‘Tuxedo’ takes away from Chan charm
Dennis Piszkiewicz
Jackie Chan became an international star by churning out
low-budget action movies. What made them special was that he did all
of his own incredible acrobatic, gymnastic and martial arts stunts,
and that he infused his films with his charm and humor. Then Chan
discovered Hollywood -- or vice versa -- and he began making
big-budget movies. Unfortunately his latest offering, “Tuxedo,” shows
once again that bigger is not always better.
In “Tuxedo,” Chan’s character blends elements of the screen
personas of Woody Allen and James Bond. Chan portrays Jimmy Tong, a
lovable, insecure everyman who makes his living as a cab driver. He
is obsessed with meeting a beautiful woman he admires from afar; but
before he gets up the nerve to ask for a date, he is hired as a
chauffeur for the top agent of one of those U.S. government agencies
that has a three-letter acronym for a name and the responsibility for
saving the world.
The agent is soon injured in action and turns over to Jimmy Tong
his TUX, short for Tactical Uniform eXperimental, which gives its
wearer the athletic prowess of a comic book superhero. Jimmy Tong,
armed with the abilities built into his tuxedo, then begins his
mission to stop a villain who wants to dominate the world by
monopolizing the supply of clean drinking water.
Chan is paired with Jennifer Love Hewitt, as a rookie agent, who
is decorative, humorless, and unconvincing in her action scenes.
James Brown, the Godfather of soul and the hardest working man in
show business, is wasted in a cameo in which he delivers a few lines
of dialogue before Chan’s character accidentally knocks him out and
takes his place on stage. Chan’s parody of Brown is no substitute for
the real thing, and what the scene has to do with the plot is
anybody’s guess.
“Tuxedo’s” biggest problems, though, are its lack of both the
humor we expect from Chan and the nonstop stunts that made him
famous. The special effects and digital image processing further
diminish the image of Chan as an action hero. Who really did the
stunts? Was that Chan pounding away at the bad guys or was someone
else pounding a computer keyboard?
Chan has been at it for a long time. He has probably figured out
that his body, like that of any professional athlete, will not last
forever. It is time for him to cash in before his reflexes slow down
and his broken bones no longer knit. But if he wants to stay in the
movie business, he is going to have to replace his stunts with
something else, such as better stories or roles with more depth.
* DENNIS PISZKIEWICZ is a Laguna Beach resident and a published
history and biography author.
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