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Culture

Let the Bullets Fly

East meets western.

Kurt Loder | 3.2.2012 6:00 PM

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Any movie out of China with a title like Let The Bullets Fly, and numbering among its stars that wily hambone Chow Yun-Fat, would seem to announce its intentions pretty clearly. And indeed there's considerable bulletage on display here, and plenty of action—although not such an overload of the wire-work variety that the cast spends half of the picture up in the air. (A number of luckless characters do go flying by, of course, some of them bouncing off a giant drum the size of a mill wheel. The "Drum of Justice," it's called. Don't bother asking.)

The movie is unapologetically an old-school western of the John Ford variety. The remote town in which the tale is set has a distinctively Asian architectural cast, but the dusty main street running through it lacks only hitching posts to be entirely familiar, and a requisite bordello is among the buildings fronting on it. A rowdy teahouse stands in for the customary barroom. And of course just about everyone is armed. ("So you have a gun," says one hooligan. "Who doesn't?")

So the genre trappings are strictly traditional. But what director Jiang Wen has really created here is a comedy of the most demented sort. The story is preposterously knotty, filled with double-dealings, doubled characters, murky disputes over bowls of jelly, and bloody disembowelings played for laughs. You can almost hear how the writers (Jiang among them) must have chortled as they slapped this thing together.

Chow Yun-Fat plays…no, wait, let's back up. The movie, set in Southern China in 1920, begins with a strange little two-carriage train being pulled along it tracks by a team of white horses. Inside are a con man named Tang (fidgety Ge You) and his devious mistress (Carina Lau). Tang has brazenly purchased the governorship of Goose Town, to which he is currently en route. But then a gang of bandits—on black horses, naturally—attacks the train and manages to derail it with an entirely silly maneuver involving a pair of hatchets. Prying Tang's scheme out of the terrified little weasel, the gang's leader, "Pocky" Zhang (director Jiang again), decides to take over Tang's identity and become the governor himself—and then set about extracting riches from the local fat cats and distributing them among the poor. He takes Tang along with him as his "counselor."

Upon arriving in Goose Town, Pocky and company discover that it's already firmly under the thumb of a slick opium-runner named Master Huang (Chow), whose own inclinations are to extract endless taxes from the poor and distribute them among the fat cats. Although not for much longer, maybe: "I shall pull Huang up by the roots!" Pocky vows.

Headlong confusion sets in almost immediately. Pocky's seven-man gang and Huang's various lackeys are difficult enough to keep track of; but Huang also employs a body double, and there's a second Pocky in the offing as well, not to mention somebody's spare wife. A number of these people are rather eccentrically attired: there are various neo-Edwardian three-piece suits and fedoras and straw boaters on display, along with such what-the-hell anachronisms as stylish round-lens sunglasses and—on one of the local whores—a vibrant blue-rinse dye job. Much fun is had with this sort of thing, and it's hard to resist.

Very soon into the picture, you begin to notice that, amid all the swarming uproar, the script actually is very funny, and filled with rich lines. ("My reputation is a hollow shell," says Master Huang, with silky insincerity.) Also that director Jiang is also an effortlessly charismatic actor (occasionally suggesting, in his warm, contemplative stillness, a young Max von Sydow). And the film is mightily elevated by its epical widescreen cinematography, which is purely gorgeous. (The picture was shot by Zhao Fei, who has also worked with Zhang Yimou, Chen Kaige and Woody Allen.)

Let the Bullets Fly is said to be the highest-grossing Chinese film on record, and it has clearly been designed as a crowd-pleaser. I can't imagine anyone being able to make sense of all of it, but I can't imagine anyone not being charmed by it, either. It's a great-looking picture, smart and witty and very knowing about the genre on which it's riffing. And Lord knows, it's never dull, in any language. 

Kurt Loder is a writer living in New York. His third book, a collection of film reviews called The Good, the Bad and the Godawful, is now available. Follow him on Twitter at kurt_loder.


