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The Golden Child

 
Movies:

The Golden Child

  • Director: Michael Ritchie
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Adventure Comedy, Fantasy Comedy
  • Themes: Fish Out of Water, Priceless Artifacts and Prized Objects, Interracial/Cross-Cultural Romance
  • Main Cast: Eddie Murphy, Charles Dance, Charlotte Lewis, Victor Wong, J.L. Reate
  • Release Year: 1986
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 94 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

Eddie Murphy followed up his Beverly Hills Cop success with this fantasy adventure that plops him right into the land of Ray Harryhausen and Indiana Jones. The plot revolves around a God-like youngster (J.L. Reate) known as a "golden child," who has been sent to Tibet to bring the gift of compassion to humanity. But the devil isn't idle, sending his emissary, Sardo Numspa (Charles Dance) to kidnap the golden child. Sardo absconds with the child and takes off to Los Angeles. In L.A., a beautiful Tibetan priestess named Kee Nang (Charlotte Lewis) seeks out Chandler Jarrell (Eddie Murphy), a social worker and self-styled "finder of lost children." She tells Chandler he has been chosen to rescue the magical child from the devil and save the world from evil. Before Chandler can let go of his first riposte, he finds himself holding a magic dagger, following a sacred parakeet, and under-going several trials by fire. He also falls in love with Kee Nang, who at one point in the film has to be brought back from the dead. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide

Review

The Golden Child earned itself a sympathetic following, but that's largely because audiences, so receptive to Eddie Murphy after Beverly Hills Cop, agreed to look past its gaping flaws for another opportunity to see the young motormouth in action. Murphy himself does not disappoint, complaining about the bizarre scenarios thrust upon him with an indignant frustration that's above the fray. Cleverly, Murphy aligns himself with the audience, shaking his head alongside them at this uneven, genre-straddling action comedy adventure that dabbles in mystical special effects. If it sounds like there's too much going on in The Golden Child, just try watching it. Murphy is the only constant as the film jumps locations and switches tones, by the end producing so many misplaced effects that it resembles some of the most notorious big-budget duds before (Howard the Duck) and after (Hudson Hawk) its release. Veteran comedy director Michael Ritchie, fresh from the hit Fletch, seems in over his head, unable to reign in this unwieldy production. It's Murphy who saves things enough for the film to serve as a step forward in his charmed career. He wrings quotable lines from the scattershot screenplay and leaves a lasting impression of reluctant heroism, most notably when he must jump through an impossible obstacle course without spilling a single drop of water. Murphy just winks at the absurdity of it all, sharing enough fun with the audience to overcome their most serious doubts. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

Cast

Randall "Tex" Cobb - Til; James Hong - Dr. Hong; Shakti - Kala; Tau Logo - Yu; Tiger Chung Lee - Khan; Pons Maar - Fu; Peter Kwong - Tommy Tong; Kenneth "Fruity" Frith, Jr. - Friend at Pink's; Charles Levin - TV Host; Bennett Ohta - Herb Shop Clerk; Marilyn Schreffler - Kala; Wally Taylor - Det. Boggs; Bob Tzudiker - Businessman Customer; Eric Douglas - Yellow Dragon; Frank Welker - The Thing; Chantara Nop - Security Man #1

Credit

Lynda Paradise - Art Director, Gordon A. Webb - Associate Producer, Dennis Feldman - Co-producer, Wayne A. Finkelman - Costume Designer, Michael Ritchie - Director, Richard A. Harris - Editor, Richard Tienken - Executive Producer, Charles R. Meeker - Executive Producer, John Barry - Composer (Music Score), Michel Colombier - Composer (Music Score), Ken Chase - Makeup, Michael Gershman - Camera Operator, Rob Hahn - Camera Operator, J. Michael Riva - Production Designer, Donald Thorin - Cinematographer, Ed Feldman - Producer, Robert D. Wachs - Producer, Judy Cammer - Set Designer, Marvin March - Set Designer, Virginia Randolph - Set Designer, Industrial Light & Magic - Special Effects, James R. Alexander - Sound/Sound Designer, Dennis Feldman - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Big Trouble in Little China; Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade; Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom; The Jewel of the Nile; Spies Like Us; Super Mario Bros.; The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor
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Album Review: The Golden Child
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Review

