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Kiss of the Dragon

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Kiss of the Dragon
Theatrical teaser poster
Directed byChris Nahon
Screenplay byLuc Besson
Robert Mark Kamen
Story byJet Li
Produced byLuc Besson
Jet Li
Steve Chasman
Happy Walters
Starring
CinematographyThierry Arbogast
Edited byMarco Cave
Music byCraig Armstrong
Production
companies
Distributed byEuropaCorp Distribution (France)[1]
20th Century Fox (select territories)
Release dates
  • July 6, 2001 (2001-07-06) (United States)
  • August 1, 2001 (2001-08-01) (France)
Running time
98 minutes
CountriesFrance
United States
LanguagesEnglish
French
Mandarin
Budget$25 million[2]
Box office$64.4 million[2]

Kiss of the Dragon (Le Baiser mortel du dragon in French) is a 2001 French-American action film directed by Chris Nahon, written and produced by French filmmaker Luc Besson, and starring an international cast of Jet Li, Bridget Fonda, and Tchéky Karyo. It follows a Chinese intelligence agent who is sent to Paris to apprehend a Chinese mob boss; framed for murder, he enlists a prostitute to help him prove his innocence.

Li purposefully wanted to take a realistic approach to the fight scenes, and forgo the CGI and wire work that had been popularized by films such as Charlie’s Angels and The Matrix.[3] It is notable as most of the action sequences did not use CGI or wire work; only two scenes required CGI enhancement and only one scene involved wire work.[4]

Plot

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Liu Jian, a Taiwanese intelligence agent, is sent to Paris to help the French authorities apprehend Chinese mob boss Mr. Big, who is involved in heroin smuggling. He meets Inspector Jean-Pierre Richard, a corrupt and violent police detective, at a hotel. Richard tricks Liu into believing he is simply providing reconnaissance of a meet involving Mr. Big. During the operation, Mr. Big is introduced to two female prostitutes, one being Jessica Kamen, an American woman, who he both takes up to his room for sex. While Liu and the rest are watching through multiple surveillance cameras, Mr. Big kicks everyone out except for the two women. As her colleague starts to seduce Mr Big, Jessica nervously retires to the bathroom where she vomits in the toilet. The other prostitute then goes on to stab Mr. Big repeatedly. Overseeing the events from another room, Liu rushes in and subdues the prostitute. He then attempts to call for help to save Mr. Big's life, but Richard enters shortly after, shooting Mr. Big and the woman with Liu's police-issued handgun, framing Liu for both murders. Jessica has remained in the bathroom during the entire incident.

Realizing he has been set up, Liu manages to escape from the hotel with a surveillance tape showing Richard shooting Mr. Big. After the events, Chinese liaisons are sent to France to investigate the matter, as Richard makes Liu the primary suspect. However, the liaisons do not believe the story Richard provides. Liu meets with one of them on a crowded sightseeing boat and passes him the tape, revealing the truth. However, Richard's men spot them, and the liaison is assassinated. Liu is then forced to flee from a horde of cops and GIGN commandos. After Liu escapes, he is forced to maintain a low profile.

While his situation worsens, he meets Jessica, whose daughter was kidnapped by Richard to force her into prostitution. Liu discovers that Jessica was the second prostitute at the hotel during the night of Mr. Big's murder. He realizes she can prove his innocence, but she refuses to go along without retrieving her daughter, Isabel. Liu decides the tape would provide the best evidence, and sends Jessica to Richard's office to steal the tape. Jessica manages to get the tape, then Liu and Jessica head to an orphanage where Isabel is kept. However, Richard anticipates this move, and has the duo ambushed by his thugs at the orphanage. During their escape, Jessica is shot in the chest. Liu manages to get her to the hospital in time and leaves for the police station, fiercely determined to retrieve her daughter.

Liu storms into the police station where Richard is holding Isabel hostage on one of the upper floors. He has to fight his way through several groups of policemen, including more than twenty officers attending a martial arts class. As a contingent of baton wielding riot police pour into the ground floor, Liu sabotages the controls of a steel fire door to block access to the upper floor. Having defeated Richard's personal henchmen, Liu enters his office and finds him holding Isabel at gunpoint. Even though Liu is unarmed, he tells Richard that if he kills Isabel, then he will have all the time he needs to kill him. Richard tries to kill Liu, but he only manages to shoot him in the shoulder. However, the bullet injury fails to prevent Liu from disarming Richard while sticking an acupuncture needle into the back of his neck, in a forbidden location known as the "kiss of the dragon," which stimulates all the body's blood to travel to the brain to cause a painful death by brain aneurysm. Richard suffers and dies from the "kiss of the dragon" just as Liu departs with Isabel. Returning to Jessica's hospital bedside, Liu removes an acupuncture needle from Jessica's neck, promptly waking her. Upon waking up, she happily finds Isabel peacefully sleeping by her side.

