Gapers Block
December 24, 2004
House of Flying Daggers





Directed by Zhang Yimou.
Starring Zhang Ziyi, Andy Lau, Takeshi Kaneshiro and Dandan
Song.
Only a few months after Miramax's long-delayed release
of Hero comes Zhang Yimou's new film, House
of Flying Daggers. Once again drawing inspiration from
wuxia (martial arts novels), this time Yimou tells
a story set in the days of the Tang Dynasty's decline. A
group known as the House of Flying Daggers is a rebel army
that "steals from the rich and gives to the poor."
A local captain named Jin (Takeshi Kaneshero) and his partner
Leo (Andy Lau) investigate the possibility that a member
of the Flying Daggers is one of the dancers at the Peony
Pavillion. Identifying Mei (Zhang Ziyi) as the rebel, they
arrest her, but concoct a plan they hope will lead them
back to the Flying Daggers' new leader. Jin poses as a lone
warrior named Wind and stages a daring "escape,"
but as they flee, with Leo and other policemen in pursuit,
Jin begins to fall for her.
House of Flying Daggers opens by setting up a
playful, comic tone reminiscent of the Errol Flynn and Tyrone
Powers action films of the early 20th century like Robin
Hood and Zorro -- and even Gilbert and Sullivan
to some extent. The silliness prepares the audience for
the huge amounts of suspension of disbelief required later
in the film when the comedy disappears as the chase takes
a dark turn. Much of the action is utterly impossible, such
as the CG-assisted boomeranging knives Mei and her fellow
Daggers throw with superhuman precision, but it shouldn't
be harder to swallow than, say, any of Legolas' equally
ridiculous stunts in the Lord of the Rings flicks.
Vibrant, colorful and bedded by some enchantingly gorgeous
music, the astonishing first two acts of this pulp fiction-fueled
film showcase a number of fantastic action set pieces, only
to lose steam in its final act when House divorces its central
characters from the events involving the Flying Daggers.
The American title may be better than the film's Japanese
title, Lovers, but it gives a false impression of the film's
focus. This shift in focus mid-way through wouldn't be a
problem, though, if the story of the House of Flying Daggers
weren't the more interesting of the film's two stories.
House of Flying Daggers is playing at the River
East 21, Pipers Alley, and the Century 12/CinéArts
6 in Evanston.
Million Dollar Baby





Directed by Clint Eastwood.
Starring Hilary Swank, Clint Eastwood and Morgan Freeman.
I went into Million Dollar Baby knowing next to
nothing about it. I knew both Roger Ebert and Jonathan Rosenbaum
had given it very positive reviews, that it starred Hilary
Swank looking like a man (as always), and that it was directed
by Clint Eastwood, which means very little to me considering
I've seen only one of the movies he's directed. While I
thought Unforgiven was very good, it was by no
means the revelation it has been made out to be. What I've
read of his other movies -- Mystic River, Space
Cowboys and Bridges of Madison County among
them -- interests me almost not at all. So, basically, I
didn't expect much from this one.
As the film started, I quickly got a hell of a lot more
than I expected. It is a much smaller film than I expected,
and a much deeper, authentic one as well. Paul Haggis' dark
and witty script, based on stories from Rope Burns
by F.X. Toole, is funny at all the right moments (often
bleakly so) and reveals admirably well-rounded characters
who very easily could have been transformed into walking,
talking issues by a more heavy-handed director, or fallen
into lame stereotypes with a lesser cast. It's an especially
good thing, then, that the cast is in top form. Hilary Swank
stars as Maggie Fitzgerald, a wanna-be boxer from Bumf--k,
Egypt, who, as Morgan Freeman's narration describes her,
"grew up knowing one thing: she was trash." (This
line is beautifully placed over a sequence of Fitzgerald
pocketing leftovers from her waitressing job for her own
dinner.) Freeman, for his part, is an ex-prize fighter whose
career as such came to an abrupt halt years before in an
incident trainer, manager and "cut man" Frankie
Dunn (Clint Eastwood) blames himself for.
I wouldn't say Million Dollar Baby is perfect,
although it is very nearly so. As Jonathan Rosenbaum pointed
out in his capsule review, Freeman's narration and how it
is used to frame the story makes for a few strained moments.
But, just as often, it economically pushes the narrative
forward (as narration should but rarely does), explaining
things that would be too awkward to relate through expository
dialogue. A subplot revolving around "Danger"
(Jay Baruchel), a mentally handicapped hang-about at Frankie's
gym, seems a bit extraneous, though undeniably crowd-pleasing
(myself included in that crowd). And in a handful of scenes
Tom Stern's usually stark, moody lighting sometimes comes
off as a little more dramatic than sensible, detracting,
however slightly, from the inherent grittiness of the story.
In hindsight, I should have seen something coming, but
Million Dollar Baby got me with its stunning sucker
punch while I was looking the other way. Nothing prepared
me for the movie's jaw-dropping turning point, which I still
can't shake from my mind. It pains me to not write about
this amazing film in more detail, but to do so would be
a disservice to those who plan to see it. And you absolutely
should because Million Dollar Baby is one of the
best films of the year.
Million Dollar Baby is playing at River East 21.
I might have to rethink my instincts about Clint's movies.
But Mystic River still looks incredibly uninteresting.
Infernal Affairs





Directed by Andrew Lau and
Alan Mak.
Starring Tony Leung, Andy Lau, Eric Tsang, Kelly Chen and
Sammi Cheng.
Andrew Lau (A Man Called Hero, Storm Riders) manages
to transcend, for the most part, the cheesiness of his earlier
films with this smart, tense and crisply shot story of a
Triad mole in the Hong Kong police force (House of Flying
Daggers' Andy Lau; no relation to the director) working
to uncover the identity of an undercover cop within the
inner circle of his true boss (Hero's Tony Leung).
Infernal Affairs is reminiscent of the best parts
of Michael Mann's flashy but brain dead crime dramas Heat
and Collateral -- perhaps a little too much to
give it as much credit as those critics who have hailed
Internal Affairs as signalling "a new era
in Hong Kong filmmaking" (Elvis Mitchell, The New
York Times). But this exciting and well-plotted genre
exercise does one thing that Mann's films don't: it actually
makes sense.
Infernal Affairs opens on Friday, December 24,
at the Music Box. It is also available on DVD from Amazon,
Blockbuster and all the usual suspects. The DVD features
a (weaker) alternate ending as well as one of the most hideous
cover designs I've ever seen, even ignoring the fact that
the woman in the center isn't a character in the movie.
Martin Scorsese is remaking the film as The Departed
for 2006 with Leonardo DiCaprio and Matt Damon as the leads.
Why do I have the feeling that the only thing that will
be better about the remake is the title?