Local
hoodlum Bart (Hoskins) is making a name for himself in the money
lending and protection rackets because everyone knows he has
a reason why you have to pay. That reason is Danny (Li), Bart’s
enforcer that will brutally take on all-comers and always wins.
Danny is no ordinary henchman however because he is docile for
most of the day but when Bart removes his collar from around
his neck Danny is unleashed and the fight begins.
The idea of a man
training someone to be an attack dog is an intriguing premise
but can ‘Unleashed’ have enough to take the collar
off?
When it comes to
his Hollywood film career, Jet Li has been very hit and miss
but mainly miss, with only ‘Lethal Weapon 4’ making
any real impact. To see the martial arts master showing his
true potential you have to watch him in his homegrown Asian
movies in films like ‘Hero’ and the ‘Once
Upon a Time in China’ movies to see him at his best. There
has never been any question about Jet Li’s action skills
but when it comes to his Hollywood career, his choices have
been a little suspect. ‘Unleashed’ finally changes
this.
This movie finally
shows Western audiences that Jet Li can actually act. In a script
written by Luc Besson, the character of Danny allows Jet to
develop him over the duration of the film. Here we see Danny
transform from a killing machine who knows nothing other than
fighting, to a person that wants to experience the joys that
life can bring. This is a major character for Jet Li’s
Hollywood career and should allow him to expand the range of
his roles away from his usual Asian Cop or enforcer parts.
Another aspect that
makes ‘Unleashed’ a far superior film to anything
Jet Li has made in Hollywood before, is the quality of his supporting
cast. Bob Hoskins returns to his crime roots to play Bart, a
complete thug who sees Danny as nothing more than a weapon.
This is a role that Hoskins can play in his sleep but he does
it with such passion and aplomb, that he makes Bart as power
hungry and aggressive as his should be. Morgan Freeman brings
even more class to the film as blind piano tuner Sam. This is
a mentor like role again for Freeman, as he opens Danny’s
eyes to the world around him. This is a role that Freeman can
also play in his sleep but his class makes Sam even more believable.
Supporting these
three big hitters is a good performance from up and coming actress
Kerry Condon. Playing Victoria she brings some humanity to the
film, showing Danny the joys that real life can bring. There
are also good shows from Dylan Brown and Tamer Hassan, playing
Bart’s henchman.
With exceptional
martial arts sequences and a story that finally allows Jet Li
to act in a Hollywood film, ‘Unleashed’ is by far
his best western film to date. There are some problems, like
the film supposed to be set in Glasgow but no one speaks with
a Scottish accent and the city is filled with Cockneys for example,
but this doesn’t take anything away from the action. Action
flicks movies don’t get much better than this.
Star Rating = * *
*
PICTURE & SOUND
Presented in Anamorphic
Widescreen 2.35:1 with Dolby Digital 5.1, the movie is presented
well.
BONUS FEATURES
Making of FX (2.08
mins)
Watch the various stages of completion for the ‘Danny’s
mother playing the piano’ scene in the movie.
Trailer (2.19 mins)
View the theatrical trailer that accompanied the film’s
cinematic release.
Complete Scenes (10.13
mins)
View complete, uncut and without enhanced visuals the fight
sequences in the jewellery store, the cage fight, house fight
and a fight within the hallway.
Deleted Scenes (2.34
mins)
Watch two deleted scenes that show Danny talking to Sam about
wanting to give up fighting and watch Danny practicing in the
warehouse. These deleted scenes are not accompanied by either
a commentary track or introduction to explain why these scenes
were removed.
‘Baby Boy’
RZA music video (3.05 mins)
Watch the music video that accompanied the release of the film
at the box office.
The Making of Unleashed
(36.25)
Director Louis Leterrier and star Jet Li take you behind the
scenes of the making of ‘Unleashed’. We find out
how the film evolved from the original script from Luc Besson
called ‘Danny the Dog’ (The international title)
to the completed film. We see the genesis of the fight sequences
under the supervision of master Yuen Wo Ping, the man who choreographed
‘The Matrix Trilogy’ and we find out more about
the casting of picture, including how Morgan Freeman, Bob Hoskins
and Kerry Condon became involved and developed their characters.
OVERALL
While there are quite
a few bonus features on the DVD, this is very run of the mill.
The lack of a commentary track doesn’t help but the making
of featurette is good with lots of behind the scenes footage.
Fans will still be slightly disappointed however because this
was a film crying out for loads of extras.