city on fire

chapter six: new dragons forever

Ask Western moviegoers to name a Hong Kong film actor and those who could do so would likely answer either Bruce Lee or Jackie Chan, both known for martial arts and action. Lee's success likely paved a path for Chan, although the film-types and screen personas for which each is known are distinctive. Where Bruce Lee kicked high, Jackie Chan kicks low. Lee broke through walls with a single punch, Chan hurts his hand when he strikes a wall. The former was serious, the latter is a comic. Jackie Chan is, in effect, an anti-Bruce Lee, a conscious and calculated polar opposite.

Notwithstanding the expectations of a martial arts audience, new dragon Donnie Yen's Legend of the Wolf (1997) feels like an elegy for a time when kung fu films reigned. Reasons include Yen's renowned martial arts skills and love of showing them on film; the movie's non-stop action, meaning high body counts, which re-creates the genre; and, the nostalgic framing device, which 'remembers when.' Yen yearns for 'the human content, by which I mean, you feel that real people, rather than special effects, are responsible for the action.' But neither an ideology of kung fu as 'mythic narratives of individualist male triumph over large corporate systems of control and exploitation' nor a view that it is an 'experimental form which escapes from representation by offering a purely kinetic ballet of sights and sounds' can be sustained in the face of intensified economic conglomeration. Yen's picture is a stroll, or rather, a tear (a race) and a tear (drop), in this instance, down memory lane.

Chapter 7

Dr. Lisa Stokes, Humanities

stokesl@scc-fl.edu

407-708-2079

Seminole Community College

Copyright © Seminole State College, 2005