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Not to be confused with the comic book.
Chun Li Poster

Theatrical Poster

Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li is the second and final[citation needed] live-action film based on the Street Fighter series. It follows the quest of Chun-Li, portrayed by Smallville star Kristin Kreuk. The film co-stars Neal McDonough as M. Bison, Chris Klein as Charlie, Michael Clarke Duncan as Balrog, and Black Eyed Peas singer Taboo as Vega. Rick Yune was originally cast as Gen but has been replaced by Robin Shou, who portrayed Liu Kang in the Mortal Kombat series. The film was released in theaters on February 27, 2009. The movie was not well received by critics or fans; much like the series' first live action big budget Hollywood movie, common criticism included that it was unfaithful to its source material, amongst other complaints.

Due to the film's failure, Capcom was also critical of the film and decided to disallow further live-action adaptation of it's works, resulting in the cancellation of the sequels.[citation needed]

Plot[]

As a child, Chun-Li moves from San Francisco to Hong Kong with her family. There, along with piano, she learns Wushu from her father, Xiang (Edmund Chen), a well connected businessman. One night, her home is attacked by Bison and his right-hand man Balrog. Xiang fights them off until Balrog grabs a hold of a young Chun Li, forcing him to surrender.

Years later, Chun-Li grows up and becomes a talented concert pianist. At the end of one of her concerts, she receives a scroll written in ancient Chinese text. On her way home, she sees a mysterious homeless man getting assaulted by street thugs. After the thugs leave, Chun Li tends to him and notices a spiderweb tattoo on his hand. Meanwhile, Xiang is shown working for Bison as a prisoner, only allowed to view pictures of his grown up daughter. Back home, Chun Li's mother finally loses her battle to cancer as Chun Li and her servants mourn her loss at a funeral.

Elsewhere, Nash and Maya investigate the murder of several heads of criminal syndicate families in Bangkok. Chun Li on the side is meeting with a wise old lady in town who studies the scroll and tells her to find a man named Gen in Bangkok, revealing to her an image of the same spiderweb she saw tattooed on the homeless man's hand. With a new goal in mind, Chun Li leaves her home and heads to Bangkok. After days of searching for Gen without any luck, she sees a man being assaulted in an alley by thugs. Chun Li comes to his rescue and fights them. After a long battle ended by finishing them with a Bike Rack Drop Ultra move, Chun Li collapses in exhaustion. There, we see Gen pick her up to take her to his home.

Gen tells Chun Li that he knows how to find her father and that Bison has him, but that she also needs anger management. In response, she goes to an internet cafe to find out more about Bison, who is now holding the families of property owners hostage in order to force them to sign their property over to him. Upon leaving, one of the owners is asked to hand over the rights to a docking harbor, allowing the shipment of the "White Rose". Chun Li overhears this. Meanwhile at Interpol, Nash figures out that Bison's headquarters are right across the street from the Police Station.

Later that night, Cantana, one of Bison's secretaries, goes to a nightclub. Chun Li spies on her and notices her eyeing the girls in the club. Chun Li moves in and seductively dances with her before casually walking away into the bathroom. Cantana follows her and locks the bathroom door. Chun Li beats Cantana until Cantana reveals the location of the White Rose. Cantana's bodyguards come back and Chun Li escapes after fighting them off. As a result of this incident, Bison kills Cantana by using her as a punching bag and then orders Balrog to contact Vega.

Gen reveals to Chun-Li of Bison's origins. The son of Irish missionaries, Bison grew up an orphan and lived his life as a thief. Many years later, Bison killed his pregnant wife by forcing their unborn daughter out of her womb prematurely in order to lose his conscience and transfer it to his daughter. Bison's henchmen later come after Gen and Chun Li. Gen fights them off until Balrog blows up his house with an RPG. With Gen gone and nowhere to be found, Chun Li runs off. She is then attacked by Vega, who she defeats soundly and hangs upside down over the side of a building.

Chun Li then heads to the harbor and interrogates an employee into telling her the arrival time of the White Rose. Later that night, this turns out to be a trap as several Shadaloo soldiers capture her. Chun Li is then taken back to Shadaloo headquarters and is reunited with her father. Bison tells her that Xiang outlived his usefulness and breaks his neck, killing him. However, as Bison and Balrog leave, Chun-Li escapes when the henchmen try to swing her around from the ceiling like a pinata. During the escape, she is shot in the arm by Balrog while trying to protect a child. e.. Before Balrog could recapture her, angered Thai locals who witness the event then pelt Balrog and other Shadaloo henchmen with fruits, food, and other merchandis. Chun Li meanwhile, is rescued again by Gen, who narrowly escaped death and survived the explosion in his house.

