
Around the world in 80 days music video movie#
And the movie certainly requires a fanciful suspension of disbelief.īut director Frank Coraci ( "The Wedding Singer") shows enthusiastic creativity in pulling it all together and giving the comedy time to breathe by, for example, transitioning quickly between episodes with imaginative, cartoonish-watercolor CGI flyovers taking us from one exotic locale to the next. speed barrier," a scientific hurdle invented by the screenwriters. At times it's hackneyed too: Fogg is introduced trying to "break the 50-m.p.h. Then Fogg and friends head across the Pacific to America, where a broken wagon wheel is replaced by a couple bicycle salesmen named Wilbur and Orville Wright (deadpan delights Owen and Luke Wilson), and where the under-construction Statue of Liberty is the setting for one more crazy kung-fu face-off.Īll this, a bit of sabotage, and much more go by in a swift 93 minutes, but the movie doesn't feel like a highlights reel because each scene is milked for maximum character (ill-at-ease Fogg is hopeless in foreign cultures without Passepartout) and maximum laughs (ditto).Īdmittedly, the script is sometimes clunky: For the sake of expediency the antagonistic head of the Royal Academy of Science (amusingly blustery Jim Broadbent) is made out to be both the most powerful man in Britain and a pooh-pooh-er of progress. ("Do Tuesdays work for you?" he leers farcically at De France.) In China it's revelations, family reunions and more spectacular and silly kung fu as Passepartout comes clean and kicks butts with some help from village holy man Sammo Hung. In Turkey, the trio is waylaid by a nutcase narcissistic prince ( Arnold Schwarzenegger) seeking to round out his day-of-the-week collection of wives. Meanwhile Jackie Chan fights off a kung-fu gang in an amusing, paint-splattering showdown that proves the stunt maestro refuses to let age and injuries catch up with him just yet. In Paris, the persnickety Fogg turns up his nose at Impressionism until he meets one of its pretty purveyors (Cécile De France), a spitfire pre-feminist who invites herself along on his adventure.

(In this way the 2004 "80 Days" is not unlike the 1956 version starring David Niven.)

Fogg is his ticket to safe passage - or so he thinks.ĭoggedly pursued by the Chinese mafia (who stole the Buddha in the first place) and an inept, crooked English constable who has been told Fogg pulled the bank job ( "Trainspotting's" Ewan Bremner, who has a gift for slapstick folly), our heroes make their way from country to country by whatever means necessary, encountering celebrity cameos and the late 19th century's greatest cultural and historical hits along the way. Passepartout has stolen a jade Buddha from a Bank of London vault in order to return it to its rightful place: his native village in China. Jules Verne might have a hard time recognizing his source material in the Jackie Chan action-comedy adaptation of "Around the World in 80 Days," but for non-purists, it's easy to forgive the many liberties taken in this funny, fleet-footed summer-matinee romp.Īlthough the ostensible main character is still screwball Victorian inventor Phileas Fogg (lanky Steve Coogan) - who wagers against the stuffed shirts of the English scientific establishment that he can circumnavigate the globe in the titular time period - this version of the story more literally revolves around Passepartout (Chan), Fogg's valet who has his own reasons for traipsing across continents.
