This newest addition to the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) is the origin story of Shang-Chi (Simu Liu), the slacker son of an immortal crime lord (Tony Chiu-Wai Leong) who has seemingly rejected his father’s empire. Instead, along with his best friend Katy (Awkwafina), he’s a parking valet at a fancy San Francisco hotel, using the Americanized name of Shaun. One evening, on his way home, he’s accosted by thugs who attempt to steal a pendant from around his neck. Big mistake.
Suddenly, Shang reveals his true identity as an elite assassin who has been hiding from his 1,000-year-old supervillain father, Wenwu—a.k.a. The Mandarin—who controls the magical Ten Rings that grant its wearer godlike power. Accompanied by Katy, Shang then takes off for Macau to find his sister Xialing (Meng’er Zhang) and stop Wenwu from invading the mythical city of Ta Lo, where he thinks his presumed-dead wife (Fala Chen), Shang’s mother, is being held hostage.
As Wenwu says: “You can’t outrun who you really are.” Grounded in Chinese and Asian-American culture, it’s sketchily scripted by directed by Destin Daniel-Cretton with Dave Callahan and Andrew Langham, combining martial-arts action and fantasy, featuring Marvel’s first Asian-American lead character and a spectacular vehicular chase through San Francisco—the best since Bullitt (1968).
Predictably, there are convoluted references to The Blip (referring to Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame) plus MCU cameos. Shang-Chi’s comic book history goes back to the ‘70s and the infamous Fu Manchu. Ten Rings was first mentioned in Iron Man, introducing the Mandarin. Optional.