I was in the mood for some good Chinese fantasy, and saw Stephen Chow's name, so I picked up the two-disc set A Chinese Odyssey Part One: Pandora’s Box (1995) and A Chinese Odyssey Part Two: Cinderella (1995).
I'm not sure I will be able to summarize these crazy movies. It starts with Monkey King (Stephen Chow) mouthing off to Kwan Yin, refusing to help Longevity Monk (Law Kar-ying). Kwan Yin subdues him, and decides to kill him ("He's really annoying!"), but the monk intervenes for him. So she only makes in incarnate as a human, 500 years later.
As a human, Chow remembers nothing of Monkey or his quest. Instead he is the leader of a bandit band. The band runs into a pair of demon women, Spider Lady (Yammy Lam) and Bai Jing Jing (Karen Mok). They plan to find the reincarnated Longevity Monk and eat him, to gain his powers. Both of them also more or less fall for Chow, but Chow particularly goes for Mok. There are some more demons, some hurly-burly, and Mok thinks that Chow got Lam pregnant, and kills herself.
When Chow finds out, he is frantic. He finds "Pandora's box" which allows him to travel back in time. Each time he does, he arrives too late. On his last try, he goes back 500 years. He meets a minor deity, Athena Chu, who tells him everything in the area belongs to her, including Chow himself and the Pandora's box.
In Part Two, we learn a bit more about Chu's character. She is a swordswoman wandering the dunes, in a very Ashes of Time manner. In a fight with some disguised demons, she reveals her true self, and her sword. The sword is magic - it can only be drawn by her true love. When she meets Chow, what do you think he does? So now he is entwined with three beautiful supernatural beings. He has also realized that he is really the Monkey King, but still doesn't want to go to the West with Longevity Monk. He's really annoying.
As far as I can tell, Chu has an evil twin, with whom she shares a body - the evil twin only comes out under the moon. Is this magic or mental illness? Chow romances the twin to get the Pandora's box back - or is he really falling for her? This is another Ashes of Time theme - the mutability of identity.
Then a lot of stuff happens, and he gets killed. He realizes that Chu is who he truly loves, but Kwan Yin reminds him of his duty, and he accepts it. His ghost wraps up a few loose ends, and it's off to get the Sutras in the West.
So, a lot of stuff happens, which is normal for these Monkey stories. There is also a lot of low humor, also typical. My favorite is in the second part, when Longevity Monk gets on everyone's nerves by being so pious. As he explains to the demons who are guarding him, "Demons are the same as humans. They should be treated with kindness." The demons listening throw up, and/or attempt to kill themselves. Even Kwan Yin, Buddha of Compassion, thinks he's annoying.
This movie certainly isn't as tight as Journey to the West, which Chow directed as well as starred in. This one is written and directed by Jeffrey Lau, and it's a little bit of a grab-bag. Some stupid jokes, some thrilling fights, some hot demon-girls - really what more could I ask for?