Los Angeles Times

Chinese animated movie is a marvel

A mythologic­al figure anchors the dazzling ‘Yang Jian’ and adds to a cinematic universe.

- By Michael Ordoña

To American audiences, especially comic fans, the title “New Gods” may confuse. “New Gods: Yang Jian” is not related to comic legend Jack Kirby’s 1970s DC masterwork that spawned Darkseid, Mister Miracle and others. And the gods are hardly new; the protagonis­ts of this exquisitel­y animated Chinese film franchise (first “Nezha Reborn,” now “Yang Jian,” with “The Monkey King” possibly next) are very, very old gods — figures from mythology reimagined for modern viewers.

There’s plenty of imaginatio­n in that reimaginin­g: The world of “New Gods: Yang Jian” is a swirling mélange of myth, pseudo-steampunk, “Blade Runner,” the kung-fu film genre and music from many corners of your ears. Bet you didn’t expect a gorgeously rendered Chinese legend to be characteri­stically scored by a lonesome harmonica (among the comedic swing, reggae and everything else).

We’re introduced via opening narration to a world that has survived an epic war among the gods in which the realms of the mortal and immortal are aware of each other but now generally keep apart. Our lethargic lead is fallen hero Erlang Shen, who used to be a big deal but now leads a group of scrappy bounty hunters on a flying wooden boat that seems in continual danger of running out of fuel. How big a deal did he used to be? He’s the artist formerly known as Yang Jian, a mighty three-eyed deity who lost his powers in a nearly apocalypti­c struggle involving his family. In the tradition of American detective movies, the big job he and his team lands forces him to grapple with his traumatic past.

There are fun characters and dazzling action sequences. The filmmakers’ approach to rethinking legendary figures and placing them in a kind of timeless, weirdly teched-out reality is intriguing. It looks like the “New Gods” franchise is meant to be the Chinese animated answer to the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and it’s certainly got the deep bench of stories to compete at that level.

It’s also got the filmmaking talent. The movie is a visual knockout. The environs aren’t just photoreali­stic, they’re bursting with creativity and often effectivel­y create emotion. Among the sumptuous sequences: the flying wooden ship traveling through a multicolor­ed magic passage/wormhole; the poetic tableau as one character dies on a moonlit winter night; a languid shot of a character walking down a hall, captured through translucen­t silk curtains.

The creatures are designed with electric inspiratio­n. So are the combat sequences — some influenced by the kung-fu oeuvres of Jet Li and Jackie Chan, some magic and cosmic without losing tension (as so often happens with flying people shooting beams at each other). One sequence seems visually influenced by Scott Derrickson’s “Doctor Strange” without feeling derivative.

As to the film’s messages beyond being a ripping yarn updating mythology for fun and profit, things get significan­tly murkier. If there’s a real-world metaphor in the central conflict, it could be a polemic against government­al regulation of climate change. It could also be essentiall­y the opposite: an argument for what is natural against what is approved by leaders. But whatever else one comes away with, “New Gods: Yang Jian” belongs alongside the more visually striking recent animated features.

 ?? GKIDS ?? THE HERO of “Yang Jian” is a deity who’s lost his power and now scrapes by as a bounty hunter.
GKIDS THE HERO of “Yang Jian” is a deity who’s lost his power and now scrapes by as a bounty hunter.

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