![]() Ni Ni - bombarded to the next big mou girl after beloved icons as Gong Li, Joey Wong, and Brigitte Lin – has talent to spare and here she’s practically reduced to the role of obligatory love interest? Francis Ng Chun-Yu is a versatile supporting actor and he’s reduced to a few ticks. Ni Ni, Francis Ng Chun-Yu, and Kara Hui Ying-Hung are all superstars back in Mainland China and it’s insulting enough that talent of this caliber has to appear in western dreck like this to stay working in between better projects. Or at least nobody for anyone coming to this from the Asian perspective. By comparison The Warriors Gate, a few notable exceptions notwithstanding, is almost entirely made up of nobodies. In short it had the best acting talent in the business, two of the best martial artists of their generation, and an action choreographer who was a dyed in the wool producer and director. The Forbidden Kingdom (2008) had Jet Li, Jackie Chan, Liu Yi-Fei, and Li Bing-Bing with action choreography from Yuen Wo-Ping. It almost makes you yearn for The Thousand Faces Of Dunjia (2017). ![]() The Warriors Gate has all of that to lesser or greater degree, but has apparently no idea what to do with any of it. ![]() The Warriors Gate is a Chinese co-production with about three name stars but written, produced, and directed by a bunch of Europeans and Americans who seem to have no understanding of the nuances and subtleties of a good period costume wuxia, except that they typically feature high-flying, wire-fu action choreography, beautiful women in ornate dresses and heroic storylines full of betrayal, quests, and arcane magic. The Warriors Gate makes the exact same mistakes that made The Forbidden Kingdom (2008) so reviled among fanatics who actually watch and know Asian martial arts and wuxia films. The only thing that The Warriors Gate (released in Mainland China as 勇士之門 and most of the English-speaking world The Warriors Gate – except in North America where it was called Enter the Warriors Gate) has going for it that it’s more or less a remake of The Forbidden Kingdom ( 功夫之王) (2008), which was in dire need of remaking because… it was only eight years old? The Forbidden Kingdom (2008) had the good fortune to have both Jet Li and Jackie Chan. Cheng Co-producer, Executive Producer J.C.Plot : passive gamer must defend ancient China from barbaric warlord. Cast Mark Chao Zhoo Ni Ni Su Lin Dave Bautista Arun Uriah Shelton Jack Sienna Guillory Annie Francis Ng Wizard Ming Xi Nymph #1 Kara Wai Mountain Spirit Zha Ka Brutus Ron Smoorenburg Black Knight You Tianyi Nymph #2 Lijie Liu Nymph #3 Dakota Daulby Travis Leigh Luke Mac Davis Hector Yilin Guan Messenger #1 Li Xiaochuan Messenger #2 Chen Tao Treasurer David Liu Tailor Huang Fei Priest / Shaman Joel Adrian Viking Barbarians, Stunts Eva Day Sales Girl Byron Gibson Viking Barbarians David Torok Viking Barbarians Svitlana Zavialova Viking Barbarians Jia Dong Liu Emperor Alexander Falk Crew Matthias Hoene Director Alicia Yao Casting Director Anamarija Josipovic Set Designer Ariel Zeitoun Executive Producer Audrey Simonaud Editor Christian Vallat Art Director Courtney Bright Casting Didier Lozahic Re-Recording Mixer Edith Vesperini Costume Designer Fei Wong First Assistant Director Frederique Ney Makeup Gilles Boillot Art Director Graham Timmer Sound Recordist Gregory Ounahon Executive Producer Guillaume Colas Visual Effects Helen Zhang Costume Designer Huang Feng Co-producer Hugues Tissandier Production Designer J.C.
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