Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons

Journey to the West:
Conquering the Demons
Chinese 西遊·降魔篇
Directed by Stephen Chow
Produced by
  • Stephen Chow
  • Wang Zhonglei
Written by
  • Stephen Chow
  • Derek Kwok
  • Xin Huo
  • Yun Wang
  • Fung Chih Chiang
  • Lu Zheng Yu
  • Lee Sheung Shing
  • Y.Y. Kong
Starring
Music by Raymond Wong
Cinematography Sung Fai Choi
Edited by Chi Wai Chan
Production
companies
Distributed by Edko Films
Release date
  • 7 February 2013 (2013-02-07) (Hong Kong)
  • 10 February 2013 (2013-02-10) (China)
Running time
110 minutes
Country China[1]
Hong Kong
Language Mandarin[2]
Box office US$215 million[3]

Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons[1][4] (Chinese: 西遊·降魔篇) is a 2013 fantasy comedy film co-written, produced, and directed by Stephen Chow. The movie was first announced in July 2011 and was released on February 10, 2013 in China.[1] The film is a loose comedic re-interpretation of the novel Journey to the West, a Chinese literary classic often believed to be written by Wu Cheng'en.

A sequel, Journey to the West: The Demons Strike Back, written and produced by Chow and directed by Tsui Hark, was released on January 28, 2017.[5]

Plot

The story takes place before Tang Sanzang got his disciples and embarked on the Journey to the West.

A riverside village is terrorized by a mysterious underwater creature. A Taoist priest kills a giant manta ray and insists that it is the demon. Sanzang, a self-proclaimed demon hunter, appears to warn the villagers that the animal is not the true demon. The villagers ignore him and, at the priest's provocation, string him up. The demon reemerges and kills many of the villagers. Sanzang frees himself and, along with the survivors, manages to beach the creature, which turns into a man. Sanzang then opens a book of nursery rhymes and begins singing to the demon. Annoyed, the demon attacks Sanzang. Another demon hunter, Duan, captures and turns the demon into a puppet. Sanzang tells to Duan that his master taught him a more humane approach and to use nursery rhymes to coax goodness out of demons, a tactic Duan scoffs at. Disillusioned, Sanzang meets his master and bemoans his lack of capabilities compared to more aggressive demon-hunters. His master reaffirms his humanist philosophy and sends Sanzang off again to find "enlightenment."

A couple enters an empty restaurant but the chef reveals himself to be a pig demon and kills them. Sanzang comes to the same restaurant, this time apparently filled with people. Sanzang sees through the illusion and recognizes them as reanimated corpses of the victims, as well as the demon's nine-toothed rake. Duan bursts into the restaurant and destroys all the corpses, and attacks the pig demon. She captures the demon in her magic bag to turn it into a puppet, but it bursts out of the bag and transforms into a huge boar, collapsing the building. Sanzang and Duan retreat. Duan then develops a strong limerence towards Sanzang after being impressed by his selfless ideals. She expresses her feelings, but Sanzang flees, not wishing to deal with romantic love in his quest for nirvana.

Sanzang's master advises him to tame the Monkey King demon Sun Wukong (trapped by Buddha) to subdue the pig demon. That night, he is captured by a gang that had also subdued Duan. It is later revealed to be a ploy orchestrated by Duan to trick Sanzang into having sex with her. After Sanzang rejects her again, she has him imprisoned. The pig demon reappears and injures Duan but is chased off by a trio of rivaling demon-hunters. Duan views Sanzang's concern for her injuries as a romantic attraction. After Sanzang refuses her advances again, she destroys his book of nursery rhymes and he leaves.

After days of traveling, Sanzang finally discovers a cave under a lotus garden, where Monkey King was trapped in for 500 years. Monkey King tells Sanzang to use a dancer to bait the demon. Duan appears and volunteers to dance. When the pig demon appears Monkey King easily subdues it, allowing Duan to turn it into a puppet. Duan then gives both the fish and pig puppets to Sanzang and offers her golden ringed weapon as an engagement band, but he rejects her again. She leaves after returning his nursery rhyme book, which she had pieced back together, although at random as she is illiterate.

