2019 Chinese animation film “Ne Zha” works best when it cheerfully bounces with a vibrant sense of fun and energy during its first half. I found its mischievous little demonic hero rather endearing even though he sometimes reminds me of that satanic kid in “The Omen” (1976). I also cared about his conflict along the story while occasionally amused by a series of goofy comic moments from a number of colorful characters around him. However, the film later becomes quite bombastic with a lot of busy actions, and that is when my level of interest was considerably decreased to my mild disappointment.
The story, which is loosely based on the 16th-century novel “Investiture of the Gods” by Xu Zhonglin (I have never read or heard of this old Chinese piece of literature, by the way), is your typical hero origin story. At the beginning, a very powerful supernatural object called the chaos pearl divided into two contrasting objects by the Primeval Lord of Heaven, and Taiyi Zhenren (voiced by Zhang Jiaming), one of the disciples under the command of the Primeval Lord of Heaven, is ordered to handle these two objects. While the Demon Orb is destined to be destroyed after 3 years, the Spirit Pearl is supposed to be reincarnated as the son of a brave and noble lord named Li Jing (voiced by Chen Hao) and his wife Lady Lin (voiced by Lü Qi), but, alas, the Demon Orb comes to take the position instead due to Shen Gongbao (voiced by Yang Wei), a nefarious colleague of Taiyi who has some other plan behind his back.
Nonetheless, despite knowing well the inherent demonic sides of their son, Lord Li and his wife try their best for raising him with love and care, though their son, Ne Zha (voiced by Lü Yanting), grows up to be your average little terror to them and many others in their peaceful town. Many people in the village have naturally hated and feared him a lot (Raise your hand if you are now reminded of a certain famous episode from classic American TV drama series “The Twilight Zone”), and he is certainly willing to give them a lot of hell just for fun and amusement.
In the end, Taiyi enters the picture again as a master willing to guide Ne Zha toward good as training him in a little special world inside a roll of painting, which one can enter only via Taiyi’s magic brush. Needless to say, Ne Zha quickly improves enough to impress his master, but to his master’s frustration, he remains unruly and naughty as before.
Because he has been told that he is destined to fight against those monsters and demons out there, Ne Zha is quite eager to prove himself, and there soon comes an opportunity. After some heroic (and very destructive) actions of his, he is again disliked by the town people due to a little misunderstanding, and that makes him all the sulkier than before.
At least, he comes across someone who can be a good friend to him. That person in question is Ao Bing (voiced by Han Mo), and Ne Zha is delighted to have someone as powerful as him, but, not so surprisingly, it soon turns out that Ao Bing has been destined to be his opponent. Shen, who has been incidentally Ao Bing’s master, and Ao Bing’s mighty dragon father have been plotting against the Primeval Lord of Heaven, and Ao Bing, who was incarnated from the Spirit Pearl, is certainly going to be the main tool of their evil plan.
Around the point where Ne Zha and Ao Bing eventually fight with each other as expected, we are surely served with a lot of loud crashes and bangs, and you can clearly see that a lot of effort and production budget was spent on this big climactic part. When his true self is finally unleashed, Ne Zha becomes a young adult just like Ao Bing, but this older self of his is rather humorless in my trivial opinion, and we come to have less fun than before despite a lot of actions and spectacles unfolded across the screen.
The more cheerful and humorous parts of the film engaged me to some degree. Yes, many of the supporting characters in the film are more or less than comic elements mostly for frequent silly physical gags throughout the story, but that is fairly acceptable in the animation background of the film, and I will not deny that I was particularly amused by an action sequence which does not even hesitate to use a fart joke at one point. In addition, the overall quality of the digital animation in the film is on a par with the average level of Hollywood blockbuster animation films, and it can be regarded as a notable forward step by the Chinese animation film industry.
As a matter of fact, the film was quite a commercial success not only in China and but also the rest of the world. It actually earned much more than its production budget (around 22 million dollars), and this impressive result eventually led to the production of its recent sequel, which incidentally earned more than 2 billion dollars around the world while also becoming the highest-grossing film of last year.
In conclusion, “Ne Zha” is no more than a test drive for its hero as well as its director/writer Jiaozi and his crew. I watched it just for preparing a bit before watching its recent sequel, and it often felt to me more like homework than entertainment, but it shows some potential and personality from time to time at least. I will watch the sequel sooner or later, and I hope that it shows some improvement compared to its predecessor.













































