Huo An, the commander of the Protection Squad of the Western Regions, was framed by evil forces and becomes enslaved. On the other hand, a Roman general escapes to China after rescuing the Prince. The heroic duo meet in the Western Desert and a thrilling story unfolds.
Jackie Chan
Huo Han
John Cusack
Lucius
Adrien Brody
Tiberius
Sharni Vinson
The Queen
Kevin Lee
Roman Soldier
Robert Peoples
Roman Soldier
Tomer Oz
Huo An General
Alfred Hsing
Han Soldier
Max Huang
Shou Xia
Sammy Hung
Red Sun
Paul Philip Clark
General Doramis
Lorie Pester
La Reine Perse
Joel Adrian
General Statius
Joel Adrian
General Sertor
Harry Oram
General Statius
Kyle Shapiro
Roman Captain
Jonathan Paulson
Roman Soldier
Vander McLeod
Scar Face Centurion
Philippe Joly
Lucius' deputy Paullus
Faith Ugurlu
Roman General
Danny Salay
Roman General
Pierre Bourdaud
Roman Soldier
Jai Day
Deputy Gaius
Murray Clive Walker
Patrick
Emrah Yilmaz
Kroraina
Danny Cameron
Roman Soldier
Kyle Cameron
Roman Soldier
Kyle Andrew MacNeil
Roman Soldier
Daniel P. Cameron
Ruthless Roman Soldier
Miroslav Karel
Roman Soldier
J.J. Demiannay
Roman Soldier
Alexander Corne
Roman Soldier
James Lee Guy
Eugene
Will Lefebvre
Roman Soldier
Lin Peng
Cold Moon
Steve Yoo
Cougar
Choi Si-won
Yin Po
Ned Bellamy
Octavius
Jozef Waite
Publius
Brahim Achabbakhe
Titus
Benny Urquidez
Extra (uncredited)
Mohetaer
Extra (uncredited)
Temur Mamisashvili
Roman Soldier (uncredited)
Li Zhenqi
Karena Lam Kar-Yan
Vanness Wu
Director, Writer
Daniel Lee
April 27, 2019
5
***East meets West on the Silk Road in this hyperactive action/adventure***
In 48 BC, a peace-promoting protection squad on the Silk Road in Northwestern China is assigned to construction work at Wild Geese Gate wherein they are assisted by a fugitive legion of Romans led by General Lucius (John Cusack), who befriends the leader of the security company (Jackie Chan). When shady Roman leader Tiberius (Adrien Brody) arrives with an army of 100,000, the other two groups team-up against them.
Supposedly inspired by real-life events, "Dragon Blade" (2015) is a Chinese action/adventure that cost $65 million and looks it. The film is top-of-the-line as far as production quality goes (score, cast, costumes, sets, quick editing, locations, etc.). Chan is entertaining as usual while Cusack and Brody surprisingly tower in their roles (I say “surprisingly” because I wouldn’t have imagined them cutting it as Roman commanders in the ancient past). The tone is serious with goofy quick-edited action and a modest amount of humor that’s actually funny.
If you happened upon any 2-3 minutes of this film you’d automatically think that it was a very worthy adventure flick. Unfortunately, it’s too manic for its own good. I tried to adapt to its hyper tone and did so until just past the halfway mark when the overkill action style pretty much lost me. I endured to the end, but it was difficult. It seriously needed to slow down and cultivate depth (but at least it tries to at times).
“Dragon Blade” lacks the confident poise of the excellent “Mongol: The Rise of Genghis Khan” (2007) and instead shoots for overKILL. Consider the frenzied pace of the 2011 version of “Conan the Barbarian,” but up the ante a couple of notches. That’s this movie.
The film runs 2 hours, 7 minutes and was shot in Hengdian and Dunhuang, China, as well as the Gobi Desert.
GRADE: C
Status:
Released
Original Language:
Mandarin
Budget:
$65,000,000.00
Revenue:
$121,545,703.00