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 Location:  Home » DVD » All Action & Adventure » The One [2002]  
The One [2002]
The One [2002]

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Director: James Wong (iv)
Actors: Jet Li, Carla Gugino, Delroy Lindo, Jason Statham, James Morrison (ii)
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Category: DVD

List Price: £19.99
Buy New: £3.37
You Save: £16.62 (83%)



New (16) Used (8) from £2.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 13 reviews
Sales Rank: 4252

Format: Anamorphic, Dubbed, Pal, Widescreen
Languages: Arabic (Subtitled), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Hindi (Subtitled), English (Original Language), French (Dubbed)
Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
Running Time: 84 minutes
Number Of Items: 1
Discs: 1
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

EAN: 5035822240735
ASIN: B00006AFIJ

Theatrical Release Date: November 2, 2001
Release Date: August 19, 2002
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: EXCESS STOCK SOURCED FROM MAJOR UK RETAILER,DISPATCH IN 3-4 WORKING DAYS

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 13
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3 out of 5 stars Good although not excellent sci-fi fare.   August 3, 2008
Martial arts sci-fi thriller in which Jet Li plays a villain called Yu Law murdering versions of himself in parallel worlds so that he can become `the one', a being of unlimited power. But he has met his match in the version of himself known as Gabriel Law. This film is not bad and Jet Li does a decent job playing good and evil versions of himself. The special effects and fight scenes stand out and are really what make the film. Brit actor Jason Statham also does a passable job as a `multiverse agent' out to apprehend the evil Yu Law and bring him to justice. But although enjoyable this film does not reach the heights necessary to be considered excellent. Still, good enough sci-fi fare.








2 out of 5 stars Jet Li's 'One' blemish in his career   April 20, 2007
 2 out of 4 found this review helpful

The fights were sweet,although looked slightly cheesy. it looked like they tried to achieve the matrix type effects but didn't have a good enough budget. The Acting was OK. They stuck some good actors in with some bad ones so that kinda screws up the whole feel for the movie. The storyline is quite simple and somewhat intriguing. There are many universes, you look quite similar in everyone and your all connected by a wave of energy. every time one of you dies, the energy of that you that died goes to the remaining yous. One man has killed all of himself but one. Th movie basically starts here. Yulaw is about to get banished forever but stops his universe travel and goes to the last universe left, ours. Lately Gabe law has been getting stronger but he doesn't know why.

Whenever they go from one universe to the next, they break up into little puzzle pieces and they didn't do a very good job for the visuals on those.



3 out of 5 stars slick, stylish sci-fi..not as deep as it aims but great fun!   December 4, 2003
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

The One is a fusion of Matrix-esque stylish mind-bending sci-fi thriller with the more tradition kung-fu action that we expect from Jet Li. While it's action is high-octane and often looks stunning, the interdimensional plotline seems a little "done before", although this film does offer a new twist...

Li plays both the villain and hero of The One. The power-hungry Yulaw is killing off his 124 alter-egos in other dimensions, one by one, absorbing their life essence in order to become "The One". Having killed off 123, only Gabriel Law (of our dimension) remains to prevent him becoming a supreme being. He too shares in Yulaw's increased strength, dexterity, speed and mental capacity, and trained as a cop, a showdown is imminent. Yulaw is also being chased by two multiverse agents [Delroy Lindo, Jason Statham] who track and follow him through wormholes, but now cannot risk killing him as the consequences of Gabriel becoming "The One" are just as unpredictably dangerous.

The plot is riddled with unexplained elements, such as just why there are only 124 different universes. Indeed all the convoluted sci-fi theory has to be discussed between Lindo and Statham, due to Li's typically wooden delivery of his lines. Nonetheless, the sci-fi element is embellished with decent dimension-hopping special effects to cover any problems, and the story is generally coherent.

The acting and dialogue is largely forgettable. Li's English and acting abilities have never been terribly strong, but he does provide a charismatic performance as Yulaw and a sympathetic one as the rather confused Gabriel. The film is also able to build up some tension through the fact both characters are dressed similarly so even the audience often becomes confused as to which of the two they are viewing (although perhaps it might help Gabriel's case if he switched to a bright yellow jumpsuit so the police would realise they were chasing two people?). Statham's hammed up acting is slightly more convincing. Carla Gugino as Gabriel's wife, T.K., evokes more sympathy from the audience, but in such a short film we never really get too close to her either.

