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 Story? What story? All a movie like Shanghai Noon needs is the  amazing stunt set pieces featuring kung fu superstar Jackie Chan and the drolly  caffeinated ramblings of Owen Wilson (and to be sure, that's all it gets). It's  a buddy comedy about Roy O'Bannon (Wilson), a minor, borderline incompetent  desperado, and Chon Wang (Chan)--Roy thinks he hears (and scoffs at) the name  "John Wayne"--a member of the Chinese Imperial Guard searching for a kidnapped  princess (Lucy Liu). They become reluctant partners in the Old West (Roy, who  considers Chon his sidekick, is hurt to discover that the bounty on Wang's head  is more than his own), brawling, drinking, bathing, and bonding and in general  having mildly amusing adventures together, while eluding a posse and other  random enemies.
   There's not a lot of focus to the plot or much motivation for characters to turn  up where and when they do--just what was achieved by the much-discussed trek to  Carson City, anyway? But Chan's inventively staged battle sequences  (particularly an early one in which he uses flexible, resilient trees to best  some Crow Indians) are predictable highlights. You'll wish there were more to  some of them, but as with his many of other films, you'll want them on video to  watch in slow-motion to see how he pulls them off. And in a potentially star- making role, Wilson's loquacious, hyper-self-conscious meanderings--he's funny  even when his lines aren't--make him seem less like a character than a very  amusing deconstruction of one. Chan and Wilson are entertaining together, even  though they're both off in their own little worlds. Think of it as Butch  Cassidy and the Shanghai Kid, and you won't be too far off. --David  Kronke
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