'Operation Red Sea': Review
Dante Lam follows up his 2016 blockbuster ‘Operation Mekong’ with a Chinese rescue mission set in a fictional Arab country
Dir: Dante Lam. China. 2018. 138 mins
Dir: Dante Lam. China. 2018. 138 mins
Subtlety is the first casualty of war in Operation Red Sea,
which dispatches an elite division of China’s special forces to deal
with a crisis situation in a fictionalised African country. A thematic
sequel to director Dante Lam’s surprise box office smash Operation Mekong
(2016), this is also the latest in a spate of Mainland China military
pictures that deliver the blistering spectacle that is usually the
domain of Hollywood blockbusters as a means of conveying resolutely
patriotic messages and promoting military power. Lured to the Mainland
industry by the promise of bigger budgets and limitless pyrotechnics,
Hong Kong action specialist Lam goes all out in his effort to rival the
sheer scale of Black Hawk Down (2001) while making sure to extoll the collective heroism of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA).
The unflinching rawness of the action has considerable impact while undercutting the dominant jingoistic tone.
Compared to recent military action titles, Operation Red Sea doesn’t look like coming within box office striking distance of the record-breaking Wolf Warrior 2
(2017), which thrived thanks to star Wu Jing’s rapturously greeted
Chinese variation on the lone Hollywood hero, but is no danger of being
wiped out like the laughable airborne actioner Sky Hunter
(2017). While it will perform strongly at home, particularly in second
and third tier cities, overseas prospects may be limited to VOD where
action junkies will find the unabashed tub-thumping almost as
jaw-dropping as its insane tank-on-tank showdown.
As with Wolf Warrior 2, the inspiration here is the
evacuation of nearly 600 Chinese citizens and 225 foreign nationals from
the port city of Aden during the 2015 Yemen civil war by China’s navy.
Taking place in the fictional African country of Yewaire, the operation
requires the Jiaolong (“Sea Dragon”) Assault Team to rescue the Chinese
Consul when widespread unrest breaks out. This chaos has been instigated
by a terrorist organisation in order to obtain materials from an energy
plant that will enable them to make ‘dirty bombs’.
Led by Yang Rui (Zhang Yi), the team includes combatants Tong Li
(Jiang Luxia) and Zhang Tiande (Wang Yutian), demolitions expert Xu Hong
(Jiang Du), and signaller Zhuang Yu (Henry Mak). Each member gets an
introductory title card that states their name and role, but the latter
would probably suffice since the emphasis here is on the unit rather
than rugged individuality. In this respect, Operation Red Sea differs from the Operation Mekong,
which was also inspired by a real-life incident (the special task force
investigation of a drug-related cargo ship massacre in the Golden
Triangle) but featured protagonists who were as fueled as much by
personal grievances as duty to the state.
Structurally, however, Operation Red Sea follows its
predecessor in that it is designed as an escalating series of set pieces
so that Lam can have a field day with the reported $72 million budget
and resources provided by the PLA, from naval vessels to helicopters to
high tech weaponry. It starts with the team’s rescue of the Chinese crew
of a cargo ship that has been seized by Somalian pirates with Lam using
slow motion to illustrate the precision of their sniper skills. With
that visual trick ticked off his ‘to do’ list, Lam proceeds to ramp up
the action in ferocious fashion. There’s a confidently staged battle in
the middle of the city with the team crossing rooftops using zip lines, a
shoot-out in a desert valley where they are pinned down following a
militia ambush, the nerve-wracking extraction of a female energy plant
employee who is being held captive in a rural town that has become a
terrorist stronghold, and a final push to intercept the ‘yellowcake’.
If the undercover procedural scenario of Operation Mekong
gave Lam a license to do a pulpy Michael Mann imitation by way of the
Golan-Globus exploitation factory, then the war zone situation presented
by Operation Red Sea has him aping Michael Bay’s sensory
bombardment with further enhancement from Elliot Leung’s bombastic
score. Lam has a better sense of screen geography than Bay with the
team’s movements and formations expertly tracked whether in wide open
spaces or tight spots, so it’s a shame that his kinetic sensibility is
so terribly served by theatrical 3D format. CGI bullet and missile shots
are slickly executed, but the in-camera action becomes headache
inducing around the halfway mark while Yuen Man Fung’s crisp desert
cinematography is diluted by a subpar conversion.
Still, the unflinching rawness of the action has considerable impact
while undercutting the dominant jingoistic tone. Despite the team’s
tactical strengths, their plans often suddenly unravel because of
unanticipated elements, resulting in stomach churning injuries. As much
as Operation Red Sea strives to reassure its primary audience
that China’s military will go to great lengths to protect citizens
abroad and guard its territorial waters, its grisly emphasis on severed
limbs isn’t going to encourage many viewers to sign-up.
Production companies: Bona Film Group, Emperor Motion, Film Fireworks
Production, P.L.A Navy Government TV Art Central of China, Star Dream
Studio Media
US distribution: Well Go USA Entertainment
Producer: Yu Dong
Executive producer: Candy Leung
Screenplay: Feng Ji
Cinematography: Yuen Man Fung
Music: Elliot Leung
Main cast: Zhang Yi, Huang Jingyu, Hai Qing, Du Jiang, Jiang Luxia, Yin Fang, Wang Yutian, Guo Jiahao, Henry Mak, Zhang Hanyu
US distribution: Well Go USA Entertainment
Producer: Yu Dong
Executive producer: Candy Leung
Screenplay: Feng Ji
Cinematography: Yuen Man Fung
Music: Elliot Leung
Main cast: Zhang Yi, Huang Jingyu, Hai Qing, Du Jiang, Jiang Luxia, Yin Fang, Wang Yutian, Guo Jiahao, Henry Mak, Zhang Hanyu
Click zmovie watch movies online free. Operation Red Sea (Bona Film Group) - $ 579.2 million: A similar case of street-hunting The Red Sea 2. The military movie has a lot of action scenes, but at the same time it is supposed to help propagate the Falun Gong spirit in a flaunt. In addition, the end of the film is highly controversial due to messages relating to sovereignty over the islands in the South China Sea.
ReplyDeleteWatch more:
putlocker moana
it follows putlocker