The Great Magician is the latest
feature film from director Tung-Shing Yee aka Derek Yee. The man has
a handful of films to his credits but he truly made his name in Hong
Kong cinema with his violent art house masterpiece “One Nite in
Mongkok”. He cemented himself as a director with an eye for the
darker side of HK life with the magnificent but depressing
crime/character study “Protégé”.
But the film that most
Americans will know Yee's work from was the Jackie Chan vehicle
“Shinjuku Incident”. Which is arguably one of Chan's best films
when it concerns acting.
So now onto Yee's latest, The Great
Magician which stars two of Hong Kong's greatest talents. Tony Leung
(Internal Affairs, In The Mood For Love) and Lau Ching Wan (Made
Detective, Running out of time). The supporting cast is nothing to
sneeze at either, Daniel Wu who can be seen in the recently released
Man with the iron fists and Zhou Xun who made quite the splash in the
Wachowski's Cloud Atlas.
The Great Magician is set during the
post Qing Dynasty China, 1920 or so. As the film starts off a rather
ruthless lieutenant Kun Shan (Wu Gang) is is the midst of using magic
to recruit criminals and low lives for his warlords army.
Said warlord is Lei Bully (Lau Ching
Wan), a ruthless man by all means who has seven wives. Well the
seventh wife isn't exactly pleased to be there. Liu Yin (Zhou Xun)
is being held against her well, a prisoner pretty much and she's not
at all happy at the thought of being married to a tyrant. Kun Shan is
also in the midst of setting up a deal with the Japanese for various
weapons of mass destruction. To complicate matters further a stranger
appears with a great interest in the Warlords seventh wife.
This stranger is Chang Hsien, “The
Great Magician” himself played with perfect charm and a great sense
of showmanship by the wonderful Tony Leung. Chang sets up shop at a
little hotel were he performs to sold out crowds, even after just his
first performance. Chang has a way with magic or more specific an
unnatural ability to control fire.
Being a Hong Kong period piece things
are never simple. Chang Hsien has actually returned not to just
perform magic but is planning to get his long lost love back. Yep...
you guessed it, he's returned for Liu Yin. There is also the matter
of the “Seven wonder scrolls” where put together these scrolls
have the power to make a persons dreams a reality which leads to a
few visually outstanding sequences.
This is far from a perfect film and
it's certainly not Derek Yee's best film as a director. But it's fun,
it's actually a whole lotta fun. Which is nice because I've been
getting tired of the overly dramatic period piece films that HK's
being releasing non-stop.
TGM is first and foremost a comedy,
it's not a costume drama or an action epic. It's a film based around
wonderfully calculated performances and very eye appealing magic
tricks.
The film doesn't hit every note perfectly though. As often is the case the CGI is a bit obvious but that's forgivable. Film fans going in expecting to see a Hong Kong version of "The Prestige" or "The Illusionist" will be disappointed though. The films tone much more resembles a less slap sticky version of Stephen Chow's Royal Tramp 1 & 2.
TGM is brought to us on Blu-ray by the
folks at Well Go USA. The 1080P anamorphic widescreen is utterly
incredible, it's a feast for the eyes. As per usual it's another
strong transfer from Well Go. TGM was shot on film so the entire
presentation has an incredibly warm look to it. Fine detail and
contrast is high in this release. It's pretty much demo material.
For audio you get four choices.
Mandarin 5.1 DTS track, Mandarin 2.0, English 5.1 DTS and an English
2.0 track. The best of the bunch by far is the Mandarin 5.1 track.
English dubs have never been my thing but from what I heard the
dubbing was surprisingly decent. So which ever option you choose,
you'll be happy with.
Supplements are a little thin but
“Making The Magic” is a terrific 40 minute making of featurette
which offers a fairly extensive look at the production. It's worth
the watch due to just the right amount of BTS footage and talking
head footage. Last up is the theatrical trailer for the film.
The Great Magician is a fun whimsical little comedy from Derek Yee. What really makes this film worth checking out are the stand out performances from Tony Leung. This flick comes RECOMMENDED.
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