Had Akira Kurosawa directed Chuck Jones cartoons, they
would have resembled the new cult hit comedy “Kung
Fu Hustle,” a Hong Kong import that combines fierce
killings, heightened martial arts and other hijinks to
form a parody of both Quentin Tarantino’s “Kill
Bill, Volume One” and Sergio Leone’s spaghetti
westerns of the 60s. It also satirically comments on destiny,
claiming that even evil deeds and the propensity for treachery
cannot erase an anointed one’s fate.
Turf wars become brutal in 40’s Shanghai. The ineffectual
police are either chumps or dupes for whoever’s in
charge at the time. The Crocodile Gang leads the town until
chopped up by the Axe Gang, the most vicious of thugs.
Two vagabonds, desperate to join the squad, launch an assault
on a dilapidated village, only to be caught off-guard when
the scrappy inhabitants excel at mystical martial arts.
The Axe gang wages war but find these surfs to be unpredictable
and not so easy to dismiss and crack.
“Kung Fu Hustle,” like “Airplane”,
builds this slapstick ballet to frantic pace, tossing visual
puns at the unsuspecting audience. Events occur so quickly
and characters evolve from villains to heroes to corpses
in the blink of an eye. Chow makes references to Fred Astaire
and Ginger Rogers, Bruce Lee and Clint Eastwood. At the
same time, director Stephen Chow paints a chaotic mis-en-scene,
one visually masterful. Harps spew out invisible but deadly
swords; heroes spin assassins around in a circle, their
wake forming a ying/yang symbol; even the waves of heat
are so palatable, you can feel the sand in your teeth.
Decapitations, eviscerations and skewerings plague the
film’s populace yet the ramifications aren’t
thrust in the audience’s faces. Chow hides the gore
from audiences raised on Tarantino and the EC Comic bloodletting
of “Sin City.” Though R-Rated, “Kung
Fu Hustle” presents nothing here that would upset
a teenager raised on Freddy Krueger or Jason Voorhees.
Even when a cat slices in half, it’s shadowed and
displayed as a sick but hilarious visual joke instead.
Though, not ultra-violent, “Hustle” does contain
some uncomfortable non-Hollywood moments, such as several
bullies urinating on a young boy.
What’s remarkable is that this film still manages
to infuse heart into the tale despite a hero prone to dastardly
activities, and two modern samurais who act as slumlords
akin to the nasty innkeepers, the Thénardiers from “Les
Miserables . ” Chow, who plays the thug attempting
to join the gang, is an engaging personality. Even when
desperately hoping to be bad, he projects a decency betraying
his actions. When he evolves into a warrior, the conversion
comes as a natural progression. Both Wah Yuen as the lascivious
landlord and Qui Yuen as the iron-fisted landlady convincingly
transform into combating machines. Qui Yuen, dressed in
a dirty smock and rollers, darts around the empty streets
like Roadrunner and smashes into walls like Wile E. Coyote.
All three flawlessly dance the choreographed brawls with
the ease of Jackie Chan or Chow Yun-Fat.
Silly, off-beat and a visual cornucopia of sight-gags
and feral energy, “Kung Fu Hustle” will delight
those attune to martial art genre and novices alike. With
a sassy beat, and a tongue planted firmly in its cheek, “Hustle” is
a perfect companion for Chow’s earlier hit “Shaolin
Soccer.”
Grade: A- |