Best known on our shores as Kato to The Green Hornet and on others, in the likes of Kung Fu Dunk Jay Chou stars as Jon, the International Security Affairs agent in charge of preventing disaster. In the exciting, extended prologue fueled by plenty of firepower, he takes a bullet to the head. He lives, but is in constant danger of full paralysis; complicating matters, one of his enemies turns out to be the brother he never knew (Nicholas Tse, The Stool Pigeon), a felon who earlier makes a daring courtroom escape by jumping four floors above ground level.
The proceedings put Jons family at grave risk, which is an element Id like to have seen shaved from the story, but Lam at least makes up for that manipulation by staging one fast-break set piece after another, especially a great chase through a train station, where a microwave comes into play. Neither Chou nor Tse is in danger of becoming the next Jackie Chan or Jet Li, but Chou in particular continues to impress with his confidence and presence.
More Outbreak than Contagion as far as virus-driven movies go, The Viral Factor wears its big-budget American influences on its sleeve. Like those influences, its longer than it needs be, but also louder than your mom would like it to be. Rod Lott
Hey! Read This:
Contagion Blu-ray review
The Green Hornet film review
Kung Fu Dunk film review
The Stool Pigeon DVD review
This article appears in Aug 15-21, 2012.
