The first Marvel Cinematic Universe instalment to feature an Asian lead has arrived and it reaffirms what we already know: Simu Liu may be the star, but it’s Tony Leung who’s the MVP, as his crime boss father who rules a centuries-old empire with the titular super-powered bangles. And that’s a good thing. Because when someone of Leung’s calibre gives a performance (his silence speaks volumes), he elevates genre material above its natural level, especially when your hero is obscure. Shang-Chi is a creation of writer Steve Englehart and artist Jim Starlin which debuted in 1973, inspired by the kung-fu craze sparked by Bruce Lee’s Enter the Dragon, and as played by Liu, while affable, has a lightweight presence. No wonder Shang-Chi’s always brooding over his old man’s legacy: he can’t escape his shadow. Daddy issues (a recurring MCU theme) aside, the movie is enlivened by a fab predominantly Asian cast (Awkwafina is ace as Shang-Chi’s wing-woman), spirited fight choreography (it has the year’s second-best brawl-in-a-bus sequence), and geek-baiting Easter eggs (hey, isn’t that guy from Iron Man 3, Sadly, the finale — which takes place in a Zhang Yimou-meets-Tsui Hark hidden forestry village straight out of a wuxia flick — goes into auto-pilot mode with some out-of-control kaiju-on-kaiju mayhem. As origin stories go, Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings is fun and furious, with the right amount of heft mixed in. Let’s see how Shang-Chi will fare when he plays with the others in the MCU sandbox (stick around for the two end-credit stingers) — and if he can truly step up to the plate as his own man. (3.5/5 stars)