Jackie Chan Round-Up

Nobody does action comedy like Jackie Chan. Arnie or Nic Cage might get laughs from their unusual performing styles and delivery of one liners. Tom Cruise or Bruce Lee do physical stunts that make you sit bolt upright. But Jackie does it with a toothy, unabashed smile on his face and genuinely takes his mortality right to the very edge. He’s a fun guy, a zany guy, a sincere guy and commits some of the most dangerous shit ever seen on screen since the days of silent comedy. No wonder he became the most globally recognised face in cinema.

Drunken Master (1978)

Yuen Woo-ping directs Jackie Chan, Yuen Siu-tien and Hwang Jang-lee in this classic Kung-Fu comedy where an apprentice learns a zany fighting style from a sozzled master.

An absolute classic. Takes the tropes of a King Hu or a Shaw Brothers flick but leans into Jackie’s comedy chops and quirky physicality. His wobbly erratic “drunken” fighting style is a wonder to behold. He has brilliant chemistry with his hermit teacher Yuen Siu-tien. The training montages are pleasingly daft but the end fight, where all the learned styles are utilised and coalesced, is gripping stuff. Up there with Snake In Eagle’s Shadow.

8

Armour Of God (1986)

Jackie Chan and Eric Tsang direct Jackie, Alan Tam and Lola Forner in this Hong Kong action adventure where a treasure hunter crosses the globe in search of an artefact.

I always assumed ‘Armour Of God’ referred to the iconic shot where Jackie rocks a jacket covered in dynamite. Only a god would take on multiple henchmen wearing that. This spin on Indiana Jones / James Bond can be pretty random. One minute Jackie is taking down a tribe of very racist “natives”, the next he’s in a boy band. The love triangle adventure plot never really crystallises but the action is top tier. One of those ones where the “out takes” over the end credits make you wince.

7

Armour Of God 2: Operation Condor (1991)

Jackie Chan directs himself, Carol Cheng and Eva Cobo de Garcia in this Hong Kong adventure sequel where treasure hunter Asian Hawk is accompanied by a trio of international hotties in the race to reach some Nazi Gold.

Not quite up to snuff. A bit too much focus on broad comedy and superfluous plot. We seem to spend too long in fake sets. I’m sure the wind tunnel finale is just as risky and challenging as all Jackie stunts but we don’t feel the risk to his life for laughs quite as directly as more famous set pieces in the back catalogue. Half an hour too baggy.

5

Police Story 3: Supercop (1992)

Stanley Tong directs Jackie Chan, Michelle Yeoh and Maggie Cheung in this cop thriller where Ka-Kui goes undercover with a very capable Interpol agent watching his back.

Really kicks into life in the last half hour when there’s both Maggie Cheung fuelled farce at a hotel resort and a frankly stupendous extended chase through Malaysia. Jackie dangling from a helicopter, Yeoh (who is fantastic here) landing a motorbike on a speeding train. For reals. I reckon Tom Cruise and Christopher McQuarrie pop this VHS during downtime on Mission: Impossible sets and think “Supercop but serious.”.

8

Battle Creek Brawl (1980)

Robert Clouse directs Jackie Chan, Kristine DeBell and José Ferrer in this period action comedy where happy go lucky Jerry Kwan is strong armed by the mob into taking part in a deadly wrestling competition.

Often remembered as a poor premature attempt to position Jackie into the American market by hiring the director of Enter The Dragon, there’s actually much to love here. Jackie plays an immigrant kid with a dream, accompanied by a jolly whistling Lalo Schifrin theme. He has a healthy looking pretty white girlfriend and that never becomes an issue, they just make “nice nice” rather sweetly between training and fights. The plot sees some 1930s gangsters put the lean on Jackie to take part in a battle royale against some weird hulking wrestlers in Texas. But there’s time for a loopy, thrilling roller relay derby sequence which is a highlight. The movie has a lot in common with the depression era exploitation flicks that followed after Bonnie & Clyde. It would fit in nicely with a marathon watch with Hard Times, Paradise Alley or Bugsy Malone. Sure, the fights do lack ambition. The white stuntmen slow the rhythms down, the camera angles chosen and the editing make Jackie’s balletic tricks seem overly rehearsed. Yet I had real fun watching this, it was a pretty relaxed evening with a six pack and a smile.

7

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Movie Of The Week: It’s A Wonderful Life (1946)

Frank Capra directs James Stewart, Donna Reed and Lionel Barrymore in this festive classic where a family man feels trapped by his small town existence… and when he reaches a suicidal low ebb on Christmas Eve he is visited by an angel.

Wears the trappings of “Christmas”, “small town”, “family”, “duty” to absolutely grind a man down. Most of It’s A Wonderful Life is brutal. George Bailey is deafened, slapped and weigh down every time he does the right thing. Bedford Falls is a hell of small, cosy cuts. Like In The Mouth Of Madness I wouldn’t be surprised that if James Stewart tried to cross that bridge rather than jump off it he wouldn’t be looped back to the Savings & Loans. Fantasy aspects aside, I always mistakenly assumed Capra was a socialist at heart. Yet after reading Five Came Back by Mark Harris I’m reappraising my surface level take on the auteur. He’s a populist. As enamoured with fascism as he is with community. In his view of America, the one outstanding individual makes change and holds his finger in the dyke against corruption. The general population are fickle and just as capable of tearing the dam that protects them all down as repairing it. They need a messiah, a special one, a Mr Smith, John Doe or George Bailey. Need him to do the heavy lifting, the smart thinking, take their hits once a scapegoat is required. It’s a terrible life being one of Capra’s outstanding good guys. Merry Christmas from the mob.

