The Sorcerer and the White Snake (Review)
The Sorcerer and the White Snake
aka 白蛇傳說 aka It’s Love aka Bai she chuan shuo aka Madame White Snake
2011
Written by Charcoal Tan, Tsang Kan-Cheung, and Sze-To Cheuk-Hon
Directed by Tony Ching Siu-Tung
Action Directors – Tony Ching Siu-Tung and Wong Ming-Kin
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Ice Age 5: Journey to Mt. Doom!
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The Sorcerer and the White Snake is a big budget effects bonanza that also doubles as a sleeping aide. Thanks to China attempting to become a major player in the movie department, they’ve begun adopting the worst aspect of Hollywood blockbusters. Giant empty special effects, bland characters, story arcs that go nowhere, and a film made as generic and non-offensive as possible to ensure the widest possible audience. Sadly, that also makes The Sorcerer and the White Snake just like so many of those big budget films in that it is not very good. Now, I can’t fault them entirely for being inspired by generic Hollywood junk, that’s most likely the films that are imported over to China that clean up in the box office. But in the race to show how China can do it too, they failed to realize what China is doing is failing just as bad.
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We’ve come to avenge Ting Ting from Thunder of Gigantic Serpent!
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When making The Sorcerer and the White Snake, the producers decided the most interesting part about this classic love story was a supporting character who fought spirits. My thinking is they wanted to do a familiar story but also wanted to do a film with huge action sequences. The only feasible way was to graft it onto the classic White Snake story. But it just doesn’t work. The original tale is diluted and weakened, while the Monk’s expanded story receives little payoff. This decision even further boggles the mind because they kept the title It’s Love, which hints that the film should be focused on the couple and not the monk. The biggest sin of all is the action sequences ring hollow and bland. Large portions of what should have made the film great were sacrificed for spectacles that focues on looking good over actual impact. Thousands of people at thousands of computers worked for thousands of hours to make me bored. Many of the huge battles fail to even convey a sense of danger for the combatants, even when the entire ocean is turning into giant tidal waves with giant snakes swimming around, no one seems to be in real danger.
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Someone wasn’t paying attention when they read the Book of Genesis!
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But are there bright spots? Well, the film certainly looks very nice. Good cinematography. Moments of the action sequences are good, but not enough. This paragraph should be longer, but I really can’t think of anything.
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By that time, my mouse lungs were aching for air.
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It is legally impossible to talk about The Sorcerer and the White Snake without bringing up the last well known theatrical version of this story, Green Snake. I’m serious. Lawyers will call you and yell. While Tsui Hark’s film is a masterpiece, it is a completely different story (based, in fact, on a separate work, the book Green Snake by Lilian Lee!) Comparing Green Snake to The Sorcerer and the White Snake is like complaining because The Muppets Wizard of Oz isn’t enough like Wicked. They are two different stories with two different tales, with the same narrative starting point. And this post isn’t about Green Snake, it’s about The Sorcerer and the White Snake.
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I hate it when I’m in the bamboo forest and a rap video breaks out…
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Let’s meet the cast, then I’ll point out some places where the film did okay and where I got annoyed.
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So much CGI, the excitemenZZZZZZZZZzzzzzzzzzzzz…..
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4 comments - What do you think?
Posted by Tars Tarkas -
July 9, 2012 at 11:59 pm
Categories: Movie Reviews, Ugly Tags: Charcoal Tan, Charlene Choi Cheuk-Yin, China, Eva Huang Sheng-Yi, giant snake movie, Jet Li, Raymond Lam Fung, Sze-To Cheuk-Hon, Tony Ching Siu-Tung, Tsang Kan-Cheung, Vivian Hsu Jo-Hsuan, Wen Zhang, Wong Ming-Kin
The Sorcerer and the White Snake
The Legend of the White Snake lives again in movie form with the upcoming The Sorcerer and the White Snake (白蛇傳說), which hits theaters in China in September. The Legend of the White Snake is a story older than writing, and has been the basis for countless stories, books, operas, tv shows, and films. The version probably most familiar in the west is Tsui Hark’s 1993 Green Snake, with Maggie Cheung and Joey Wong. White Snake and Green Snake are two snakes that have taken human female form, and the basic story usually involves White Snake and a young scholar falling in love, until a monk comes along and throws White Snake into a well. Later versions sometimes change things to a more happy ending.
The Sorcerer and the White Snake has Jet Li as the Monk Fa Hai, and it will feature many martial arts battles. Eva Huang is White Snake, and Charlene Choi is Green Snake. The scholar Xu Xian is Raymond Lam, and the Monk’s understudy is played by Wen Zhang. Several others have been cast as various demon characters, including Jiang Wu as Turtle Devil, Vivian Hsu as Snow Goblin, Miriam Yeung as Rabbit Devil, Chapman To as Toad Monster and Lam Suet as Chicken Devil. So it will be a huge zoo of fairy monster people!
The Sorcerer and the White Snake has had a few English titles, originally Madame White Snake and then It’s Love. But It’s Love is a lame name, thus the distributor changed it to The Sorcerer and the White Snake to pull in Harry Potter fans. I’m kidding, they actually did it to get fans of the Sorcerer’s Apprentice franchise! But will it have the “mocha mocha” song? Because you need the “mocha mocha” song!
Ching Siu-tung (1987’s A Chinese Ghost Story) directs.
Trailer:
English subs trailer:
Effects work video:
via HKMDB
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Posted by Tars Tarkas -
August 5, 2011 at 1:43 am
Categories: Movie News Tags: Chapman To Man-Chat, Charlene Choi Cheuk-Yin, China, Ching Siu-tung, Eva Huang Sheng-Yi, Hong Kong, Jet Li, Lam Suet, Law Kar-Ying, Miriam Yeung Chin-Wah, Raymond Lam Fung, The Sorcerer and the White Snake, Vivian Hsu Jo-Hsuan, Wen Zhang