Showing posts with label Country: Taiwan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Country: Taiwan. Show all posts

REVIEW: DVD Release: The Treasure Hunter























Film: The Treasure Hunter
Release date: 12th July 2010
Certificate: 15
Running time: 102 mins
Director: Yen-ping Chu
Starring: Chiling Lin, Jay Chou, Eric Tsang, Daoming Chen
Genre: Action/Adventure/Romance
Studio: E1
Format: DVD
Country: Taiwan

When Stephen Chow (Kung Fu Hustle and Shaolin Soccer) pulled out of The Green Hornet reinvention scheduled for release in 2011, many were left baffled by director Michael Gondry’s decision to cast Jay Chou, gargantuan pop star, as Kato; stepping into the shoes movie phenomenon Bruce Lee left behind. With Seth Rogen already mysteriously cast as The Hornet (he did write the screenplay) anticipation for its release is slightly muted. The Treasure Hunter, starring Chou and available to buy this month, provides the perfect opportunity to assess his acting credentials in a film billed as “Indiana Jones meets The Mummy.”

Lan Ting (Red Cliff’s Chiling Lin), an adventure novelist living in the city, agrees to meet up with her estranged father; the man she hasn’t forgiven for leaving home so he could explore ancient ruins instead of raising a family. A collision on route ensures she never sees her father, awakening days later in a desert, held hostage, used as a bargaining tool for an ancient map that will lead her captors to a secret tomb filled with treasures.

Met instead by Ting’s childhood friend Qiaofei (Chou), with news of her father’s mysterious demise and the map her enemies have been seeking, she is attacked, along with the others, by more furtive foes hell-bent on retrieving the map and killing all those that have seen it.

Narrowly escaping, the custodians and convicts must join forces and overcome their differences if they are to banish the ghosts of old and ultimately prevail…


Director Yen-ping Chu must have thought he had potential gold on his hands by pairing two of Taiwan’s hottest properties together for this supposedly exhilarating desert romp. Sadly, although Jay Chou and Chiling Lin are both attractive to look at, and handle their roles more than adequately, they’re let down by a nonsensical story in which too many characters spend the duration of the film doing very little. It wouldn’t be so bad if the twosome had some kind of chemistry going on, but their relationship is more wooden than Hayden Christensen and Natalie Portman’s in Attack Of The Clones.

Chou spends the majority of the movie with the same glum facial expression, no matter what emotion he’s supposed to be conveying, whilst Lan Ting seems almost worried to get too close to her co-star in case she upsets his adoring teenage fan base. Fortunately, seeing as the film is a cross between Indiana Jones and The Mummy, at least the viewer will be rewarded with tremendous action and adventure, right? Well, not quite. Whilst the CGI is easy on the eye, obvious wire work ruins the few fight scenes we are forced to endure. Chou’s performance suffers heavily with this, the punches he throws are tamer than those witnessed on a school playground - Bruce Lee has nothing to fear whatsoever. Admittedly, the duel between Qiaofei and a masked Dao Dao is briefly entertaining, but Chu’s decision to have a young boy play guitar during it is simply baffling.

Considering its running time, there are surprisingly few action scenes. The Sandstorm Legion offer some menace, but they also provide the film with its first of many illogicalities: can horses really outrun a car and a motorcycle? The finale, located in the lost tomb, finally raises some interest, involving a zombie and some white-haired ghosts, but it suffers from similar flaws - the scenes just aren’t long enough and lack any kind of tension. All too often characters are introduced to offer brief conflict; the Eagle of the Desert is much talked about during the opening scenes, but the duel between him and Qiaofei is lost in a sandstorm of sentimentality.

Lan Ting’s character infuriates simply because the death of her father has little impact on her persona. She basically grieves for two minutes, accepts it and moves on. Even when they are confronted by his apparent murderer, more of a mummy than a man, she’s primarily concerned about hitting the deadline for her next novel, or whether Qiaofei still loves her after all these years. As for the murderous mummy, another villain popping up to satisfy the audiences need for Chou to play tough, the Andrex puppy would probably offer more resistance.

Director Yen-ping Chu never commits to a particular tone, somehow managing to steal the worst parts from films of similar ilk, moulding them into a bland, pointless experience. The amount of money spent to achieve this is staggeringly obvious - some of the visuals are a feast for the eyes - but while he handles the visual aspect of the film with style, wire work aside, he is rather careless with the amount of annoying, and frustratingly redundant performances – Pork Rib (Eric Tsang) is supposedly the clown of the piece, but he’s so over the top it hurts, and others drift in and out offering very little to a plot lacking in mystery, suspense or drama.


