Liu Jian, an elite Chinese police officer, comes to Paris to arrest a Chinese drug lord. When Jian is betrayed by a French officer and framed for murder, he must go into hiding and find new allies.
Jet Li
Liu Jian
Bridget Fonda
Jessica
Tchéky Karyo
Richard
Ric Young
Mister Big
Burt Kwouk
Uncle Taï
Laurence Ashley
Aja
Cyril Raffaelli
Twin
Didier Azoulay
Twin
John Forgeham
Max
Paul Barrett
Pilot
Max Ryan
Lupo
Colin Prince
Lupo's assistant
Vincent Glo
Pluto
Vincent Wong
Minister Tang
Kentaro
Chen
Stéphane Jacquot
Richard's Right Hand Man
Stefan Nelet
Tang's Assistant
Peter Sakon Lee
Tang's Assistant
Isabelle Duhauvelle
Isabel
Yannick Derrien
Bodysearch Boss
Francesca Disca
Red Hair Hooker
Taïra
Fat Hooker
David Gabison
French Minister
Bertrand Waintrop
Customs Official
Alain Zef
Video Technician
Nicolas Herault
Video Technician
Jean-Marc Huber
Fat Thug
Franck Tiozzo
Thug
John Maczko
Thug
Claude Brécourt
Concierge
Jean-Georges Vongerichten
Barman
François Nguyen
Chinese Bodyguard
Jocelyne Isaac
Subway Agent
Raymond Khamvene
Fat Chinese Chef Wong
Urfé Koupaki
Taxi Driver (rasta)
Gregory Galin
Hotel Clerk
Alexander Koumpan
Driver Place de la Concorde
Daniel Milgram
Taxi Driver
Bernard Flavien
Coroner
Eric Averlant
Coroner
Marc Ligaudan
Assistant Coroner
Frédéric Moulin
Cop (Sentry Box)
Alain de Catuelan
Cop (Station)
Ludovic Berthillot
Cop (Lift)
Guillaume Lamant-Deboudt
Newspaper Man
Lina Chen
Hooker
Barbara Bernard
Hooker
Pat Tourne
Hooker
Crystalle Seeram
Hooker
Karen Drotard
Hooker
Sabine Ben Rhadi
Hooker
Saadi Spera
Hooker
Stéphanie Martin
Hooker
Stéphanie Durand
Hooker
Carmelle Edma
Hooker
Schana Réaux
Hooker
Affif Ben Badra
Lupo's Henchman (uncredited)
Director
Chris Nahon
Original Story
Jet Li
Screenplay
Luc Besson
Screenplay
Robert Mark Kamen
May 20, 2021
6
_**Jet Li flick in Paris with Bridget Fonda**_
An expert Chinese intelligence agent (Jet Li) is sent to Paris to help the head inspector (Tchéky Karyo) in apprehending a Chinese mob boss at a ritzy hotel, unaware that it’s a set-up. Bridget Fonda plays an American prostitute that “Johnny” (Li) develops a relationship with during the misadventure.
"Kiss of the Dragon" (2001) is a big city crime thriller with the expected overdone martial arts action due to Li. It’s a modern mixing of “From Russia with Love” (1963) with the preposterous action of “The Gauntlet” (1977) and the martial arts of “Enter the Dragon” (1973). It was Bridget’s second to last theatrical movie before calling it a day (although she also did some TV work in 2001-2002, like her final piece “Snow Queen”).
I like the fact that the protagonist, Liu Jian (Li), is confident and an expert fighter, but also very human, even meek, as a stranger in a strange land (being his first visit to Paris). The action is thrilling with a sense of style counterbalanced by some quality drama with Fonda’s character and her situation. If I were to nitpick, some eye-rolling elements bring down the film’s quality. For instance, Liu Jian storms a police building, opens a door and suddenly enters a dojo full of martial arts guys ready to take him down. Why Sure! Earlier, a British pilot grabs not one, but two Uzis to kill Liu Jian in the swank lobby, shooting up the entire place. Did he really need to cause mass devastation to kill one Chinese man? I'm sure the corrupt Inspector (Tchéky Karyo) wouldn't enjoy explaining the wholesale desolation to the mayor.
Moreover, there are too many hip-hop songs on the soundtrack. I could see one or two (at the most), but they overdid it. It smacked of trying to be too ‘hip.’
The film runs 1 hour, 38 minutes and was shot entirely in Paris & nearby Seine-Saint-Denis, France.
GRADE: B-
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$25,000,000.00
Revenue:
$64,437,847.00