Rush
Hour (1998)
Rated PG13
Starring: Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker, and
Elizabeth Peña
Rating:

out
of

|
Jackie Chan has secured a cult following for himself in the United States.
Since the US opening of Rumble in the Bronx in 1996, Chan's films have
pulled half-decent, if not spectacular, box-office numbers and spawned
a number of his earlier Hong Kong films to be re-released in US theaters
and on home video. However, true mainstream superstardom has eluded him.
Rush Hour, a buddy action picture, is his first American made movie since
1985's The Protector, another buddy action film. The Protector was a horribly
mismatched teaming of Chan and unlikely action star Danny Aiello. This
time, Chris Tucker (The Fifth Element) is teamed with Chan. Tucker's faster
than light mouth teamed with Chan's faster than light hands is a match
that looks to score a knockout at the box-office.
Chan plays Lee, a Hong Kong supercop (Does he ever play an average cop?),
who is friends with a Chinese consul Han (Tzi Ma). When the consul's daughter
is kidnapped in the United States by a Chinese crime gang, Lee is called
in from Hong Kong to help. However, the FBI has other plans for Lee. They
don't want him interfering with their investigation. So, they recruit
LAPD detective James Carter (Chris Tucker) to escort Lee around town and
keep him away from the consul's house, which is the base for the investigation.
Carter, who believes he is getting a prime assignment with the FBI, is
angry when he finds out he's basically babysitting Lee. Lee is angry because
he's getting the runaround from the FBI. Together, Lee and Carter decide
they're going to solve the case in spite of the fact that they're not
supposed to get involved.
The plot is standard buddy movie fare. The two cops in question initially
dislike each other's differences and get on each other's nerves. Of course,
they find common ground and bond to help get their work done. It's nothing
new and its pretty predictable. However, with Tucker's comedy style and
Chan's martial artistry, this formula has at least some new ingredients.
They pair manage to inject enough charisma and energy into the lame script
to make it work for them. As an added bonus, some of the scenes involving
Soo Yung (Julia Hsu), the kidnapped daughter, are genuinely rib-tickling.
One involving a Mariah Carey song is particularly good.
There's a lot to chuckle at in Rush
Hour and there's just enough action
to whet the appetite of Chan's fans. It doesn't pretend to be anything
more than an action comedy, and with two of the best of each genre's brightest
stars in tow, it manages to be a fairly good one. Trivia: Rush
Hour director Brett Ratner worked with Chris Tucker in 1997's
Money Talks, which also starred Charlie Sheen. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |