Wu Assassins

Wu Assassins is an American supernatural action web television series, created by John Wirth and Tony Krantz that premiered on Netflix on August 8, 2019. The series stars Iko Uwais, Byron Mann, Lewis Tan, Lawrence Kao, Celia Au, Li Jun Li, Tommy Flanagan and Katheryn Winnick. The first season received positive reviews, with critics praising the fight choreography, although there was criticism of the plot.

Wu Assassins
Genre
Created by
Starring
Composer(s)Jeehun Hwang
Country of originUnited States
Original language(s)English
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes10 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s)
  • John Wirth
  • Chad Oakes
  • Michael Frislev
  • Tony Krantz
  • Stephen Fung
Producer(s)Chris Rudolph
CinematographyJohn Bartley
Editor(s)
  • Elísabet Rónaldsdottir
  • Bridget Durnford
  • Christopher A. Smith
Camera setupSingle-camera
Running time40–50 minutes
Production company(s)
Release
Original networkNetflix
Picture format4K (16:9 UHDTV in high dynamic range)
Audio formatDolby Digital
Original releaseAugust 8, 2019 (2019-08-08) 
present (present)
External links
Website

Premise

Kai Jin, a young Chinatown chef in present-day San Francisco, becomes entangled with the Chinese Triad's pursuit of deadly ancient powers known as the 'Wu Xing.' After an encounter with a mystical spirit, Kai reluctantly becomes the Wu Assassin, using his enhanced martial arts skills to recover supernatural powers from five modern day criminals threatening to use them to destroy the world."[2]

Cast and characters

Main

  • Iko Uwais as Kai Jin, a Chinese-Indonesian chef in San Francisco's Chinatown, who learns that he is the last of the Wu Assassins, who are destined to kill the five Wu Warlords, who possess supernatural powers based around fire, wood, earth, metal and water. As the Wu Assassin he has increased physical strength and agility, is able to change his appearance to hide his identity, and can withstand the Wu Lords' supernatural attacks.
  • Byron Mann as Uncle Six, a leader of the Triad with supernatural abilities who runs the criminal world in San Francisco's Chinatown and is Kai Jin's adoptive father. As the Fire Wu he can create tendrils and projectiles made of fire, and can heat up and set objects alight.
  • Li Jun Li as Jenny Wah, a young restaurateur who runs her family's Chinese-American restaurant, Master Wah's, and is Kai Jin's friend.
  • Celia Au as Ying Ying, a woman who teaches Kai the ways of a Wu Assassin. She was the first Wu Assassin to hunt and fight the Wu Warlords.
  • Lewis Tan as Lu Xin Lee, Kai's friend who owns Lee's Wheels, a custom garage, which he also uses as front for car theft for the Triad and Alec.
  • Lawrence Kao as Tommy Wah, Jenny's older brother who is a heroin addict and a member of the Triad.
  • Tommy Flanagan as Alec McCullough, a Scottish crime boss who operates mostly in Europe, who relocates to San Francisco to try to take over the criminal world of the Triad in San Francisco's Chinatown. He is a former Wu Assassin who became the Wood Wu Lord, who can manipulate plants and trees, and has healing powers that result in him having an extended lifespan.
  • Katheryn Winnick as Christine "CG" Gavin, an undercover inspector of the San Francisco Police Department, recently hired to work at Lee's Wheels.

Recurring

  • Tzi Ma as Mr. Young, Kai's neighbor and a Chinese grocery owner
  • JuJu Chan as Zan, the triad's lieutenant and Uncle Six's right-hand woman, though she is determined to become the triad's leader
  • Mark Dacascos as an unnamed monk, whose body and face disguises Kai's identity when he fights as the Wu Assassin
  • Cranston Johnson as Frank Fletcher, the police captain of San Francisco Police Department and CG's boss

Guest

  • Jeff Fahey as Jack, a retired cop whom CG visits for information on Uncle Six (in "Fire Chicken")
  • Robin McLeavy as Maggie McCullough, Alec McCullough's late wife (in "Codladh Sámh", "Gu Assassins", and "Paths: Part 2")
  • Kevin Durand as James Baxter, the Earth Wu, who can control the earth, telekinetically move rocks, and turn flesh to stone (in "Legacy")
  • Summer Glau as Miss Jones, the Water Wu, who can turn into and manipulate water (in "Paths: Parts 1 & 2")
  • Travis Caldwell as Gideon, the Metal Wu, who can manipulate metal, electronics, electricity and possess people's bodies through their hemoglobin (in "Paths: Parts 1 & 2")

Episodes

No.TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal release date
1"Drunken Watermelon"Stephen FungJohn WirthAugust 8, 2019 (2019-08-08)
Kai Jin is a Chinatown chef. One day, he is attacked by Triad thugs and escapes, but finds an unconscious young woman in the street. The woman wakes up and reveals that she is Ying Ying, the first Wu assassin. She deems Kai to be pure of heart and gives him a monk shard, which gives him the power to defeat the modern day Wu Warlords. Uncle Six, Kai's stepfather, tries to recruit him to the Triads, but Kai refuses. When Kai's neighbor is attacked by the Triad, Kai defeats all of them in disguise as one of the original monks. Meanwhile, the FBI boss Frankie hires Christine Gavin to follow a triad member named Lu Xin Lee, who is Kai Jin's best friend, to investigate the conflict between the Russian Mob and the Triad.
2"Misspent Youth"Stephen FungCameron LitvackAugust 8, 2019 (2019-08-08)
Kai starts to understand the role of the Wu Assassin, although he still claims that he is not a killer. Uncle Six learns about the Wu assassin. CG starts working for Lu Xin, and meets Kai. Kai learns that his stepfather, Uncle Six, is the Fire Wu Lord. Jenny saves Tommy from an opium gang.
3"Fire Chicken"Roel ReinéYalun TuAugust 8, 2019 (2019-08-08)
Alec's Russian gang kills Uncle Six's entire counterfeiting operation in a night club, which causes Frankie to be worried about CG. Kai follows CG to warn her about her fate in his dreams before leaving which makes CG search up Kai. Jenny scolds Tommy for relapsing into doing heroin and having trouble with gangs, and tells him that their parents will be meeting with them soon. Kai meets up with Jenny to ask her if he can work under her due to his food truck being ruined, to which Jenny agrees. Jenny also reveals to Kai that she took a loan from Uncle Six to remodel the restaurant, which upsets him. CG tells her boss to give her a week to capture the Russian gang leader and Uncle Six, meanwhile Uncle Six tells his men to find the Wu Assassin. Tommy drives Zan, Uncle Six's bodyguard, and men to kidnap all the bald chefs in Chinatown. Uncle Six meets up with Kai to try to reconnect with him, but fails. Jenny confronts Zan in a fight when she sees Zan kidnapping her chef, but Zan defeats her. Kai finds Zan, and purposely gets captured to confront Uncle Six. Meanwhile, CG meets up with a witness who tells her that a fire monster burned down a building that had Uncle Six's men in it.
4"A Twisting Snake"Roel ReinéDavid SimkinsAugust 8, 2019 (2019-08-08)
15 years ago, Tommy, Jenny, Lu Xin, and Kai snuck into a building to get some fireworks when Uncle Six killed the Triad Leaders( including Raymond Tong) to get their positions by using his fire powers. As a result, Lu Xin Lee was burned, and Tommy was held responsible. In the present day, Uncle Six nearly kills Kai when CG distracts Uncle Six, and escape but not before Uncle Six realizes that Kai is the Wu Assassin. Jenny and Tommy meet up with their parents but the meeting ends disastrously as their father is disappointed with the modern remodeling. Kai explains everything to CG, but CG receives a call from Lu Xin. Kai meets Ying Ying again, where she reveals that she was the first Wu Assassin that managed to defeat all 5 Wu Lords, but was killed. Ying Ying shows Kai the statues of all the past Wu Assassins, meanwhile the meeting with the Russian gang goes south and CG realizes that they will kill Lu Xin. Kai looks at a photo of Alec McCullough, recognizing him as a past version of Wu Assassin.
5"Codladh Sámh"Toa FraserJulie Benson & Shawna BensonAugust 8, 2019 (2019-08-08)
CG and Lu Xin kill all the thugs, where CG reveals that she was an undercover cop. Kai takes Tommy and Jenny to where Lu Xin and CG are, where he reveals to everyone that he is the Wu Assassin. Uncle Six tries to threaten McCullough, but McCullough reveals that he is the Wood Wu Lord. McCullough explains that he was once the Wu Assassin 500 years ago, however after the Water Wu Lord kills his wife and child, he tries to resurrect them by killing himself and then immediately returning to life as the recently fallen Wood Wu Lord, who has healing powers; however he is unsuccessful in bringing his family back to life and is cursed with an extended lifespan. Tommy gets rid of the dead bodies, while Kai and Jenny devise a plan to kill Uncle Six. Kai's plan fails as Uncle Six knows he is the Wu Assassin, and offers a truce to defeat McCullough.
6"Gu Assassins"Toa FraserCameron Litvack & John WirthAugust 8, 2019 (2019-08-08)
The day before, Jenny fights against Zan and loses to her. McCullough plans to get all 5 Wu pieces to revive his family, as a result the world will end. In the present, Uncle Six tells Kai to kill the Earth Wu to stop McCollough, in return Kai will remove the Fire Wu piece from Uncle Six. Lu Xin gathers 5 animals and sucks the poison out, then Kai does a blood ritual with all the people affected by the Fire Wu (Tommy, Lu Xin, himself, and Jenny) which produces Gu, a poison that can remove the Fire Wu. Ying Ying objects this, seeing it as too risky and as a result she loses connection to Kai. Zan takes Uncle Six to Jenny's restaurant, where they successfully removed the Fire Wu. Kai gives the Fire Wu piece to CG, and it is revealed that Zan is actually a double spy for McCullough after Uncle Six insults her dreams of being the new Triad boss, and she reveals that Uncle Six lost the Fire Wu and Kai is the Wu Assassin.
7"Legacy"Katheryn WinnickDavid Simkins & Yalun TuAugust 8, 2019 (2019-08-08)
James Baxter, the Earth Wu Lord, kills a woman named Jill and her boyfriend Danny after deeming them not worthy to help save the Earth. Kai takes Uncle Six to Oregon where James Baxter lives, unaware that Lu Xin is following them. While at a diner, Kai and Uncle Six win a brawl after one of the waitress makes racist remarks. Uncle Six remembers that the day he killed a man in front of a young Kai, he found the Fire Wu shard. Uncle Six and Kai slowly repair their relationship, with Uncle Six explaining that he took Kai in because both of them had similar pasts. The next day, Kai confronts James and kills him, with the latter warning him to keep the earth shard away from McCullough, while Lu Xin plans to kill Uncle Six for causing the fire that burned his body, but decides not to.
8"Ladies' Night"Tony KrantzJulie Benson & Shawna BensonAugust 8, 2019 (2019-08-08)
The Metal Wu Lord meets up with McCullough to get the Fire Wu piece from CG. After meeting up with Kai, CG purposely gets arrested by taking tires off a car to see Frankie, her boss, to tell him everything. The Metal Wu Lord takes control of a police woman name Riley, where they arrest Tommy due to him owning a gun that killed Uncle Six's men (who were killed by the Russian gang). Jenny gets a voice mail from Tommy, and arrives at the police station with her lawyer. Riley shuts down the police precint, which allows Zan to shoot the police precint. CG knocks out Riley due to her suspicions, and helps Jenny defeat Zan. Frankie gets taken over by the Metal Wu, and McCullough captures Tommy. Before Zan can take the Fire Wu, Jenny takes the Fire Wu for herself and becomes the new Fire Wu Lord. Frankie transfers the Metal Wu piece to CG, and McCullough makes a deal: Jenny must sacrifice herself to release the Fire Wu, or Tommy will die.
9"Paths: Part 1"Michael NankinDavid Simkins & Yalun TuAugust 8, 2019 (2019-08-08)
Miss Jones, the Water Wu Lord, kills an old man after losing a poker game and steals an artifact that is a guide post to the after life. Zan meets up with Uncle Six and tells him of a negotiation: McCullough has captured CG, Tommy, and Jenny. To free them, Kai must give the Earth Wu shard to McCullough. McCullough calls Kai, but Kai hangs up on McCullough and Uncle Six tries to recruit a Triad army, but is injured by Zan. A monk that Kai has been impersonating takes Kai Jin to the Path, where he explains that if McCullough succeeds with his plan, then it will cause a disrupt in the space-time continuum. Kai and Lu Xin take out McCullough's thugs and to free Jenny. Meanwhile CG temporarily breaks free of Gideon's control, while Jenny, Kai, and Lu Xin devise a plan. When they go back home, the Triad records Zan killing Uncle Six.
10"Paths: Part 2"Michael NankinCameron Litvack & Jessica ChouAugust 8, 2019 (2019-08-08)
Kai destroys his room in a fit of rage after seeing Uncle Six dead. After calming down, he and Lu Xin goes to McCullough's meeting. McCullough heals Tommy, Kai attempts to thwart McCullough's plan by giving Tommy the Earth Wu, however McCullough reveals that to open the gate to the Dao, there must be 5 human hosts for the Wu pieces. The group is transported to the Dao, where Kai manages to gather the 5 Wu Pieces, opening a portal back to the human world. Kai and his friends fight through McCullough's henchmen, killing Gideon. Lu Xin leads the others to the portal back to the human world except for Miss Jones (who grieves over her boyfriend's body), while Kai follows McCullough through a portal that transports him to his family. McCullough reunites with his family, and suspicious of his modern appearance they reject him at first, but he quickly convinces them that he is the real McCullough. Kai tracks down McCullough, and finally kills him but spares his family. Six weeks later at the restaurant Lu Xin tells Kai that Zan is in Macau trying to recruit more members, and Lu leaves to see CG where they kiss. A man asks Jenny to help make Chinatown a better place, and Kai looks inside the envelope Lu Xin gave to him when he sees Ying Ying, who tells him that the world still needs a Wu Assassin as the building begins to shake.

Production

Development

On June 29, 2018, it was announced that Netflix had given the production a series order for a ten-episode first season.[1] The series is co-created, executive produced and co-written by John Wirth. Other executive producers include co-creator Tony Krantz and Nomadic Pictures’ Chad Oakes and Mike Frislev. Stephen Fung will direct the first two episodes, with Krantz expected to helm another. In addition to playing the lead, Uwais also will serve as producer, lead martial arts and fight choreographer and stunt coordinator.[3][4]

Casting

In June 2018, Uwais was cast in the lead role of Kai Jin.[3] In the same month, it was announced that Byron Mann was cast in the series regular role as Uncle Six.[5] In July 2018, it was announced that Tzi Ma, Tommy Flanagan, Lewis Tan and Katheryn Winnick were cast in their respective main roles of Mr. Young, Alec McCullough, Lu Xin Lee and Christine Gavin.[6] In August 2018, it was reported that JuJu Chan and Mark Dacascos were cast in recurring roles.[7] In October 2018, Lawrence Kao and Celia Au joined the main cast.[8] In November 2018, it was revealed that Summer Glau was cast in the minor role of Miss Jones.[9] In January 2019, Li Jun Li joined the main cast in the role of Jenny Wah.[10][11]

Filming

Principal photography for the first season took place on location in Vancouver, Canada from August 8, 2018 to November 20, 2018.[12]

Release

Marketing

On July 23, 2019, the official trailer for the series was released.[13]

Critical reception

The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported the first season had 83% approval rating based on 23 reviews, with an average rating of 6.79/10. The critical consensus reads "Though its story at times leaves something to be desired, Wu Assassins's exceptional choreography and bold aesthetic makes it an action packed delight."[14]

Nick Allen for RogerEbert.com previewed the first three episodes and gave a positive review. Allen wrote: "[Wu Assassins] harnesses Uwais' energy as both a fighter and an actor in an exciting fashion, and creates a giddy opportunity for martial arts awesomeness to flourish."[15] Stephen Harber from Den of Geek wrote: "I think this show has potential. I like the cast. I like the premise. I like the Shaw Brothers vibes and that faint odor of tokusatsu I'm picking up on, too." He suggests the show is a "guilty pleasure" but is concerned about the B-stories and side characters, which he says feels padded out.[16] Isaac Feldberg of The Boston Globe says the show "isn’t reinventing the wheel. But it does effectively showcase lead Iko Uwais" and praises the fight sequences, "brawls so carefully choreographed they play like bone-crunching ballets — "Wu" coasts on the same, all-important rule of cool every Hollywood action franchise [...] seems to have forgotten."[17]

References

  1. Baysinger, Tim (June 29, 2018). "Martial-Arts Drama 'Wu Assassins' Picked up by Netflix". The Wrap. Retrieved June 12, 2019.
  2. Lawrence, Derek (July 23, 2019). "Exclusive: The Raid star kicks more ass in trailer for new Netflix series Wu Assassins". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved July 23, 2019.
  3. Otterson, Joe (June 29, 2018). "Netflix Orders Martial Arts Drama 'Wu Assassins,' Iko Uwais to Star". Variety. Retrieved June 8, 2018.
  4. Chu, Karen (August 7, 2019). "'Wu Assassins' Director Stephen Fung Talks Netflix's First Martial Arts Original Series". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved August 7, 2019.
  5. Andreeva, Nellie (June 29, 2018). "Netflix Orders Martial Arts Drama Series 'Wu Assassins' Starring Iko Uwais From Tony Krantz, John Wirth & Nomadic Pics". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved October 1, 2018.
  6. Petski, Denise (July 20, 2018). "'Wu Assassins': Katheryn Winnick, Lewis Tan, Tommy Flanagan & Tzi Ma Join Netflix Martial Arts Drama". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved July 27, 2018.
  7. Petski, Denise (August 15, 2018). "'Wu Assassins': JuJu Chan & Mark Dacascos To Recur In Netflix Martial Arts Drama". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved September 29, 2018.
  8. Ramos, Dino-Ray (October 17, 2018). "'Wu Assassins': Lawrence Kao And Celia Au Join Netflix Martial Arts Series". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved October 17, 2018.
  9. Vanne, Chris D. (November 4, 2018). "Summer joins Netflix Sci-Fi drama Wu Assassins". Retrieved November 29, 2018.
  10. Petski, Denise (January 15, 2019). "'Wu Assassins': Li Jun Li Cast In Netflix Martial Arts Series". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved January 15, 2019.
  11. Cruz, Rachel (January 17, 2019). "Netflix Martial Arts Drama 'Wu Assassins' Adds Li Jun Li". Business Times. Retrieved January 28, 2019.
  12. Takeuchi, Craig (July 17, 2018). "Filming in Vancouver: Iko Uwais in Wu Assassins, Rachel Bilson in Take Two, The Order, and More". Inside Vancouver. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  13. Yeoman, Kevin (July 23, 2019). "Wu Assassins Trailer: First Look At Netflix's Supernatural Martial Arts Series". Screenrant. Retrieved July 23, 2019.
  14. "Wu Assassins: Season 1 (2019)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved December 2, 2019.
  15. Allen, Nick. "Netflix's Wu Assassins is a Stunning Showcase for Rising Martial Arts Star Iko Uwais". RogerEbert.com.
  16. Stephen Harber (August 7, 2019). "Wu Assassins Review (Spoiler Free)". Den of Geek.
  17. Feldberg, Isaac (August 8, 2019). "Three options in the streaming world for Friday viewing - The Boston Globe". BostonGlobe.com. Archived from the original on August 9, 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.