An efficient new entry to the burgeoning Marvel Cinematic Universe, Shang Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings is thankfully not nearly as impenetrably mythic as its title suggests. In a sharp two hours it manages to stay grounded while at the same time providing plenty of mystical material plus some tub thumping action sequences. While there is a pattern to Marvel’s introductory films that this one sticks to, there is enough new ground to make it worthwhile even if the subject area is not as fresh as, say Black Panther or even Iron Man. Like the latter non Marvel enthusiasts may never have heard of Shang Chi (I hadn’t) but just as we were all that time ago with Tony Stark we’re glad to have shared his story.
SPOILERS AFTER THE BREAK!
Xi Wenwu is thousands of years old thanks
to ten rings that give him both eternal life and extraordinary powers. He uses
this for criminal activities until one day in an attempt to conquer the magical
land of Ta Lo he meets his match in the form of Ying Li. She has almost equal
powers and soon they fall in love and have two children whom Wenwu devotes his
life to, turning his back on violence until Ying Li is killed in an attack. He
then trains his son Shang Chi to become a fighter so strong he can avenge his
mother’s death. This backstory is unfurled in a series of flashbacks while we
also meet present day Shang Chi- or Shaun as he is known- who works as a valet
parker at a hotel keeping his past a secret even from best friend Katy. When he
is attacked on a bus by a motely crew out to steal a pendant given to him by
his father his secret is out and before long he – with Katy tagging along- head
for where he thinks his sister Xialing is, knowing she is in danger.
If you can overlook the curious question of
why someone with limitless power couldn’t just avenge his wife without taking
years training his son to do so when the boy has less chance of succeeding this
is a joyride. The script has exactly the right balance between fun and serious
moments, never getting too bogged down in the latter. There are three excellent
early action sequences including the bus attack which ingeniously manages to gradually
carve up the whole vehicle. Then Shang Chi, Katy and Xiailing take on their opponents along the side of a skyscraper. Meanwhile in flashback we witness Wenwu’s initial encounter
with Ying Li; a beautifully balletic battle that’s almost a dance juxtaposed
against Japanese fauna and tall trees. There is a real visual inventiveness to this first section of the film.
Like most Marvel movies there comes a point
when the character stuff and quirky asides give way to big action and though
there is nothing in the last half hour that can match the verve of those early
action scenes you can’t argue too much about the scale of the final
confrontation. What doesn’t really work for me though is the idea that Wenwu would
really be so easily fooled as to believe what he does. Just as happens early on
with the idea of training his son, he seems to be used to progress the plot
rather than have believable motivations. Little explanation is offered as to
how the Ten Rings themselves came to be but knowing Marvel this is probably a
reveal they’re saving for another film.
The film does contain a few nice surprises,
which are worth seeing for yourself rather than reading about in reviews, and
is an enjoyable addition to the Marvel machine. Its Asian cast and origins are visually
distinctive but in plot terms it is closer to past Marvel big hitters lacking
some of the originality that made Black Panther more distinctive. Shang
Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings works best though when kept apart from
the MCU mythology and is certainly a strand of this ever growing story worth returning
to in future.
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