10

Perfect Double Bill: Lost Horizon (1937)

I write regular features about live comedy for British Comedy Guide here https://www.comedy.co.uk/people/bobby_carroll/features/

The Boy And The Heron (2023)

Hayao Miyazaki directs Soma Santoki, Masaki Suda and Aimyon
in this Japanese animation where a young boy meets a mysterious speaking heron after losing his mother during World War Two.

Very much a Studio Ghibli Greatest Hits. Weird little sad sack humanoid grotesques. Secret worlds. Cute edible floaters. This is slightly more grounded in adult emotions. There’s an obvious Miyazaki avatar lording it around in the shadows wanting to pass his creation on to another generation, hoping for safe hands. It could be half an hour shorter and the dream logic plotting means it is easy to drift off when we suddenly shift onto a new plane of existence. I really did love a lot of this and I’m not a die hard Miyazaki adherent.

7

Perfect Double Bill: Spirited Away (2001)

I write regular features about live comedy for British Comedy Guide here https://www.comedy.co.uk/people/bobby_carroll/features/

Priscilla (2023)

Sofia Coppola directs Cailee Spaeny, Jacob Elordi and Dagmara Domińczyk in this biopic of Elvis’s child bride told from her point of view.

There’s definitely a movie here but the end result is quite watery and underwhelming. The look and the sound is utterly enthralling. The performances less so. This is an enigmatic biopic… leaving too much negative space for the gauche actors to get a little lost. Spaeny is fine, adrift in the glamour and living every high school girls dream. She and Coppola reign as they hint at the cult like community she is sucked into at Graceland. But the later suggestions of outright abuse and worse still come across as weak tea. Pretty much every marriage has moments where one partner loses their temper. Just all felt too obtuse… if you let it wash over you, rather than absorb you, Priscilla is… alright, momma.

6

Perfect Double Bill: Last Days (2005)

I write regular features about live comedy for British Comedy Guide here https://www.comedy.co.uk/people/bobby_carroll/features/

Porridge (1979)

Dick Clement directs Ronnie Barker, Richard Beckinsale and Peter Vaughan in this spin-off movie from the hit British prison sitcom.

No massive shakes as a unique cinematic experience but manages to recreate the humour and the clever characters away from the fake studio sets and transplant it all into a real working nick. Which creates a strange, but not unworkable, shift in tone.

6

Perfect Double Bill: Stir Crazy (1980)

I write regular features about live comedy for British Comedy Guide here https://www.comedy.co.uk/people/bobby_carroll/features/

The Element Of Crime (1984)

Lars Von Trier directs Michael Elphick, Esmond Knight and Meme Lai in this experimental neo-noir where a retired detective returns to Europe to investigate a serial killer who roams an existential wasteland.

Very much an exercise in style – the sepia dunked palette and the pointless puzzle plot grow wearisome very soon. This kinda meta nothing mystery movie seemed quite prevalent in the Eighties and is one of Von Trier’s rare exercises in genre. Has a few shocking moments… but these days those are the very least you now expect from Lars…

4

Perfect Double Bill: Epidemic (1987)

I write regular features about live comedy for British Comedy Guide here https://www.comedy.co.uk/people/bobby_carroll/features/

Passages (2023)

Ira Sachs directs Franz Rogowski, Ben Whishaw and Adèle Exarchopoulos in this emotionally intelligent Parisian millennial drama where an absolute train wreck of a human being leaves his long term partner to explore a straight relationship after a one night stand… only to realise he has given up too much on a whim.

“Pssst… PSSSSTTT… Hey you!… Yeah, you… Come here… Wanna see Paddington Bear raw fuck another dude for five minutes straight?… Step right this way, my man…”

6

Perfect Double Bill: Lilting (2014)

I write regular features about live comedy for British Comedy Guide here https://www.comedy.co.uk/people/bobby_carroll/features/

Closely Watched Trains (1966)

Jiří Menzel directs Václav Neckář, Jitka Bendová and Josef Somr in this Czechoslovak New Wave comedy about a teenage virgin who suffers from premature ejaculation when he starts working at the local railway station.

And this is more Carry On than kitchen sink. It is hard to see what the sniggering, horny fuss is all about until the second half. The seduction by rubber stamp and the fallout where an irate mother displays her “defiled” daughter to every man of authority is probably the satirical highpoint. There is some pessimism and fatalism that you’d never find in an American Pie sequel… not yet. The resistance / sabotage subplot is no more hard hitting than ‘Allo ‘Allo! Maybe the reason Sixties Czech filmmakers were so interested in one recent occupation was it gave them the chance to comment on another, more current regime indirectly? Still, you’d struggle to see what the Criterion release and Oscar win were all about going in cold in 2024?

6

Perfect Double Bill: The Cremator (1969)

I write regular features about live comedy for British Comedy Guide here https://www.comedy.co.uk/people/bobby_carroll/features/

Personal Services (1987)

Terry Jones directs Julie Walters, Alec McCowen and Shirley Stelfox in this “based on a true story” British sex comedy where a struggling single mum becomes a madame for kink specialists.

David Leland’s second script adapting the life of Cynthia Payne for the big screen. This is a bit squigglier than Wish You Were Here, with Walters’ performance being less well defined than Emily Lloyd’s show stopping debut. More kitchen sink than Carry On, Personal Service is a grimy but affectionate portrait of a gang of sexual outsiders. The ensemble casting is key. The film comes alive during a farcical wedding but that sequence feels quite separate from the tone of the rest of the movie.

7

Perfect Double Bill: Wish You Were Here (1987)

I write regular features about live comedy for British Comedy Guide here https://www.comedy.co.uk/people/bobby_carroll/features/