Chun Li approaches Nash and tells him she needs backup to take down Bison. Nash and Maya oblige as Chun Li approaches the dock employee who set her up last time. The employee tells her that he was forced into deceiving her and tells her the real arrival time. Chun Li doubts him at first, but he points to the white board at the arrival time, proving that it is true. At the dock later that night, Interpol agents engage in a shootout with Shadaloo soldiers wherein Maya is wounded. Chun-Li enters a ship and meets a girl who speaks Russian asking for her father before leaving her to continue her search for Bison. Meanwhile, Gen fights Balrog and kills him by stabbing him with a pipe spraying nitrogen. Bison takes the girl, who is revealed to be his daughter Rose, and flees the scene by helicopter. Bison takes her in and welcomes her warmly.

Chun-Li, Gen, Nash and a SWAT officer arrive at Bison's headquarters, where Nash and the officer take Rose out to safety while Chun-Li and Gen face Bison. After a long battle, Chun-Li hits Bison with a bamboo pole and drops sandbags on him, stunning him. She then charges up a Kikoken and shoots it at him, knocking him off the scaffolding before she jumps and twists his neck with her legs. Nash tells Chun-Li to leave the scene as Thai police arrive.

Back in Hong Kong, Chun Li is settled down as Gen pays her a visit. He shows her an ad for a Street Fighter tournament, telling her about a Japanese fighter named Ryu. Chun Li declines, saying that she's home for now.

Differences between the film and the games[]

  • Chun-Li is an American of Chinese descent, as opposed to a native of China.
  • Chun-Li's father is a businessperson instead of a police officer.
  • Charlie is an Interpol agent instead of a soldier in the U.S. army.
  • Vega is a plain-looking Latino, as opposed to an attractive Spaniard.
  • Rose is M.Bison's teenaged daughter here, as opposed to an adult woman who happens to share some of the Dictator's soul.
  • C. Viper is a police detective instead of a journalist employed by Seth.

Reception[]

The movie was not well received by critics or fans; Rotten Tomatoes currently lists the movie at a "4% Fresh" rating, with 50 negative and 2 positive reviews. The general consensus among most critics was that unlike the first movie, which had developed a campy-but-fun reputation, The Legend of Chun-Li drifted too far from its source material and was simply unwatchable. In addition, the movie was a box office flop, taking in less than $9 million domestically, with an estimated budget of over $50 million.

Cast[]

Character Actor
Chun-Li Kristin Kreuk
Charlie Chris Klein
Balrog Michael Clarke Duncan
Vega Taboo
Gen Robin Shou
Detective Maya Sunee Moon Bloodgood
M. Bison Neal McDonough
Huang (Chun-Li's father) Edmund Chen
Young Rose Elizaveta Kiryukhina
Cantana Josie Ho
Zhilan Cheng Pei-pei

DVD[]

The Theatrical and Unrated 2 DVD version was released on June 30, 2009 in North America

Contents[]

  • Number of discs: 2

Special Edition features DVD features:

Disc 1:

  • 2.35:1 anamorphic wide-screen
  • 14 Deleted Scenes
  • Audio Commentary by Patrick Aiello, Ashok Amritraj, Neal McDonough and Chris Klein
  • Audio: English Dolby Digital 5.1
  • Becoming a Street Fighter
  • Behind the Fight: Production Gallery
  • Chun Li: Bringing the Legend to Life
  • Fox Movie Channel Presents Making a Scene
  • Interactive Menus
  • Marvel vs. Capcom 2 Sneak Peek
  • Recreating the Game: Arcade to Film Comparisons
  • Scene Selection
  • Street Fighter Round One Fight - Animated Feature Film
  • The Fight in Black and White: Storyboard Gallery
  • Trailers

Disc 2:

  • Street Fighter: Round One - FIGHT!