Golden Child features Michael Allen Harrison performing a variety of holiday songs. Some of the featured songs include "Offering," "Good King," "Gift," and "Emanuel," along with six others. Most of the songs have a religious theme and should appeal to listeners looking for holiday music with a strong sense of Christianity. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
The Offering Michael Allen Harrison (2:12)
The Good King Michael Allen Harrison (6:18)
The Gift Michael Allen Harrison (2:27)
Emanuel Michael Allen Harrison (7:20)
Peaceful Place Michael Allen Harrison (3:27)
Bring a Torch Michael Allen Harrison (2:26)
Drummer Boy Michael Allen Harrison (4:29)
The Golden Child Michael Allen Harrison (6:12)
Shepherds Hurried to Bethlehem Michael Allen Harrison (4:24)
Deck the Halls Traditional Michael Allen Harrison (6:25)

Credits

Michael Allen Harrison (Main Performer), Julian Goble (Photography)
Wikipedia: The Golden Child
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The Golden Child

The Golden Child Movie Poster
Directed by Michael Ritchie
Produced by Edward S. Feldman
Robert D. Wachs
Written by Dennis Feldman
Starring Eddie Murphy
Charles Dance
Charlotte Lewis
Victor Wong
Randall "Tex" Cobb
James Hong
Music by Michel Colombier
Cinematography Donald E. Thorin
Editing by Richard A. Harris
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) December 12, 1986
Running time 94 minutes
Country United States
Language English

The Golden Child is a 1986 American mystical comedy film starring Eddie Murphy. Murphy plays Chandler Jarrell, a social worker who is confronted by a young Asian woman (Charlotte Lewis), who tells him that he is the Chosen One destined to save The Golden Child, the saviour of all mankind, from the clutches of the demon Sardo Numspa, played by Charles Dance. The film was directed by Michael Ritchie for Paramount Pictures.

Contents

Plot

In an unknown location in Tibet, a young boy with mystical abilities, the Golden Child, receives badges of station and demonstrates his power by reviving a dead bird, which is to become a constant companion. However, a band of villains led by a mysterious man (Sardo Numspa) breaks into the hidden temple, slaughters the monks and takes the boy away.

Some time afterwards, a young woman named Kee Nang watches a Los Angeles TV show in which Chandler Jarrell, a social worker who engages in finding missing children, appears and tries to present his latest case (a missing girl named Cheryll Mosley) over the host's prattling. She seeks him out the next day and openly informs him of the kidnapping of the Golden Child and that he is the 'Chosen One' who would recover it from the hands of evil. Jovial and worldly as he considers himself, Chandler does not take this seriously, even after the appearance of the astral form of the Child and his bird familiar following Chandler everywhere he goes, but he is instantly taken with Kee Nang and constantly tries to flirt with her.

Soon Cheryll Mosley is found, dead from loss of blood, near an abandoned house smeared with Tibetaian graffiti and a pot full of blood-soaked oatmeal. Kee Nang reveals to him that this house was a holding place for the Child and brings Chandler in contact with Doctor Hong, a mystic expert, and Kala (a creature half dragon, half human woman, who remains hidden behind a screen). Together they track down a motorcycle gang named the Yellow Dragons, which Cheryll had joined, and then the Chinese restaurant owner Tommy Tong, a henchman of Numspa, to whom Cheryll had been 'sold' for her blood, which was to be used to make the Child vulnerable to earthly harm; Tong, however, is killed by Numspa as a potential traitor. Still not taking the case too seriously, Chandler is quickly convinced when Numspa — whom Chandler begins to continuously call "Numsy" — draws him into a controlled dream, where he leaves a burn mark on Chandler's arm. He also presents his demands: the Ajanti Dagger (a mystic weapon which is capable of killing the Golden Child) in exchange for the boy.

