Seoul
Raiders (2005)
Cast: Tony Leung Chiu-Wai, Richie Jen, Shu Qi
Director: Jingle Ma
In this sequel to Tokyo Raiders (2000)
Tony Leung Chiu-Wai reprises his role as Lam, the cool private detective.
In the opening sequence we find Lam stealing
a set of plates to counterfeit US dollars called (inexplicably) “The Avenger”.
Trouble is a thief called JJ (Shu Qi) and US
diplomat Owen Lee (Richie Jen) want them too. Getting them back to the rightful owner and figuring out who the bad guys are
involve martial arts, spectacular stunts and location shooting in Seoul.
The main elements from the first movie
are here- Tony Leung’s obsession with his hair, his “cattle prod” device (nicely enhanced with computer
generated graphics), and his bevy of beautiful assistants. This time out his assistants (or as I like to call them “Tony’s
Angels”) are Korean beauties who drop everything when he (literally) whistles for them. There are a few elements from
Tokyo Raiders that are missing from the new installment that make Seoul Raiders a slightly disappointing sequel.
Missing Element #1: Ekin Cheng Yee-Kin!
As you know from reading the rest of my
site, Ekin is one of my favorite actors (as is Tony), so I especially like movies that feature more than one of my favorites. The “buddy” aspect was one of the best things about Tokyo Raiders (hereafter referred to as
“TR”), so to not have Ekin in the sequel was a major disappointment to me. Lam’s relationship to the others
in the film didn’t come close to having the same chemistry that he had with Ekin’s interior designer Yung.
Missing Element #2: The
Catchy Music!
If you’ve seen “TR” you
know the music I’m talking about – the upbeat Latin- inspired tunes that punctuate the fight scenes. This music
stood out and enhanced the fight scenes. The music in Seoul Raiders (hereafter
referred to as “SR”) was forgettable.
Missing Element #3: Interesting
Action Choregraphy!
Ailen Sit choreographed both Raiders but
the action (especially the martial arts) in “SR” was less intricate and not as fun as in “TR”. Tony
Leung did less of the action and stunts himself and the ones he did do were not as complicated as those he did
in “TR”.
I realize that all this makes it sound
like I didn’t like the movie. This is not entirely true. There were some good stunts, passable fight scenes, and a couple of “in jokes” from the
first film but nothing stood out as great. Leung’s character Lam was not as charming as in the first outing and neither
Shu Qi or Richie Jen contributed much to the proceedings. It just wasn’t as fun as Tokyo Raiders.
Bottom line: would I watch it again? Maybe,
but I might fast forward to what I call “the greatest hits” (the fight sequences).
Would I buy it? Probably not.
DVD
Details:
Distributor: Media
Asia
Language Tracks: Cantonese
& Mandarin
Subtitles:
Removable English and Chinese
Special Features:
Making of (no English subtitles)
Deleted Scenes (no English subtitles)
Travelogue (no English subtitles)