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Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon |
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Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon opens
with decorated warrior Li Mu Bai deciding that
it’s time to hang up his sword. Not just
any sword, mind you, but the legendary
Green Destiny, a 400-year-old weapon that’s
the Far-East equivalent of Excalibur. Li Mu Bai
entrusts his Ginsu-sharp blade to Shu Lien,
the promised bride of his deceased brother
(the two share an unspoken attraction, but
forbid themselves to act upon it so as not to
dishonor the dead man’s memory). Once in
Peking, Green Destiny is stolen by a masked
martial artist who nimbly scales walls and
skips across rooftops like Peter Pan. Battles
over the custody of Green Destiny are
fast-paced, stylized kung-fu exhibitions that
defy the laws of physics.
Along the way, Shu Lien befriends Jen, a
teenager promised in marriage to a man she
doesn’t love (a flashback reveals that Jen’s
real main squeeze is Lo, a thieving thug who
ambushes rich folk cameling through the
desert). Meanwhile, Li Mu Bai has second
thoughts about forsaking his violent past, at
least until he avenges the death of his master
at the hands of the evil Jade Fox. So when this
elusive Fox makes the scene in connection
with the stolen sword, hold onto your wontons!
Identities and loyalties soon become clearer
and the battle lines are drawn (using very nice
calligraphy). Li Mu Bai realizes that Jen has a
special gift that demands his tutelage. But will
she become his disciple or be swayed by
Jade? Who has the girl’s best interests at
heart anyway? This critically acclaimed martial
arts tale from Taiwan (with English subtitles)
has a distinctly feminine core, focusing most
of its attention on the relationships of its
women. Blades clank. Fists blur. Emotions
are shared. It’s Bruce Lee meets The Joy
Luck Club.
•
positive elements: The film esteems
nobility, discipline and honor within the Asian
culture. Friends put themselves at risk to
protect one another. Li Mu Bai and Shu Lien
struggle to reconcile matters of the heart with
the social/moral propriety demanded of them,
and do so with integrity. Li Mu Bai attempts to
turn his back on a violent past. There’s a
lesson in Lo’s admission that he runs with a
horde of thieves because, "Slowly your
gang becomes your family." When Jen
romanticizes the nomadic power of Giang Hu
warriors, Shu Lien reminds her of the need for
rules, integrity, friendship and trust. Acting like
Peking’s version of Obi Wan Kenobi, Li Mu Bai
selflessly offers his services to train a disciple
in the ways of an exclusive, spiritually based
fighting force.
•
spiritual content: There is talk of
meditation and prayer, as well as readying
oneself for the afterlife, though the film’s
worldview is obviously not Christian. On two
occasions, Li Mu Bai asserts that
everything is just a state of mind (the
second time, Shu Lien points out that all is
not illusion). Eastern religion is the only
faith represented.
•
sexual content: Premarital sex gets
romanticized as Jen and Lo are shown in the
throes of passion and conversing in the
afterglow on several occasions.
•
violent content: Intensely
choreographed swordplay and hand-to-hand
combat, while relatively bloodless, includes
fatalities and introduces an arsenal of diverse
weaponry. A large circular blade is imbedded
in a man’s forehead. A warrior is killed by a
poison dart. One girl apparently commits
suicide by leaping from a bridge. A shrewish
woman attacks a foe who kills her in
self-defense. In a flashback, Jen’s family
caravan falls under siege in the desert when a
band of marauders converges on it (she and
the leader, Lo, are viciously antagonistic until
their fighting rage turns into sexual passion).
•
crude or profane language: A young
woman is maliciously called a whore.
•
drug and alcohol content: Jade Fox
burns an intoxicating incense to drug Jen.
•
conclusion: Crouching Tiger,
Hidden Dragon set a record in 2001 for
Oscar nominations by a foreign film. Its 10
Academy nods, arriving in the wake of Golden
Globe wins for Best Director and Best Foreign
Language Film, have caused moviegoers in
the United States to take notice (it is on pace
to gross $100 million during its U.S. run). The
Presidents’ Day matinee I attended was quite
full—mainly of art loving baby boomers. One
might naturally assume that an Asian release
without a single word of English (unless you
count "Aiyaaaaaah!!!!") wouldn’t
appeal to teenagers. But there may be
pockets of adolescent interest. The character
who becomes the film’s focal point is an
angst-ridden 18-year-old, a self-trained Ninja
bound by matronly honor and parental
authority who longs for romance and
adventure. She’s Mulan with an attitude.
Also, the fight sequences play out like a
live-action video game. Think Mortal Kombat on the big screen enhanced by
the mid-air choreography and production
value of The Matrix. Visually engaging
stuff.
However, unlike many mainstream critics
who have gushed over Crouching Tiger,
Hidden Dragon, I found the gravity-defying
chases across rooftops and lemur-like leaps
through treetops an illogical distraction. Artful,
yes. Perhaps even standard fare in the martial
arts genre. Still, they felt to this Westerner
rather cartoonish and out of place in a film
that, creatively, wants to be taken seriously.
There are tragic elements here sure to leave
audiences less than effervescent as they drop
their popcorn bags into awaiting trash
receptacles. Ultimately it is the nobility of Shu
Lien and the budding pacifism of Li Mu Bai
that makes them easy to root for. Other
characters may give Crouching Tiger its
roar, but they provide its heart.
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