It feels like every few years someone comes along trying to be the
next Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan, Jet Li, or even Donnie Yen. And try as they
might, they usually cough up a few watchable titles before fading back
into obscurity. While Stephen Chow is undoubtedly the best of the bunch,
we’ve also tread through the likes of Tony Jaa. And now here comes the
triple threat of Yue Song (writer/director/star) taking aim at modern
audiences with Iron Protector (aka The Bodyguard in most
markets), but Song has a long way to go. Even while trying something at
least sorta new with a superhero/kung fu mixture, it never knows what
tone it wants to settle on, leaving your interest behind in the dust.
Wu-Lin
(Song) has just been duped by a mugging of a man who is actually part
of a cult of protectors, err, bodyguards. Working for Mr. Li is Jiang Li
(Xing Yu, aka Shi Yanneng) who also happens to be Wu-Lin’s brother.
Wu-Lin is the successor of the ancient “Iron Feet” clan so he is
assigned to protect Fei-Fei (Li Yufei), daughter to the richest family
in the city. Now, Wu-Lin and Jiang Li are pitted against each other when
Fei-Fei is finally abducted and they must face their sibling rivalry
head on.
Well Go USA offers up its typical fantastic video/audio presentations
on yet another 25GB disc. It’s a good thing the film comes with scant
extras and a simple — if not occasionally engaging — audio mix. Colors
are bright with contrast running high, yet there’s no bleeding or
blooming. Blacks are spot on with no crush. Aliasing is absent even if
the dreaded banding rears its ugly in a few instances. Detail is as
razor sharp as expected from a WGU release. The 5.1 Mandarin DTS-HD
Master Audio leaves a lot to be desired throughout the first half of the
film. Thankfully, as the action scenes ramp up the surrounds finally
kick in. The first half is a rather front heavy affair. But at least it
finally delivers when it needs to. A 2.0 Mandarin Stereo track is also
available with English subtitles.
As for those scant special features, the film’s trailer (1:04) is
included, along with three behind-the-scenes featurettes. “The Chase”
(1:43) is a fun look at an elongated foot chase involving a van. This
one was more interesting as they quickly talk about how they had no
stunt drive and simply found someone daring enough to drive for them to
pull it off. “The Final Battle” (3:11) is an interesting look at how the
finale came together through practical effects, CGI, and lots of
wire-work. There were plenty of accidents and injuries on set, something
also shown off during “Training, Stunts, and Fighting Highlights”
(3:26). This feature would have been better if we hadn’t already seen it
play out during the end credits. However, it is a nice throwback to the
Jackie Chan era when his films used to show on-set incidents for anyone
daring enough to question his prowess.
Iron Protector comes from a long line of bodyguard sub-genre
films and never really tries to push things more than what’s come
before. But it does have a sense of humor running through it that helps
keep the action moving along. It does start to feel rather long and I
honestly thought it was almost over when the finale commences, but when I
checked the run-time, there was still a whopping 30 minutes left. Song
at least delivers where it counts and there’s a few action scenes that
are pretty impressive for being such a new director. With time, Song may
not be able to fill the shoes of those who came before, but at least we
can see he’s having a good time trying to at least stand alongside the
greats, even when falling short. Featuring great A/V while being lax on
extras, Iron Protector may not be a new classic, but at least you
won’t be mad at yourself for wasting 90 minutes on it either. At least a
rental could be recommended, but with how fast WGU discs wind up on
Netflix, you could always just wait and give it a whirl once that time
comes.
Article first published on Blogcritics.
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