to have a real relationship except for Luk and his mother (which is actually rather sweet).

Overall, the only saving grace is from Yat Chor Yuen (brother of Woo-ping) and the rest is just a mess. Worth a look if you're a die hard Yen or Yuen fan, but other than that, there's nothing to recommend.
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