Monkey King tricks Sanzang into removing the seal on his prison and bursts out of the cave. Sanzang begins to pray to Buddha, and an enraged Monkey King rips the hair from his head. The three demon hunters appear to catch Monkey King but he effortlessly kills them. Duan returns and defends Sanzang, but the Monkey King mortally injures her. Sanzang admits he loves her, and Monkey King proceeds to vaporize her body. Looking at the nursery book again, Sanzang realizes Duan accidentally reassembled the words of his book into those of the Buddha Sutra. Sanzang summons Buddha, who defeats Monkey King with the palm of his hand. Sanzang then places Duan's golden ring on Monkey King, and it turns into his restrictive headband.

Sanzang tells his master that his suffering due to Duan's loss has helped him to enlightenment. Sanzang is then instructed to travel on a journey to the west (India) for the Buddhist sutras of Leiyin Temple, and it is shown that the Water Buffalo, Pig Demon, and Monkey King have been tamed and turned into humans named, respectively, Sha Wujing, Zhu Bajie and Sun Wukong. As they hike across the desert, Sanzang looks across the sand and sees an image of Duan.

Cast

Box office

The film set several records at the Chinese box-office. The film was released on February 10, 2013 in China and opened to 78 million Yuan ($12.5 million) on its first day, thus overtaking the 70 million yuan ($11.2 million) opening-day record set by Painted Skin: The Resurrection on June 28, 2012 as the biggest opening-day gross for a Chinese film.[6] On February 14, 2013, the film grossed 122 million yuan ($19.6 million) and thus overtook the record of 112 million yuan by Transformers: Dark of the Moon as the biggest single-day gross by a film in China's box-office history.[7][8] The film set an opening record in China with $92.46 million.[9]

To date, the film has grossed US$205 million in China,[10] US$3.6 million in Hong Kong,[11] US$3.2 million in Malaysia,[11] and US$1.8 million in Singapore.[11]

Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons grossed a total of US$215 million worldwide, making it highest grossing Chinese-language film ever.[3] It was surpassed by Monster Hunt, in 2015, as the highest Chinese film ever produced.

Critical reception

The film was well received by critics. At Rotten Tomatoes, the film received a rating of 93% based on 29 reviews,[12] while according to Metacritic, the film has received an average score of 68, based on 13 reviews.[13]

Edmund Lee of Screen International describes the film as "a thoroughly entertaining action comedy."[1] Andrew Chan gave the film 9/10 and writes, "Stephen Chow latest revisit to “Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons” is a highly entertaining affair. From the get go, the audience is treated with Chow famed exaggerated style of comedy."[14]

Sequel

Derek Kwok reported in March 2013 that there were ongoing discussions about a script for a sequel with Stephen Chow, who may appear in it himself.[15] The film has a reported budget of around US$64 million. Filming started on 6 August 2015, starring Kris Wu as Tang Sanzang, Lin Gengxin as Sun Wukong, Mengke Bateer as Sha Wujing, Yao Chen as Taoist, and Bao Bei'er as an unannounced character, Shu Qi and Cheng Si Han reprise their roles as Duan and Master Nameless respectively.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Edmund Lee (2013-02-04). "Journey To The West: Conquering The Demons". Screen International.
  2. NEW CHINESE ODYSSEY (2013). Hong Kong Cinemagic.
  3. 1 2 "Top 10 Chinese films in 2013 - "Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons" (西游降魔篇)".
  4. "Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons (2013)". Hong Kong Movie Database.
  5. "Film in Production". english.entgroup.cn. EntGroup Inc. Retrieved October 3, 2015.
  6. Stephen Chow's Journey to the West continues to break box-office records
  7. Valentine’s Day Treats Chinese Exhibitors with Love; “Journey” Obliterates Single-Day Record
  8. Domestic Comedies Dominate Holiday Box Office
  9. Nancy Tartaglione (June 30, 2014). "Update: Intl Box Office: Boosted By China, ‘Transformers’ Crushes $202.1M Says Paramount For Biggest 2014 Offshore Bow; ‘Breakup Guru’ Woos; ‘Dragon’ Still Flying". Deadline.com. Retrieved November 18, 2014.
  10. Bai Shi (Beijing Review) (9 February 2014). "Hollywood Takes a Hit". english.entgroup.cn. EntGroup Inc. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  11. 1 2 3 http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?page=intl&id=journeytothewest.htm
  12. "Journey To The West (2014)". Rotten Tomatoes.
  13. "Journey to the West : Reviews". Metacritic. CNET Networks, Inc. Retrieved April 14, 2014.
  14. Andrew Chan (8 February 2013). "Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons". [HK Neo Reviews].
  15. ihktv (22 March 2013). "Stephen Chow may Star in Journey to the West Sequel". Asian Pop News. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
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