Chandler and Kee travel to Tibet, where Chandler is apparently swindled by an old amulet seller, who later turns out to be the High Priest of the temple where the dagger is kept hidden and, subsequently, Kee's father (Chandler calls him "Monty Hall" or "Monty"). In order to obtain the blade, Chandler has to pass a test: an obstacle course in a bottomless cavern whilst carrying a glass of water without spilling even one drop. With luck and wits, Chandler recovers the blade and even manages to bring it past customs into the United States.

At their hideout, however, Numspa and his henchmen attack them. The Ajanti Dagger is lost to the villains, and Kee sacrifices her life for Chandler, taking a crossbow bolt meant for him, and dies in his arms confessing her love for him. Doctor Hong and Kala offers him hope, for as long as the sun shines upon Kee, the Child might be able to save her yet. Driven now by a personal motive, Chandler — with the help of the Child's familiar — locates Numspa's hideout, retrieves the dagger, fights past the guards with the help of Til, one of Numspa's men converted to good by the Child, and frees the boy. But as he prepares to finish Numspa, the latter reveals his true face as a flying demon from hell. Chandler and the Child escape the hideout, only to be tracked down by the demon. After some narrow escapes, Chandler and the child seek shelter in an old abandoned industrial warehouse, but seconds later, Sardo is back on top of them, destroying the warehouse and fighting Chandler. Having been outmatched by Sardo, he and the child escape, but Chandler loses the dagger after Sardo whacks him with his right wing. However, Sardo is buried under a chunk of falling masonry, allowing Chandler and the Child to escape again and head over to Doctor Hong's shop where Kee is being kept.

As the two approach Kee's body, a badly injured but berserk Numspa smashes up through the floor with the dagger in his hand, but his attempt to kill Chandler with it is foiled by the amulet the Old Man had sold him: the amulet emits a beam of light that blasts the dagger from Numspa's hand. The Child uses his magic to place the dagger back into Chandler's hands, and Chandler pierces Numspa through the heart with it, destroying him. The Child then uses the last ray of sunlight and his powers to bring Kee back from the dead. As the movie ends, the three take a walk discussing the Child's return to Tibet and (as Chandler jokingly suggests) the boy's prospective fame as a stage magician.

Cast

Production details

John Carpenter was at one point attached to direct, but ultimately dropped out. He would later direct Big Trouble in Little China, a film with similar Chinese mysticism themes which was initially set to be released in the same time frame as this film.

Actor Mel Gibson was also originally slated to play the role of Chandler Jarrell. When Gibson was unavailable, the producers selected Murphy, and changed the movie from a serious adventure drama to a partial comedy. Until Murphy did The Nutty Professor, this was the only film he starred in that was rated less than R in America. Gene LeBell makes a small, cameo appearance as a drunk member of the Yellow Dragons biker gang with horrible breath from previously-consumed liquor. A tied-up Murphy, as LeBell (in character) coughs near his face, begs him to please take as many Tic Tacs from out of his pocket as he likes.

John Barry began scoring this film, but during production left the project after differences with the producers, and his music was replaced with a mostly synth-pop/orchestral score by Michel Colombier, however some Barry cues remain in the final film, and one track, "Wisdom of the Ages," appears on the soundtrack.

Contrary to popular opinion,[who?] the Ajanti Dagger in the film is not the same knife prop used in The Shadow (with Alec Baldwin), but both are based on the Tibetan Phurba dagger. The exotic weapons wielded by the villain Tommy Tong are called hook swords.

Yodha was a Malayalam film inspired from this movie.

Although the Golden Child is referred to as a boy throughout the film, the character was actually played by a girl.

Reception

Released in December 1986, The Golden Child was a box office success. It took in $79,817,937[1] in the U.S. alone, making it the 8th biggest film of the year. However, the film was considered a disappointment by the studio when compared to Murphy's previous film, Beverly Hills Cop, which garnered $234,760,478[2] at the U.S. box office.

References

  1. ^ The Golden Child (1986)
  2. ^ Beverly Hills Cop (1984)

External links



 
 

 

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Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Golden Child" Read more

 

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