The Monkey King (miniseries)

The Monkey King, also known as The Lost Empire, is a 2001 four hour television mini-series produced by NBC and the SciFi Channel. It is a contemporary take on the classic novel Journey to the West. It stars Bai Ling, Thomas Gibson, Russell Wong, Eddie Marsan, and Randall Duk Kim. The film is directed by Peter MacDonald and written by pre-eminent Asian American dramatist David Henry Hwang.[1]

Plot

Nicholas Orton (played by Thomas Gibson) is an American businessman who has lived in China for several years. He has a chance encounter with a beautiful Chinese lady (played by Bai Ling) who says that he is the only one who can save the world from reverting five-hundred years. He is unswayed by this until many modern buildings begin disappearing before his eyes. This mystical lady (revealed later as Guanyin, the bodhisattva of compassion) transports him to a portal which offers entrance, through the teachings of Confucius (played by Ric Young), to the ancient Chinese underworld.

When Nicholas Orton (soon to be named The Scholar From Above) reaches the other side of the portal, he finds that his studies of Confucius will come in handy for the path that lies ahead. Nicholas Orton's first action is to rescue Sun Wukong the Monkey King from the mountain which he has been imprisoned in for centuries. Sun Wukong (the Monkey King or Monkey Emperor) travels with Nicholas Orton in his quest to save the original manuscript of Journey to the West from destruction. They are later joined by Zhu Bajie (Pigsy) and Sha Wujing (Friar Sand) to help them on the way.

Reaction

Robert Bianco of USA Today called it "silly and confused."[2] Variety called it "tedious" and said "all the strong technical work comes across as the outer shell of an empty nut."[3]

The Ratings were poor it recorded one of the lowest ratings ever for a miniseries on NBC. Critics said it was due to oversaturation of special-effects-driven miniseries dropping in popularity.[4][5]

Releases

The film is available on DVD and videocassette. There was also a novelization of the mini-series released under the title The Monkey King by Kathryn Wesley.

External links


References

  1. "The Monkey King (TV Movie 2001) - IMDb". imdb.com. Retrieved 2014-03-16.
  2. "What to watch Thursday". Usatoday. Com. 2006-09-13. Retrieved 2014-03-16.
  3. Steven Oxman (2001-03-07). "The Lost Empire | Variety". Beta.variety.com. Retrieved 2014-03-16.
  4. "The Monkey King (2001) (TV) - News". imdb.com. Retrieved 2014-03-16.
  5. "Rob's 'Will & Grace' Page - News Archive". Durfee.net. 2001-03-11. Retrieved 2014-03-16.
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