Origin of title

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The title "Kiss of the Dragon" is derived from one of the last scenes in the movie, in which Liu punctures Richard in the back of the neck with an acupuncture needle at a "very forbidden" point on the body. The puncture itself, called "kiss of the dragon", traps all the body's blood in the head and causes side effects of quadriplegia, bleeding from the head's orifices, and a painful death by brain aneurysm.

Cast

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Production

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The director filmed most of the action sequences without CGI or wire work; only two scenes required CGI enhancement and only one scene involved wire work.[4] Wire work was added to one of the last fight sequences between Li and Cyril Raffaelli, in order to add clarity to Raffaelli's kicks, as he was moving too fast for the camera. Nahon had to slow down this fight scene, as both Li and Raffaelli were moving too quickly to be captured clearly at normal recording speed.

The French version of the film is notably different from others; it contains a zoomed-out shot of Tcheky Karyo shooting one of his henchmen in the head, resulting in a fountain of blood erupting. This passage was cropped from most international versions of the movie.[5]

Reception

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The film received mixed reviews from critics,[6][7][8] who thought violence overwhelmed it at the expense of the story and even a true portrayal of martial arts. On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 53% based on reviews from 108 critics. The site's consensus states "A formulaic actioner that's sure to please action fans. Those looking for plot, believability, or character development will have difficulty finding them."[9] On Metacritic it has a score of 58 out of 100, based on 26 critic reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[10] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade B+ on scale of A to F.[11]

Writing in the Asian Journal of Communication in 2013, academic Zheng Zhu listed the film alongside Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story (1993) and The Tuxedo (2002) as films that broke from the Western tradition of portraying Asian men as asexual, stating that while they are often featured as heroes in martial arts films, they are rarely portrayed as romantic or loving. Noting the films each show an Asian martial artist with a white female partner, Zhu states they reverse the conventional portrayal of a "dominant white knight and a submissive Oriental lady". However, he makes critiques of the portrayal of these relationships. For example, each film shows "white women play[ing] the most important role" in helping Chinese men accomplish success. Asian men, Zhu argues, are portrayed as incapable of achieving success in Western society unless they are supported by white femininity.[12]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 3 out of 4 stars, and wrote: "I like the movie on a simple physical level. There is no deeper meaning and no higher skill involved; just professional action, well-staged and filmed with a certain stylistic elegance."[13] The film is based on a story by Li,[4] and is one of Fonda's final on-screen appearances before her retirement from acting.

Due to its violence, Kiss of the Dragon was banned in China. Li spoke out about this censorship.[14]

Box office

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Kiss of the Dragon opened at 2,025 North American theaters on July 6, 2001, to an opening weekend gross of $13,304,027 ($6,569 per screen).[15] It went on to a total North American gross of $36,845,124, making the film to be very profitable for 20th Century Fox (which only paid slightly more than $12.5 million to acquire the distribution rights in North America and some other foreign territories).[16]

Its total worldwide box office gross is $64,437,847.

The film was set to be the first film in the United States to receive an R-rating to be available on Disney+ on April 29, 2022, but eventually the decision was dropped, and the film will instead be streaming in Canada only.[17]

Trivia

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  • There are conflicting informations about the name of the Protagonist portrayed by Li. His surname is Liu, his given name is mostly Jian, be it in the IMDb, Fandom, but also on DVD and Blu-ray covers. However, his full name is mentioned twice, his surname overall three times, twice by Inspector Jean-Pierre Richard, once by his fellow Chinese policeman. And any time his surname is pronounced as Ouyang, which is a very common surname in China. When Richard mentions his full name for the first time, it sounds very much like the real life person Ouyang Ziyuan, and the subtitles also shows the name as Ouyang Suiyan. When Richard mentions his surname for the second time, he also pronounces it like Ouyang, but in the subtitles in all languages the name appears as Liu Ciu-jian (in Pinyin style without hyphenation Ciujian). Same does Liu/Ouyang's fellow Chinese policeman, pronouncing the surname as "(Inspector) Ouyang". So it seems very likely his original surname was supposed to be Ouyang, and his given name Suiyan, but Ouyang Suiyan was later changed to Liu Jian.
  • In an interview for the Los Angeles premiere on June 25, 2001, Fonda stated that she did not like to work with the actor who portrayed the taller twin, Didier Azoulay, because in one scene he grabs her character Jessica on her neck, lifts her into the air and choke her, which Azoulay did too roughly. In the same interview, Li emphasizes how important Fonda's character is to the plot. He said in normal action films the girl is like a flower that can appear, disappear and reappear when wanted, without having any important meaning. Jessica, however, would be the key between the good guy Liu and the bad guy Richard, and she would make the whole story work.[18]

