Thursday, November 15, 2007

Finishing the Game

Finishing the Game (Director: Justin Lin, 2007): Bruce Lee died in 1973 during the filming of his “dream pro­ject,” a film to be called “The Game of Death.” Five years later, the pro­du­cers released a film under that title that con­tained the 12 minutes that Lee had com­pleted. To pad the rest, they included scenes from some other Bruce Lee films, as well as footage shot with stunt doubles, and even a still photo! Needless to say, this cyn­ical cash-in was far from the film Lee had wanted to make. Justin Lin’s film is a hil­arious mock­u­mentary that attempts to go behind the scenes as the film­makers try to audi­tion “the next Bruce Lee.” While based on a true story, the film is com­pletely fic­tional, and there­fore takes many liber­ties for the sake of get­ting a laugh. And there are lots of laughs in the film. It’s a supremely silly send-up of chop-socky flicks, studio politics and 70s cul­ture. Some of the hope­fuls include a South Asian doctor named Raja Moore, a vain Lee imper­son­ator named Breeze Loo, and a com­pletely white guy who claims to be half-Chinese. The film revels in the worst sort of ste­reo­types, not only of Asian but of black cul­ture, with MC Hammer star­ring as an agent who dresses like a pimp. The art dir­ec­tion is glor­i­ously ugly and the soundtrack full of porno­funk. All of it adds up to a thor­oughly enjoy­able 90 minutes. Somehow, though, I felt a little bit disappointed.

I think what bothered me is that the basis of the story was a real injustice, with Lee’s legacy sub­jected to the worst sort of exploit­a­tion. Though the film is billed as a satire, I found the comedy just a bit too broad for it to func­tion that way for me. The obvious lesson is that des­pite the film­makers’ belief that Lee could be replaced by any other Asian, that it just wasn’t true. For Lin to have made that point more effect­ively, he would have had to include at least a bit of footage of the real Lee. His absence left the film a bit hollow, I think, des­pite what I am sure were the best of intentions.

Official site for the film

7/10(7/10)

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