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Kurt Loder is a New York writer who also hosts the SiriusXM interview show True Stories.

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  1. Gojira   13 years ago

    I'm sure my wife will enjoy this.

    Because, you know, she's Chinese.

    1. HeroicMulatto   13 years ago

      And you're saying you might not?

      It's Chow Yun-fuckin'-Fat...in a movie with the word "Bullets" in it! C'mon son!

      1. Paul   13 years ago

        This. I'm not really seeing how this movie could miss.

        1. lurker   13 years ago

          And Ge You is in it too. He's quite a good actor as well.

      2. Paul   13 years ago

        And it's got Chinese prostitutes in it. Oliver Stone could direct this and it would be good.

        1. BakedPenguin   13 years ago

          Hell, Jim Jarmusch would have a hard time screwing this up.

          Well, actually no, he wouldn't.

          1. Paul   13 years ago

            I just watched the trailer. I think I've got an erection.

            1. BakedPenguin   13 years ago

              Not quite as excited as you, but it looks fun - I think I'll try to see it.

            2. Karl Hungus   13 years ago

              I think I've got an erection.

              That's one of those things where I pretty much know for sure either way. 😉

      3. Gojira   13 years ago

        No HM, I'm sure I will. I was just making a racially insensitive remark (the movie is Chinese therefore all Chinese people will like it).

        Like how my Mexican friend is always wanting to eat tacos.

        1. Paul   13 years ago

          No HM, I'm sure I will. I was just making a racially insensitive remark (the movie is Chinese therefore all Chinese people will like it).

          I get it. All those Chinese think alike?

        2. HeroicMulatto   13 years ago

          Damn right you were racially insensitive. The correct term is "China-man".

        3. BakedPenguin   13 years ago

          I was just making a racially insensitive remark (the movie is Chinese therefore all Chinese people will like it)

          After reading this, it occurred to me that someone thinking similarly might assume that because I was an American, I must like Adam Sandler.

          I have been enlightened to the evils of national stereotypes.

        4. Troy   13 years ago

          Like how my Mexican friend is always wanting to eat tacos.

          That is the only reason I hang out with Mexican people.

      4. Anonymous Coward   13 years ago

        But John Woo isn't directing. Which means no doves. Or churches. Or doves in churches. Or doves in churches flying while people expend ridiculous amounts of ammunition.

        1. Paul   13 years ago

          Chinese prostitutes...

  2. Ska   13 years ago

    Do they have a French cleaner instead of an oriental laundry?

    nyuk nyuk nyuk

  3. Res Publica Americana   13 years ago

    Jumpy Chinese dudes in tuxedos fucking shit up with large quantities of ammunition? What the fuck's not to like?

  4. HeroicMulatto   13 years ago

    This isn't Chow Yun-Fat's first lo-mein Western. Watch Peace Hotel for an earlier example of this genre.

  5. Warty   13 years ago

    Wait, how can you tell Chinese movies apart?

    1. Paul   13 years ago

      By how they sound.

    2. KW6   13 years ago

      Why bother trying? An hour later, you want to watch another one anyhow.

  6. Jackie Tomassis   13 years ago

    Kinda makes you wonder now doesnt it? I mean like for real dude.

    http://www.Gone-Anon.at.tc

  7. Jackie Tomassis   13 years ago

    thats making a whole lot of sense dude.

    http://www.Gone-Anon.at.tc

  8. paul hughes   13 years ago

    "Master Huang (Chow), whose own inclinations are to extract endless taxes from the poor and distribute them among the fat cats."

    That is to say, Chow plays George Bush?

  9. myfriend123   13 years ago

    Nice.

  10. replica hermes   13 years ago

    Gucci was founded by Guccio Gucci in Florence in 1921; Gucci is now one of the world's most iconic fashion houses. Designer Frida Giannini took the creative reins in 2006, infusing the label's feminine, wearable clothing with a uniquely ladylike, intelligent sense of glamour.

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