Shanghai
Noon (2000)
Rated PG13
Starring: Jackie Chan, Owen Wilson, and
Lucy Liu
Rating:

out
of

|
Jackie Chan finally achieved star status in the United States with the
buddy cop movie, Rush Hour in 1998, but let Chris Tucker steal most of
the spotlight. Two years later, Touchstone Pictures has released a buddy
western movie, Shanghai Noon, with Owen Wilson taking over the Chris Tucker
role. However, Wilson lacks Tucker's charisma and Chan carries the movie
on his own.
Like Rush
Hour, Shanghai Noon features Chan as a "fish-out-of-water" in
the United States. This time, rather than being a top Hong Kong detective,
Chan is Chon Wang, a Chinese Imperial Guard sent to the United States
to retrieve Princess Pei Pei (Lucy Liu), who has been kidnapped from the
Forbidden City. When the train he is on is robbed by a gang led by Roy
O'Bannon (Owen Wilson), Chon finds himself separated from his fellow guardsmen.
After a series of run-ins, O'Bannon and Wang team up to find the princess.
Shanghai
Noon never takes itself seriously and that's one of its many
strengths. The movie is sweet, silly and full of the requisite action
that a Jackie Chan movie needs to succeed. The action sequences in this
film are above and beyond those featured in Rush Hour, giving Chan fanatics
what they go to a Jackie Chan movie to see: fast, furious and frequently
funny fight scenes. There are precious few of the jaw-dropping, life-threatening
stunts that Chan is famous for, which is understandable. Chan, at 46 years
old, isn't getting any younger. He still can dance his way through a fight
scene like no other martial artist I've ever seen and that's well worth
the price of admission.
The film provides a few good
laughs, several chuckles and a large dose of the steady grins. The comedy
is fairly predictable, but good-natured.
Aside from a few sex and drug-related jokes, the film is almost family
fare, but it never seems watered down to cater to younger audiences. It
also includes a fair number of nods to older Westerns, including Butch
Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and the Italian "spaghetti westerns" of
the late 1960s and early 1970s.
While the movie won't get many nods from historical nitpickers, Shanghai
Noon is an amicable tale that features just enough plot to string together
the action scenes. It's nice to see Chan in another high quality, high
profile domestic release that is sure to win him more American fans. Trivia: The
evil marshall is named Van Cleef, in an obvious tribute to Lee Van
Cleef, who played many villains in the spaghetti westerns of the 60s
and 70s. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |