Kung Fu Yoga (Chinese: 功夫瑜伽) is a 2017 Chinese action adventure comedy film written and directed by Stanley Tong and starring Jackie Chan.[5][6][7] The film's cast includes Chinese actors Aarif Rahman, Lay Zhang, and Miya Muqi, and Indian actors Sonu Sood, Disha Patani, and Amyra Dastur.
Kung Fu Yoga | |
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Chinese | 功夫瑜伽 |
Mandarin | gōngfū yújiā |
Literally | Kung Fu Yoga |
Directed by | Stanley Tong |
Written by | Stanley Tong |
Produced by | Jackie Chan Jianhong Qi Jonathan Shen Barbie Tung Wei Wang |
Starring | Jackie Chan Aarif Rahman Lay Zhang Sonu Sood Miya Muqi Disha Patani Amyra Dastur |
Cinematography | Wing-Hung Wong |
Edited by | Chi-Leung Kwong |
Music by | Nathan Wang |
Production companies | Taihe Entertainment Shinework Pictures Viacom 18 |
Distributed by | Khorgos Taihe Digital Entertainment Cultural Development Sparkle Roll Media |
Release dates |
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Running time | 108 minutes[1] |
Countries | China Hong Kong India[2] |
Languages | Mandarin[1] English Hindi |
Budget | US$65 million[3] |
Box office | US$257.8 million[4] |
The film was released in China on 28 January 2017.[5][8] It features original music composed by Nathan Wang[9] and an ending dance number choreographed by Farah Khan.[10]
It is Jackie Chan's highest-grossing film in China.[11] It was also the highest-grossing comedy film in China, until it was overtaken by Never Say Die (2017).[12]
Jack (Jackie Chan), a renowned professor of archaeology at the Terracotta Warriors Museum in Xi'an, teams up with young Indian professor Ashmita (Disha Patani) from the National Museum Institute, Rajasthan to locate India's lost Magadha treasure in Tibet. Their team, Jones Lee (Aarif Rahman), Xiaoguang (Lay Zhang), Kyra (Amyra Dastur) and Noumin (Miya Muqi); find the treasure underneath a frozen lake using modern technology. However, they are interrupted by a group of mercenaries led by Randall (Sonu Sood) who steals the treasure and leaves them there to die. In the chaos, Jones – a member from Jack's team who is more a treasure hunter than an archaeologist smuggles away a diamond artifact. Jack's and Ashmita's team manages to escape from the underground icy cavern through an opening.
Two weeks later, the 212-carat diamond artifact pops up in Dubai for auction on the black market. To save his job, Jack attempts to get back the artifact with the help of a rich friend. Jack wins the auction but Randall strikes again with his goons which results in a high speed car chase through heavy traffic in Dubai. In the ensuing chase, Ashmita snatches it from them. Jack investigates Ashmita's whereabouts and finds she isn't who she claimed to be before but the youngest descendant of Magadha royalty. Ashmita explains the diamond artifact is known as the "Eye of Shiva" in their family chronicles and it is the key to immense treasure hidden somewhere.
She asks Jack to help her find the real treasure and protect it from wrong hands. They further find the diamond artifact is a part of a scepter that opens a map room built using vastu shastra and astronomical positions of that period in a closed part of a sacred temple. Randall kidnaps Jack and Ashmita, demands to find the treasure for him because it belonged to his family. They all together find the map room which happens to be a puzzle room where a wrong move can cost lives.
They reach an underground Shiva temple made out of gold that is nearby a secluded waterfall. Reaching there, Randall's group begins to extract gems and diamonds from the temple decorations and searches for the treasure, but to his despair, they find that the legendary treasure is ancient knowledge about medicine, Buddhism, mechanical structures, and many more. In despair, Randall tries to destroy everything, but Jack, Ashmita and their team fight to stop them. Jack uses principles of yoga and kung fu to defeat Randall and convinces him of the significant importance of this finding. Meanwhile, a group of Sannyasis comes down through the new opening above ground and, upon seeing the magnificence of the deity in the underground temple, they start to sing and dance in joy. The groups that were fighting, realizing their pettiness, stop fighting and happily join with the joyous expression.
Principal photography began in Beijing in September, before moving to Xi'an and Dubai on 27 September and ended on 30 October.[14] Filming then continued in Beijing and India in December.[15] Filming also took place in Iceland.[16]
The film originally began as a Sino-Indian co-production. However, its Indian production partner Viacom 18 eventually pulled out of the production.[17] Viacom 18 stated: "We had every intent to collaborate with ‘Kung Fu Yoga.’ However things didn't work out as planned. But we are optimistic about more such partnerships in the future."[18]
The film was produced primarily by the Chinese studios Taihe Entertainment and Shinework Pictures.[14][19]
According to director Stanley Tong, Bollywood star Aamir Khan was initially offered a major role in the film, but he could not take up the offer due to scheduling conflicts, as he was busy shooting for his own film, the blockbuster Dangal (2016).[20] The ending dance number in Kung Fu Yoga was choreographed by Bollywood musical dance choreographer Farah Khan.[10]
Kung Fu Yoga | |
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Soundtrack album | |
Recorded | 2016 |
Genre | Feature film soundtrack |
Length | 10:18 |
Language | Mandarin, English, Hindi |
Nathan Wang composed the background score. The soundtrack was released on 2017.
No. | Title | Singer(s) | Length |
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1. | "Beautiful Fairy Tales" | Jackie Chan, M.I.C | 3:36 |
2. | "Curry Flavor" | Jackie Chan, Zhang Yishan, Yang Zi | 3:12 |
3. | "Money Home" | Manihong | 3:30 |
4. | "Goosebump (Ending song)" | Fazilpuria | 2:56 |
Total length: | 10:18 |
Kung Fu Yoga was released in China on 28 January 2017.[21] It was released in the Philippines by Star Cinema (replacing Viva International Pictures as distributor[22]) on 1 February 2017.[23] In India, the film was released by Tanweer Films on 3 February 2017.[24]
The film was a major box-office success in China, where it became Jackie Chan's highest-grossing film in China and one of the top ten highest-grossing films of all time, grossing ¥1.753 billion[25] (US$254,531,595).[26] In comparison, it was a commercial failure in India, where it grossed ₹40 million (US$500,000) on its opening day.[27] The film opened at number 1 in Singapore, earning $1.85 million, during its weekend debut of 28 January 2017.[28]
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film received a score of 48%, based on 23 critics' reviews.[29] On Metacritic, the film received a weighted average score of 50 out of 100, based on 9 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[30]
Stanley Tong filmography | |
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As director |
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As writer |
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As producer only |
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