Characters[]

Heroes[]

Neutrals[]

Villains[]

Trivia[]

  • Rick Yune was originally cast as Gen, but he was replaced by Robin Shou, who is the only actor in the cast who has previously featured in other movies based on a video game: he played Liu Kang in Mortal Kombat (1995) and its sequel Mortal Kombat: Annihilation (1997), as well as having a cameo role in DOA: Dead or Alive (2006).
  • Kristin Kreuk left Smallville for this role.
  • Most of the back story setting up the alliance between Chun-Li and Nash can be found in the deleted scenes on the DVD.
  • M. Bison's alternate name for Shadaloo was the Shadow Empire, like in the video games.
  • Crates throughout Bangkok's industrial area were labeled "Toei". That was the Japanese animation group of American action hits-such as G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero. This can also refer to Capcom's rival, Nintendo distributor Koei.
  • During some scenes at Central Police of Bangkok, can be seen a man similar to Guile, with the same military cut and next to Charlie.
  • Ryu is mentioned in the final scenes of film, although his name is mispronounced "rai-yu".
  • During the nightclub scene, Chun-Li has her hair in her signature "buns" from the video game series.
  • In the flashback to Chun-Li's father giving her the spinning bird necklace, Chun-Li saying "thank you" in Chinese is translated in subtitles as "I love you".

Videos[]

External links[]

Street Fighter series
Video games (Full list)
Main games Street Fighter · Street Fighter II (Champion Editon · Hyper Fighting · Super · Turbo · Hyper · HD Remix · Ultra) · Street Fighter Alpha: Warriors' Dreams (Alpha 2 · Alpha 3) · Street Fighter III (2nd Impact · 3rd Strike) · Street Fighter IV (Super · Arcade Edition · Ultra) · Street Fighter V (Arcade Edition · Champion Edition) · Street Fighter 6
Spinoffs Street Fighter EX (EX2 · EX3) · Street Fighter 2010 · Street Fighter: The Movie (Arcade version · Home version) · Street Fighter II: The Interactive Movie · Street Fighter: The Storytelling Game · Chun-Li ni makase China · Street Fighter: Puzzle Spirits · Street Fighter: Battle Combination · Super Street Fighter IV: PachiSlot Edition
Crossovers Marvel vs. Capcom series · SNK vs. Capcom series · Namco × Capcom series · Taisen Net Gimmick Capcom & Psikyo All Stars · Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo · Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix · Capcom Fighting All-Stars · Capcom Fighting Jam · Cannon Spike · Tatsunoko vs. Capcom · Street Fighter Online: Mouse Generation · Street Fighter × Mega Man · Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U · Street Fighter × All Capcom · Japan Sumo Cup: Yokozuna vs. Street Fighter · Puzzle Fighter · Super Smash Bros. Ultimate · TEPPEN · Street Fighter: Duel
Compilations Street Fighter Anniversary Collection · Street Fighter Alpha Anthology · Street Fighter Collection · Street Fighter Collection 2 · Street Fighter 30th Anniversary Collection
Shared Universe Final Fight series · Slam Masters series · Rival Schools series · Captain Commando
Miscellaneous List of games · List of playable characters · List of non-playable characters
Other media
Film/Television Future Cops · Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie · Live-action film · Street Fighter II: Yomigaeru Fujiwara-kyō · Street Fighter II V (List of episodes) · US TV series (List of episodes) · Street Fighter Alpha: The Animation · Street Fighter Alpha: Generations · Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li · Street Fighter IV: The Ties That Bind · Super Street Fighter IV OVA · Street Fighter - Round One: Fight! · Balrog: Behind the Glory · Street Fighter: Legacy · Street Fighter: Assassin's Fist · Street Fighter: World Warrior · Matador · Street Fighter: Resurrection
Comics Street Fighter II (manga) · Street Fighter Gaiden · Street Fighter (UDON) (Legends: Chun-Li · Legends: Ibuki · Issue 0 · Street Fighter IV Issue 2 · The Life and Death(s) of Charlie Nash · Street Fighter vs. Darkstalkers) · Street Fighter Alpha (manga) · Sakura Ganbaru! · Cammy Gaiden · World Warrior Encyclopedia (Hardcover) · Ryu Final · Street Fighter Zero (HK comic) · Street Fighter (Brazilian comic series) · Street Fighter Zero (Brazilian comic) · EX2 Plus (comic) · Street Fighter (Malibu comic) (Issue 1 · Issue 2 · Issue 3)
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