Friday 31 January 2020

The Warrior's Way - Way better than it should be

Sometimes a film has everything going for it on paper and yet somehow manages to mess itself up. 'The Warrior's Way' is actually the opposite.  Nothing really should work here and yet it all falls together to make a highly-watchable film.

Dong-Gun Jang is the titular 'warrior,' but don't feel too bad if you haven't heard of him as - apparently - this was his first Hollywood film.  He plays an oriental fighter who leaves his native land in disgrace when he finds he's unable to kill the infant heir of a rival clan.  It goes without saying that the story takes place in the past - this sort of thing doesn't happen that much these days (hopefully!).  So he heads to the 'Wild West' of America where he settles down in a tiny desert town and looks after his (adopted) daughter.  Unfortunately, the clan who he fell foul of has other ideas and follow him over.

However, don't expect wall-to-wall martial arts action from the off.  I hope it's not too much of a 'spoiler' to say that all these evil ninjas don't follow him straight away, leaving plenty of time for our hero to get to know his new townsfolk.  And, if you see any of the marketing surrounding this movie you'll notice that the cast who have obviously been classed as 'more familiar' to our Western audiences take prominent positions, namely Kate Bosworth, Geoffrey Rush and Danny Huston.  They're all good, but only get top billing due to most people not knowing who Dong-Gun Jang is and that's a shame for him as he's more than capable of headlining a film like this.

Don't worry, there's plenty of great action thrown in there, but also a suprising amount of character development thrown in.  A lot of people have mentioned how 'CGI' it looks.  Oddly enough, I'm one of those people who hates computer-generated special effects and finds that - sometimes - too much of them can completely ruin a film for me.  However, here they just seem to work.  And they don't come much more excessive that in 'The Warrior's Way.' I doubt there were more than a couple of sets built for the entire production, as almost all the backgrounds are done (or looked like it to me!) on a green screen.

So, despite looking much like a hour and a half long Playstation 2 cut-scene, the film actually jogs along nicely.  There's humour, fun, characters you'll care about and obviously a couple of evil baddies who you'll want to see get what's coming to them.  If you like your martial arts films on the light-hearted side and have a strong tolerance to CGI effects then this is definitely worth a watch.

7/10 if I woke up on Groundhog Day and had to watch this again, I could live with that

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