Review of Unleashed
These are just a few scattered thoughts:
1. The basic story is as old as Enkidu and Shamhat, and that's pretty old. I think Jet Li a pretty good impression of a man who had been raised like a dog - first beaten and then very clingy, cheerful, and loyal. He did interesting things with body posture and so-forth.
2. Morgan Freeman exudes fatherliness, avuncularity, and warmth. He's also very tall. I suspect that both of those aspects led to his getting this part. If nothing else, he made Mr Li look short and fragile. He's also a convincing person to bond with.
3. Jet Li is a very graceful man. In most of the movies his fighting style shows that. That's one of the interesting things about Unleashed - when he fought it was very short and savage blows, and you saw the grace only when he leaped and dodged.
4. It was nice to see a perky skinny chick as the heroine. I liked her.
5. There Were No TVs. In any scene. Not even the bad guy was so crass as to have an idiot box in his lair. I can't help but feel there's a moral there...
6. I loved the production values and set-dressing. The colouring of the movie was lovely. There was comfortable clutter in one house and dank dark greys in the villain's lair, a woman singing in a shower, a little mouse scuttling across one of the frames... there was a lot of attention to detail from the movie-makers.
7. It's odd how many violent movies are mushily sentimental, and how many action heroes will, at some point in their lives, make a movie in which they play a character with a very vulnerable side: Jean Claude van Damme in Replicant, all those warm fuzzy movies of Arnold Schwarzenegger's, even the scene in The Saint where the hero gets dunked in an ice-covered river and goes spoggly with hypothermia for a while. I think it's King Kong Syndrome, myself.