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A family of circus acrobats have been the keepers
of an ancient Buddhist scroll for over a thousand
years. The scroll is a kind of map to a sharira*,
the crystallized remains of a Buddhist monk. The
sharira is said to “possess mystical powers
that can transform mankind for the better.”
The monk in question here lived over a thousand
years ago and legend has it that there will come
a time with the Heart of Dun Huang will come into
the possession of the family, and with the aid
of the scroll, lead them to the sharira.
Uh, yeah. I’m still confused over all of
it.
Yin (Michelle Yeo) is the head of the family
of acrobats and doesn’t believe in the power
of the sharira. When Eric (Ben Chaplin), a man
from her past, shows up with the Heart of Dun
Huang, she still doesn’t believe, but her
brother, Tong (Brandon Chang), does. Tong and
his girlfriend take both the Heart and the scroll
and set off to find the secret of the sharira.
On their trail is Karl (Richard Roxburg), a rather
generic bad guy who sent Eric to find the Heart
in the first place. Karl wants to possess the
power of the sharira himself, but just what he
wants to do with it, we never know (nor are we
ever told just how the sharira can transform mankind).
Karl and his thugs catch up with Tong and Eric
and Yin try to rescue him and stop Karl from taking
over the world or whatever he wants to do.
THE TOUCH is an interesting
film that is sadly marred by poor dialog and cheesy
fight scenes. Yeo can fight too; she and the other
actors aren’t the problem; the chorography
and cinematography are. The fights are just a
mess with the film sped up for effect and just
looks… unnatural for lack of a better word.
Thankfully there aren’t too many fight scenes.
Another problem is the quality of the special
effects but that pales in comparison to the wretched
fights. Towards the end, Yin, Eric, Tong and Karl
do battle in this rather elaborate hall complete
with rock pillars and fiery arrows. The setting
is quite captivating but the computer-generated
effects are lacking.
However, THE TOUCH is one of the odd movies that
one encounters and likes against their better
judgment. I enjoyed the characters and their stories
(or what little we are told about them), and despite
the low-grade computer f/x, I thought the story
and the settings (i.e. the above-mentioned hall
along with a certain tree) quite spellbinding.
Yeah, very Indiana Jones indeed – but that’s
not a bad thing.
Oh and …just why THE TOUCH is called THE
TOUCH I have no idea. “The Touch”
is the damn circus that Yin runs/owns/works for,
but heck, I could think of a whole lot better
names to call the movie. Maybe Crystallized Buddhist
Dude, or Ancient Scroll, Flying Family. Even Chinese
Circus… something, anything that made more
sense.
Watson Scale. Okay, I can overlook the technical
problems in THE TOUCH enough to give it 4 stars.
However I may be letting my personal interest
in Buddhism and mythology get in the way, so as
a general, average, everyday kind of movie, I’d
give it 3 stars. Check it out, but don’t
expect too much. You could be either mildly disappointed;
or pleased at finding a new guilty pleasure.
For Silman review of this film, click HERE.
*According to The Dictionary of Buddhism by Damien
Keown, the sarira is “the relics (or material
remains) of a Buddha or saint, normally enshrined
in a stupa.” (a stupa being religious monument
which usually houses such relics or other sacred
objects.) Couldn’t resist doing a bit of
digging around on the subject.
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