Black Mask
This 1996 Hong Kong action thriller has been dubbed and dumped on the American
public now that its star, Jet Li, has hit it big in Lethal Weapon 4. In
this futuristic comic-book adaptation, Li is a member of a covert corps of
cyber-engineered super-cops. When the experiment goes sour, the units are
processed for termination, but several escape during a last-minute
insurrection. Li assimilates into Hong Kong society as a meek librarian and
befriends a rough-and-tumble police inspector (Lau Ching-Wan). The remainder of
the kill-happy militia, under the hand of their psychotic commander (a gaudy,
John Lennon-ish Patrick Lung), embark on an ultra-violent -- and gory --
campaign to take over Hong Kong's underworld. Realizing his cop buddy doesn't
stand a chance and looking to protect his new identity, Li dons a Kato-esque
costume -- replete with the celebrated object of the film's title -- and goes
at it with his former stablemates.
The plot is sheer techno-garble, but when it comes to action, The Black
Mask delivers with an adrenaline-pumping kick. The flashy, martial-arts
fight sequences, choreographed by Yuen Woo-pin (the brains behind the stylistic
kung fu work in The Matrix), are Jackie Chan caliber. Behind the mask,
or in the restrained demure of the librarian, Li is charismatic, Lau exudes an
über-cool machismo, and as the Mask's former and present love interests, a
bondage-clad Françoise Yip (Rumble in the Bronx) and a ditzy,
cute Karen Mok are wonderfully spicy.
-- Tom Meek
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