Warriors of Virtue

Warriors of Virtue

Promotional poster
Directed by Ronny Yu
Produced by Ronald Law
Dennis Law
Christopher Law
Jeremy Law
Patricia Ruben
Screenplay by Michael Vickerman
Hugh Kelley
Starring Angus Macfadyen
Mario Yedidia
Marley Shelton
Chao-Li Chi
Doug Jones
Music by Don Davis
Cinematography Peter Pau
Edited by David Wu
Production
company
China Film Co-Production Corporation
Law Brothers Entertainment
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release dates
  • May 2, 1997 (1997-05-02)
Running time
101 minutes
Country United States
China
Budget $35 million
Box office $6,524,620 million[1]

Warriors Of Virtue is a 1997 Chinese-American fantasy film directed by Ronny Yu. It is in English, Mandarin and Cantonese. Although commercially unsuccessful and critically panned, a sequel, Warriors of Virtue: The Return to Tao, was made in 2002.

Plot

Ryan Jeffers suffers a disability to his leg, preventing him from trying out for sports and fitting in with other kids at school. He is currently the waterboy of his school's football team and has a crush on the quarterback Brad's girlfriend. He often seeks escape through comic books and dreams of adventure, hiding the depression of his disability from his mother.

One day, the owner of his favorite restaurant, his friend Ming, gives him a manuscript of Tao, representing the five elements; Earth, Fire, Water, Wood and Metal, and advises Ryan to live his life no matter his physical limits. That night, Ryan and his best friend Chucky are approached by Brad and his friends, who suggest an initiation for their group. Leading them to a water plant, Ryan is told he needs to cross a narrow pipe in order to sign his name on a wall of graffiti. Ignoring Chucky's protests, Ryan attempts to cross the pipe, but a water pipe opens up and throws him into the water.

Ryan wakes in a strange forest and is attacked by assailants who are drawn off by a creature from the lake. He screams and runs in fear, but soon realizes his leg works. He meets a dwarven man named Mudlap, who leads him to a beautiful girl named Elysia who tells him that he is in Tao; Ryan tells her about the manuscript, which had been stolen with his backpack. Believing it to be the Manuscript of Legend, Elysia takes Ryan to Master Chung and he meets four of the five warriors, anthropomorphic kangaroos each representing an element: Lai; Warrior of wood, Chi; Warrior of Fire, Tsun; Warrior of Earth; and Yee, Warrior of Metal. He is told that Yun, the Warrior of Water, had left them following an earlier conflict; Ryan thinks that the creature that saved him is Yun and he has the manuscript. He is told that the manuscript would be sought by Komodo, a man who betrayed the Warriors and is stealing from the Lifesprings of Tao in order to stay young forever, and that they are protecting the last spring. While talking to Elysia, Ryan is captured by Mantose, Barbarocious and Dullard, but is saved by Yun who admits he doesn't have the book, leading Ryan to believe Komodo has it. He convinces Yun to return to the Lifespring.

Ryan flees, wanting to return home, but Mudlap leads him into Grillo's arms and he is saved by Chung. Yun, Yee and Chi go after the manuscript and fall into a trap after being betrayed by Elysia, who joined Komodo as vengeance against Yun for killing her brother by accident. They are nearly killed in a trap, but narrowly escape using their skills and they return to the Lifespring to prevent Komodo from ambushing the others. Komodo attempts to kidnap Ryan but instead fights Chung; the battle is brutal, but Chung is defeated and killed by Komodo. After Ryan awakens, Elysia explains of Yun killing her brother and tries to convince him to read from the book so that Komodo could possibly invade his world for more Lifesprings. Ryan realizes he can't read the book and this upsets Komodo, who tries to strike Ryan down. Elysia interferes and is killed by Barbarocious, whom Komodo kills in rage as Ryan escapes. Komodo, now growing unhinged, returns to the Lifespring and challenges the Warriors to one-on-one combat, splitting into five versions of himself. He taunts and defeats the warriors while Ryan, after getting an apology from Mudlap for his betrayal, finds an inscription in the manuscript. Facing Komodo and taunting him, Ryan tricks Komodo into using his power on him, weakening him so that the warriors can use their powers to purify his spirit, reforming him to a kind man. Ryan, now mortally wounded, is surrounded by his friends and Yee astonishes everyone by thanking Ryan, speaking for the first time in many years.

Suddenly, Ryan is back at the water plant before crossing the pipe. Realizing his desperation to fit in led to his accident, he changes it this time, refusing to go through with it. The water pipe opens like it did before, trapping Brad on the other side, but his insults to his friends only prompt them to leave him behind for the police to find. That night at home, Ryan apologizes to his mother for an earlier argument. When he goes to bed, he offers to tell his dog about Tao.

Cast

Voice cast

Reception

Warriors of Virtue received overwhelmingly negative reviews from critics. Film critic Kale Klein of the Carlsbad Current-Argus was so physically distressed by the film that he actually vomited during the initial screenings.[2] On an episode of Siskel and Ebert, Gene Siskel voted thumbs down and described Warrior of Virtue as "Generic junk made for the international action market, a cheap hybrid of Power Rangers and Ninja Turtles." It currently has an 18% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 11 reviews.[3]

Sequel

A second film titled Warriors of Virtue: The Return to Tao was released on October 22, 2002. It was directed by the first film's co-writer Michael Vickerman with Nathan Phillips replacing Yedidia as Ryan Jeffers along Nina Liu as Amythis, Shedrack Anderson III as Chucky and Kevin Smith (his final role) as Dogon, a villain bent on taking over our world and Tao.

References

  1. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=warriorsofvirtue.htm
  2. Pragasam, Andrew. "Warriors of Virtue Review (1997)". The Spinning Image. Retrieved 2010-02-21. External link in |publisher= (help)
  3. Warriors of Virtue on Rotten Tomatoes Accessed on June 21, 2010

External links

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