Soundtrack

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Kiss of the Dragon
Soundtrack album by
Various artists
ReleasedJuly 3, 2001
Recorded2000–2001
GenreHip hop, electronic
LabelVirgin
ProducerBink, The Neptunes, Daft Punk, Slum Village, DJ Clue, DJ Ev, Nick Wiz, Larry "Rock" Campbell
Singles from Kiss of the Dragon
  1. "Lapdance"
    Released: May 21, 2001
  2. "Ghir Dini"
    Released: 2001
  3. "F**k That"
    Released: 2001
  4. "Adore You"
    Released: 2001
  5. "What You Got?"
    Released: 2001
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[19]

The soundtrack was released on July 3, 2001, through Virgin Records, and consisted mainly of a blend of hip hop and electronic music.

  1. "Mystikal Fever" – 3:49 (Mystikal)
  2. "Lapdance" – 3:33 (N.E.R.D)
  3. "Aerodynamic" – 3:35 (Daft Punk and Slum Village)
  4. "Fuck That" – 3:17 (Bathgate)
  5. "What You Got?" – 4:19 (Chino XL)
  6. "Sing" – 4:41 (Mouse)
  7. "Cheatin'" – 3:46 (Liberty City)
  8. "Don't Blame It on I" – 4:05 (The Congos)
  9. "Ghir Dini" – 3:59 (Assia)
  10. "As If You Said Nothing" – 4:38 (Craig Armstrong)
  11. "Adore You" – 4:21 (Lisa Barbuscia)

References

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  1. ^ "Kiss of the Dragon (2001))". UniFrance. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Kiss of the Dragon (2001)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2009-08-27.
  3. ^ Noxon, Christopher (2001-07-04). "Taking a Fast-Track Career in Stride". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-09-10.
  4. ^ a b c James Plath. "Blu-ray review of Kiss of the Dragon". DVDTown.com. Archived from the original on 2008-12-04. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
  5. ^ Wurm, Gerald (April 26, 2008). "Kiss of the Dragon (Comparison: R-Rated - French DVD) - Movie-Censorship.com". www.movie-censorship.com.
  6. ^ Elder, Robert K (2001-07-06). "The French misconnection". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2010-09-10.
  7. ^ Mitchell, Elvis (2001-07-06). "FILM REVIEW; In a Tough Spot in Paris? Fight Your Way Out, Limbs Flying". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-09-15.
  8. ^ Jay Boyar (January 25, 2002). "Kung Faux? Martial Arts Get Lost In The Translation". Orlando Sentinel. Archived from the original on 2012-06-16. Retrieved 2020-07-01.
  9. ^ "Kiss of the Dragon (2001)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2024-12-22.
  10. ^ "Kiss of the Dragon". Metacritic. Retrieved 2020-07-01.
  11. ^ "KISS OF THE DRAGON (2001) B+". CinemaScore. Archived from the original on 2018-02-06.
  12. ^ Zhu, Zheng (2013). "Romancing 'kung fu master' – from 'yellow peril' to 'yellow prowess'". Asian Journal of Communication. 23 (4): 403–419. doi:10.1080/01292986.2012.756044. S2CID 144868286.
  13. ^ Roger Ebert (July 6, 2001). "Kiss of the Dragon". Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved 2020-07-01.
  14. ^ "Jet Li attacks China film censors". BBC. 2007-08-20. Retrieved 2010-09-25.
  15. ^ Welkos, Robert W. (2001-07-10). "Weekend Box Office; There's No Scaring 'Cats & Dogs'". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  16. ^ Natale, Richard (2001-07-11). "Company Town Film Profit Report". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2020-07-01.
  17. ^ Mellon, Rory (April 4, 2022). "No, Disney Plus is not getting an R-rated movie after all". Tom's Guide.
  18. ^ 'Kiss of the Dragon' Premiere
  19. ^ Taylor, Jason D.. Kiss of the Dragon at AllMusic
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