Kowloon Walled City (2021) - KUNG FU KINGDOM
Shi Yan Neng plays the movie’s protagonist Jin A’Neng, with Lu Yang playing Feng Jia Hui and Sun Zi Jun playing Hong Jie.
Additionally, the villainous Master Hai is played by Yang Xiao Bo, while Feng’s cousin A Kun is played by Lv Yu.
After avenging the killing of his sifu by a gang leader, kung fu master Jin A’Neng travels from China to Hong Kong, venturing into the heart of the city’s crime-ridden sector known as Kowloon Walled City.
Divided into four sections with different gangs vying for power, Feng Jia Hui is determined to clean up Kowloon, and finds an ally in A’Neng after he saves her from a gang attack.
Jin ANeng gets ready for a brutal showdown
As the appointed head of the Western section of Kowloon, Feng sets about her mission. After A’Neng helps fend off a gang attack on a local brothel in the city’s Eastern section,
Feng also finds a new ally in the brothel’s madam, Ms. Hong. However, the group’s challenges only continue growing from there.
The biggest shortcoming working against “Kowloon Walled City” is the movie’s abbreviated runtime of 83 minutes.
While an urban kung fu crime war doesn’t necessarily beg for the same kind of epic scope and treatment of “The Wrath of Vajra”, “Kowloon Walled City” is nonetheless a bit restrained in having to tell its story and deliver on the action it promises with the compact runtime it has to work with.
An additional 10 minutes would have done the trick to flesh out the scope of the story a bit more, along with the history of Kowloon Walled City itself within the context of Hong Kong.
Though the movie briefly glosses over it in the end credits, a little more meat on the overall story, by way of being slightly longer would’ve given it an overall boost.
Fortunately, the short runtime of “Kowloon” is a minor vexation at worst amid the movie’s fantastic action scenes, orchestrated by Shi Yan Neng and Chen Chao.
“Kowloon” wastes no time in starting off with a bang with A’Neng taking down a gang with his fists inside of a bath house, and pulls out more than a few slow-motion close-ups of fists and feet hitting their targets to juice up the impact that much more.
Shi Yan Neng continues to be a badly underutilized talent on the Chinese/Hong Kong action scene, his wolf-like grimace an intimidating punctuation to his power and ability in his fight scenes in “Kowloon”.
Whilst “Kowloon” doesn’t exactly deliver jokes in spades it also has a generally much more light-hearted attitude than many will probably expect from its crime-war premise.
A’Neng might be a confident kung fu master, but he’s rougher around the edges in social situations, chewing on strips of raw ham with little concern for decorum and navigating a date Feng Jia Hui with all the awkwardness of a dweeb taking the head cheerleader to prom.
As Hong Jie, Sun Zi Jun adds her own dry humor to “Kowloon” as an adept fighter herself with as blunt a personality as Betty White.
With its stunts, fight scenes, and subtle humor, “Kowloon Walled City” could well have been a Jackie Chan movie had it been made in the mid-80’s.
“Kowloon” handles its kung fu action with a care truly becoming of Hong Kong’s Golden Age, bringing the right amount of complexity and finesse to action sequences like A’Neng battling an invading gang in Hong Jie’s brothel to give them a real polish.
A’Neng’s final showdown is a little more modern given its indulgences in wire-assisted leaps and impacts, but it’s still a satisfying blast of fury that A’Neng’s fists display whenever he’s called upon to stand up for what’s right.
The nostalgic DNA of “Kowloon Walled City” is what makes the movie a fun, endearing Hong Kong throwback.
While the impact of its short running time remains lamentable in what they chip off from the movie, what remains is an exhilarating, and captivating kung fu crime actioner that gives viewers exactly what they’re after.
The Coolie from “Kung Fu Hustle” might never get a true solo movie, but if “Kowloon Walled City” is the closest the world ever gets to that, it’s a pretty fair trade!
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