It’s a Marvel movie so expectations are low… and met. First a few good points: the cgi’s good, the martial arts fights are silly but efficient and there’s a good set-piece featuring a runaway bus in San Francisco. Unfortunately the characters are cardboard cut-outs, the threadbare plot is merely a device to get from one fight to another and there’s no sense of drama at all. Half-way through we’re even introduced to cartoon animals and dragons. Tom and Jerry fights were more exciting.
It may keep undemanding kids amused for a while, but others may soon be reaching for the FF button. On the plus side, it will at least prompt a new admiration for all those crazy Hong Kong kung fu films that may now not seem so bad after all.
A fantasy action adventure film from the MCU, full of martial arts, spirited and entertaining with fun roles and an overlong punch up climax. This will appeal to young teenagers desperate for more Marvel stuff and the makers oblige with nods and references to previous films in the franchise and the inevitable sequel (check the mid credits sequence). This one has an introductory prologue about a medieval power hungry warlord, The Mandarin (Tony Leung) who has ten mystical rings which give him power to conquer and long life. A thousand years later he is mellowed by falling in love with a woman from a magical, hidden village, has two children and trains them in martial arts...like you do! Then said wife dies, he grieves, becomes a nasty guy again but the children move away and live humble lives. Then the eldest, Shang-Chi (Simi Liu) and his girlfriend (Awkwafina - in a neatly funny performance) are attacked by bad guys and their adventures begin which will involve lots of kung fu fights and strange monsters. Ben Kingsley has an MCU linking cameo and Michelle Yeoh adds some gravitas as a kindly warrior with all the answers. This is a typical MCU film, it's ok especially if you like this sort of thing and as I say it's entertaining as far as it goes but it's really nothing overly stimulating or new.
If you are a fan of Marvel Avengers then you know what to expect. The difference is that the characters here actually have some substance to them. I actually cared about them a little more than if they were dressed up in tights and masks and had shields and magic hammers. Yes this is still pure fantasy with monsters and dragons and a baddie who is just misguided and sad but still bad. As much as I love the original arc in the Avengers films. I do lose track of what I have seen and where we are at. So with this new film franchise at least if it continues, as long as they don't overdo the number of characters. We are in for a fun rollercoaster of nonsense.
Every now and then, Marvel Studios manages to break just a bit from the familiar and find something beyond its formula. Sure, we get a slew of sequels from the Avengers ensemble but sometimes get something surprisingly off-beat for the brand, like a Guardians of the Galaxy or a Black Panther. Count Shang-Chi among that flock as one of the stand-out highlights of Marvel’s Phase 4 thus far.
What makes Shang-Chi (Simu Liu) stick out from the pack is that he doesn’t so much have a major flaw to his character that some superpower will help him overcome. He does indeed come to acquire the fantastical ten rings that will allow him to go toe-to-toe with bigger threats in future Marvel movies but that’s not the crux of such a story. Rather, Shang needs to come to terms with his past.
His lineage is rather remarkable and made all the more compelling when revealed slowly throughout the course of the film. Shang’s father, the REAL villain of The Mandarin not the fake actor of Iron Man 3, has devoted his life to power with his ability to use the ten rings for his own shadow organization. He has also trained Shang to be an expert assassin while he neglected his sister. So it’s a life that Shang would rather leave behind, which he does so by trying to live a simpler life with his American friend Katy (Awkwafina).
But the past can’t stay dead for long. After enough time has passed, Shang finds himself targeted by his dad’s goons who want the necklaces were given to him and his sister by The Mandarin’s dead wife. Realizing he can’t let this go, Shang takes off with Katy on a journey to find the truth about what his father is trying to accomplish. He reconciles with his estranged sister who has now become an underground fighting manager and learns the secrets of a fantasy land that The Mandarin had been searching to uncover for decades.
There’s a delightfully understated tone in this picture to make the family drama resonate and soar above the easy snark and winks that accompany most Marvel movies. Simu Liu has a strong enough performance that has his attempts at humor feel genuine and his heartbreak over grief feels relatable. I fully expected to Awkwafina to be the central source of comic relief but she is thankfully given a rather robust arc of trying to prove herself as a friend. Even the villain becomes highly sympathetic in that his ultimate goal is an emotional and understandable one, where even if it means freeing an ancient evil, we connect with his sorrow.
The action scenes are pretty exciting which may not sound like much coming from a Marvel movie but consider the first big action sequence of a fight on a bus. Shang-Chi does battle with multiple men while Katy controls a bus with broken brakes and plenty of frightened civilians on board. The scene is brilliantly staged and shot well, where one can easily appreciate the sequence of Shang-Chi kicking two goons in the face and then flipping on his jacket. Scenes like that are far more enticing than that of the par-for-the-course climax of grand special effects of fantasy creatures and energy blasts (cool as those scenes may look).
The film is ultimately a family drama that is more admiring than that of Black Widow, especially with its highly stylish edge of Chinese folklore and staging of martial arts. Even the somewhat obligatory scenes of relation to other Marvel movies can’t bog down this entry from standing well enough on its own. This is far more than just the Chinese version of the same superhero formula.