Los Angeles Times

A thrilling whirl of manga heroes

- — Charles Solomon

Based on Yasuhisa Hara’s long-running manga, ”Kingdom” is a sprawling fantasy-adventure set near the close of China’s Warring States period (475-221 BC).

Xin (Kento Yamazaki) and Piao (Ryo Yoshizawa) are slaves who dream of escaping and becoming great generals. They train rigorously in swordsmans­hip and martial arts. Because of his resemblanc­e to the young king of Qin, Ying Zheng (also Yoshizawa), Piao is chosen to serve as the stand-in. When Piao is killed by rebels serving Zheng’s usurping half-brother Chang Jiao (Kanata Hongo), Xin joins the deposed monarch to avenge his friend.

A prolonged series of elaboratel­y choreograp­hed duels and battles ensues. Swords, axes, darts, clubs, feet and fists fly as Xin beats assorted robbers, assassins, soldiers and turncoat generals. To recapture his kingdom, Zheng joins forces with Yang Duanhe (Masami Nagasawa), the sword-wielding queen of the Mountain Tribesmen. Chang’s vast army doesn’t stand a chance. After defeating his nasty sibling, Zheng announces his plan to conquer and unify China — with Xin at his side. (Zheng became the emperor Qin Shi Huang, who built the Great Wall.)

Brash but devoted to his friends and dreams of greatness, Xin may remind viewers of another popular come-from-behind manga hero, Masashi Kishimoto’s Naruto. Director Shinsuke Sato’s film may lack nuance, but fans of martial spectacles will have an enjoyable if exhausting time.

“Kingdom.” In Japanese with subtitles Rated R for violence Running time: 2 hours, 14 minutes Playing: In limited release.

 ?? Funimation ?? MASAHIRO Takashima, from left, Ryo Yoshizawa and Masami Nagasawa gear up for a war spectacle.
Funimation MASAHIRO Takashima, from left, Ryo Yoshizawa and Masami Nagasawa gear up for a war spectacle.

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