Playing tribute to Indiana Jones and The Mummy, The Treasure Hunter manages to plunder all of the worst bits from both to create a mess of a movie. Devoid of originality, plot and action, only die-hard Jay Chou fans will find anything here worth to treasure. DW


REVIEW: DVD Release: Invitation Only























Film: Invitation Only
Release date: 5th April 2010
Certificate: 18
Running time: 96 mins
Director: Kevin Ko
Starring: Kristian Brodie, Bryant Chang, Vivi Ho, Jerry Huang, Joseph Ma
Genre: Horror
Studio: Momentum
Format: DVD
Country: Taiwan

In a global sense, Invitation Only may be just another entry in the growing library of torture-porn films following in the infamous footsteps of Hostel. For Taiwan, though, it represents much more. Believe it or not, this is Taiwan’s very first slasher movie, and director Kevin Ko has pulled no punches to make sure it arrives with a bang. Buckets of gore? Check. Gratuitous nudity? Check. Gaping plot holes and inexplicable character motivations? Check. Everything’s in place, we’re ready to go.

We join Wade, a down-trodden, ambitionless young man, bullied by his boss and miserable in his job as a chauffeur for a limo company. After a chance meeting with his company’s CEO in a compromising position with a beautiful fashion model, Wade is bribed for his silence with a mysterious ticket granting him access to a secret party, which he will attend in his boss’s place. The party is a hedonistic, underground affair for the rich and influential, and promises to fulfil the wildest desires of its guests.

It’s not long before things turn sinister, however, and Wade and several other party newcomers realise they’re all there by suspicious means - and have been exposed as leading duplicitous lives. Soon it becomes a cat and mouse game of terror and torture, with the guests being chased through dimly lit rooms and being picked off one by one by a masked assailant in gradually more and more gruesome ways…


Ko and his cast are clearly having lots of fun, splattering the screen red with goo, and wasting no time in getting to the meat of the action. Sadly, though, things aren’t quite as entertaining for us.

Primarily the film comes across as a thinly glossed pastiche of its Western influences, most obviously Hostel and Saw, but also borrowing shamelessly from ‘70s classics like Halloween and Friday The 13th. Where Hostel succeeded, however, with a knowing sense of irony, some genuine tension and an (at the time) unexpectedly shocking ‘ick factor’, Invitation Only lacks all of these key ingredients. It seems to have arrived at the Torture-Porn party sadly late, and the gore, while gleefully liberal and visceral, is neither shocking nor inventive - and seriously pales in comparison to its predecessors.

The film also suffers from a terminal lack of humour, and the events – rather than executed with playful exuberance – are presented in deadly seriousness. This is a crucial flaw, as what might have been a funny, if sick slasher – a knowing mirror of it’s Western influences – comes across more as a desperately earnest home movie, trying but largely failing to live up to expectations.

The cast are adequate for what’s required: beautiful, wooden and thoroughly disposable – everything the victims in a slasher movie should be. The stand out is Jerry Huang as company CEO Mr. Yang, who adds an initially creepy and intense presence, although as he is called on for a more involved role in the proceedings his character slowly descends into parody. Special credit also to the unintentionally hilarious bearded evil mastermind (surely the campest megalomaniac we’ve seen in many years?) for delivering his outrageously absurd dialogue with complete conviction. The women are beautiful and largely helpless, and there’s a soft-core sex scene with Japanese adult movie star Maria Ozawa thrown in early on for good measure, which should keep the eager fan boys very happy.

As the action hots up for a daring breakout and escape, and the set pieces and sequences become more complex, Kevin Ko struggles to keep up. A high speed chase between a Ferrari and a pick-up in his hands somehow becomes boring, and the use of ‘inventive’ camera angles and flashy editing to paper over the small budget cracks fail to convince. The sequence comes off looking deeply amateur, and you wish again that more energy had been put into originality instead of trying to ape big budget blockbusters.


Invitation Only is an uninspired and formulaic effort that will please only the most undemanding and devoted of teenage horror fans. Perhaps in the years to come we can look forward to Taiwan finding its own voice in the horror genre, and it will start to produce films of genuine originality, instead of trying to imitate its influences on their own terms. Until then, we’ll have to put up with Invitation Only. LOZ