REVIEW

DVD Review: Balls of Fury

Written by Chris Beaumont
Published December 17, 2007

Sometimes it seems that we don't get any good spoofs anymore. It is sad that the height of the spoof comes in the form of Epic Movie and The Comebacks. Of course, we are occasionally graced with something such as the great Hot Fuzz, although that may be more of a comedic homage than a spoof.

Well, just when I was about to give up on the pure spoof, along comes Balls of Fury to help start the healing process. No, it is not a great film, not by a long shot. What Balls of Fury succeeds at is delivering actual laughs, low brow as they may be. Is it worth adding to your collection? Probably not, but it is definitely worth tossing into your Netflix queue.

The film plays out along the same lines as the Bruce Lee classic Enter the Dragon. As co-writer/co-star Thomas Lennon confirms in the bonus material, they took a classic kung fu story and replaced all of the kung fu with ping pong. The end result is a comedy with strong Eastern flavors, seasoned with table tennis, and stewed in the minds behind Reno 911!

Picture this scene: a ping pong prodigy goes to the Olympics with golden expectations, only to fail miserably. This sends his life on a downward spiral that ends with him as an out-of-shape performer at a dinner theater off the Vegas strip. Not exactly the high life that was expected of him based on his early success. Well, as it would turn out, there is a need for his particular skills, a need that could help avert terrorist activity around the world.

The CIA, in the guise of George Lopez, approaches our hero, Randy Daytona (Dan Fogler) for a dangerous mission. He is charged with getting invited to a super-secret ping pong tournament held by the evil Feng (Christopher Walken). Once at the tournament, Feng will finally be able to be caught in the act of evil. On top of that, Feng also just happens to be behind the death of Daytona's father (Robert Patrick).

However, before Daytona can go off and face the bad guys, and in true kung fu fashion, he has to go off and train under a master to gain the skills needed to succeed in his task. The master is Wong (James Hong), who runs a Chinese take-out joint with his niece, Maggie (Maggie Q). Long story short, he gains the skills he needs and heads off to the tournament where he faces off with his enemies new and old.

It really is a pretty funny movie. Balls of Fury works particularly well if you are a fan of kung fu flicks. Overall, it is great just to have a spoof comedy that works, more or less, from start to finish. All too often we are saddled with movies that just grab scenes from other movies and string them together in the hopes that a narrative will appear. This film takes the better approach: pick one film and spoof the hell out of it. Do all of the jokes land? Of course not, but how often do you see a comedy where every single joke hits the mark? Probably not too often. Still, even when the jokes don't land, the cast still pulls it off.

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Christopher Beaumont spends much of his time writing about entertainment when he isn't sitting in a movie theater. He is known around the office as the "Movie Guy" and is always ready to talk about his favorite form of entertainment and offer up recommendations. Interests include science fiction, horror, and metal music. His writings can be found at Draven99's Musings and Draven99's Media Center.
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DVD Review: Balls of Fury
Published: December 17, 2007
Type: Review
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Comedy
Writer: Chris Beaumont
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