What fans are really here to see, of course, is the action. And here the movie does deliver pretty well, especially in the opening and closing scenes. Unfortunately these bouts of action are sporadically scattered amongst a little too much sci-fi rambling, and are often a little too brief in duration. Li's usual martial arts antics are spiced up with some interesting speed-ups and slow-downs to represent Yulaw's superhuman speed. However, the inevitable Li vs. Li showdown is rather disappointing, a missed opportunity. While the fight itself is adequately choreographed, it lacks any special spark. The choppy music video editing with shifting camera angles and overblown sound effects that suited the earlier gun battles and shorter fights is unwelcome here, breaking the flow of the Li's smooth fighting style.

The film always looks sci-fi stylish, but in what has now become a rather conventional and unremarkable way, using dark clothing and blue/grey lens filters (just look at the palettes in the stills here). This aids the action, especially in the time-slowing sequences (not really a Matrix rip-off as some have argued: there's no bullet-time here) which look great.

The key reason that The One works is that it is unshamedly campy but utilising a big budget to create an exciting glossy surface. It never pretends to be genuinely quality cinema, it never tries to cover up its plot holes, it never tries to push Jet Li's acting, and so the sci-fi action remains thoroughly enjoyable throughout.


4 out of 5 stars Wicked!   October 13, 2003
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

No doubt about it, martial arts at it's best here people. Jet Li plays a fine part. The effects included are amazing to say the least, many of them see jet fight himself!!! Don't understand me huh? Don't worry about it, you'll understand if you see the film, even if the story is a little 'brain racking'. Action fans-a must. Jet li fans-definetely. Martial arts fans-Certainly. People in search of something light-sorry but no. The storyline is good but confusing. Overall though, a film worth getting and I'm sure you'll love it-Action/jet li/martial arts or even random fans. ENJOY!!!!


5 out of 5 stars Jet Li vs Jet Li for the multiverse championship   October 12, 2003
 6 out of 7 found this review helpful

What else could a guy ask for really? Not only do you have Jet Li doing his martial arts thing, which he does better than anyone else working in movies today, but he finally faces a worthy opponent (himself); then there's the gorgeous Carla Gugino, who has long been one of my favorite actresses; throw in a visionary, science fiction storyline, all kinds of explosions, some pretty darn impressive CGI, and you've got yourself a movie I will gladly pay to watch. But it gets better. The story comes from the minds of X-Files legends Glen Morgan and James Wong, with Wong directing and Morgan serving as co-producer of the story they co-wrote. Best of all, though, we get to see Jet Li portray a bad guy, and that is something you just don't want to miss.

Jet Li plays both of the characters at the heart of this story. The universe of The One is not even a universe, it's a multiverse, with versions of each person existing simultaneously in each universe; all these different versions of "you" are connected somehow, and the power vacuum left by the death of one "you" is not lost but is shared equally among all of the other versions of "you." Travel between the universes is possible through wormholes, and such travel is strictly policed. When one agent discovers that he can become more powerful by killing one of his counterparts elsewhere, he becomes a renegade who knocks off 123 versions of himself to become almost all-powerful. Lawless (the bad Jet Li) makes a spectacular escape from the universe cops and comes after the one remaining version of himself out there, Gabe Law (the good Jet Li). Gabe has naturally been gaining in power and strength himself all this time, and this fact plus his martial arts background makes Gabe a force to be reckoned with. The movie builds to the ultimate confrontation between these two selves, a nice twist on the struggle between good and evil.

I, for the most part, like my martial arts displays realistic and natural; if you're going to use wires and allow for all sorts of superhuman abilities, you'd better do an impressive job with the special effects. Consider that job done in The One. Using such devices as different film speed and CGI animation, this movie's special effects are quite impressive; Wong avoids the kind of excess you find in many a Matrix clone. There are a couple of scenes in which the animation does not look real for a moment or two, but one can easily overlook this because the things that the souped up version of Jet Li does pretty much rock the house. The fight scenes are in no way diminished by the use of the old hidden wire technique, and you walk away from this movie knowing you have gotten your money's worth of entertainment. The DVD adds a plethora of special features on the making of the movie, including a commentary by Wong and crew, some good looks at the fight choreography work of Cory Yuen, a really cool animation sequence of one action scene using G.I. Joe-type figures, and another look at all of the faces of Jet Li that go to form the funniest part of the movie – as Lawless' crimes are detailed, we are shown photos of all the incredibly diverse and oftentimes hilarious guises of Jet Li's character across the multiverse.

I think The One is a fantastic, action-packed winner. Just accept the premise of the whole multiverse idea; it works quite well so long as you don't let yourself ponder over the implications and questions the whole concept raises in your mind. If you find yourself overanalyzing the movie's premise, just think about how gorgeous Carla Gugino is – that's the strategy I employed, and I must say it worked quite well indeed.

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