Season 1 of the Cinemax original martial arts crime drama Warrior was picked up for a 10-episode season order on June 7, 2017.[1] It premiered on April 5, 2019.
Synopsis
WARRIOR is a gritty, action-packed crime drama set during the brutal Tong Wars of San Francisco's Chinatown in the second half of the 19th century. The series follows Ah Sahm (Andrew Koji), a martial arts prodigy who emigrates from China to San Francisco under mysterious circumstances. After proving his worth as a fighter, Ah Sahm becomes a hatchet man for the Hop Wei, one of Chinatown's most powerful tongs (Chinese organized crime family).
Befriended by Wang Chao (Hoon Lee), a fixer and profiteer in Chinatown, Ah Sahm is taken under the wing of Young Jun, the hard-partying son of the Hop Wei's leader, Father Jun (Perry Yung), who is facing an imminent opium war with a rival tong. As he is indoctrinated in the rules of Chinatown gangs, Ah Sahm wins the confidence of a canny brothel madam, Ah Toy (Olivia Cheng), revealing to her the true intentions of his journey to America.
Over the course of the season, Ah Sahm crosses boundaries inside and outside Chinatown, bringing him into contact with tong rivals Mai Ling (Dianne Doan), a beautiful and ruthless Chinese woman who has achieved a position of power in one of the tongs, and Li Yong (Joe Taslim), a tong lieutenant and Gung Fu master. As violence erupts, Sergeant "Big Bill" O'Hara (Kieran Bew) and Richard Henry Lee (Tom Weston-Jones), a transplanted southerner and rookie cop, are tasked with forming a Chinatown squad.
Meanwhile, working-class leader and tough Irishman Dylan Leary (Dean Jagger) is fighting for all Irish laborers by trying to inflict as much damage as possible on the Chinese immigrants he says are stealing their jobs. Amidst the strife, power-hungry San Francisco Mayor Samuel Blake (Christian McKay) and Deputy Mayor Walter Buckley (Langley Kirkwood), who has his own political aspirations, engage in widespread corruption, while the mayor's young wife, Penny (Joanna Vanderham), finds herself trapped in a loveless marriage.[2]
Cast
Main
- Andrew Koji as Ah Sahm
- Olivia Cheng as Ah Toy
- Jason Tobin as Young Jun
- Dianne Doan as Mai Ling
- Kieran Bew as Bill O'Hara
- Dean Jagger as Dylan Leary
- Joanna Vanderham as Penelope Blake
- Tom Weston-Jones as Richard Lee
- Hoon Lee as Wang Chao
- Langley Kirkwood as Walter Buckley
- Christian McKay as Samuel Blake
- Perry Yung as Father Jun
- Joe Taslim as Li Yong
Supporting
- Rich Ting as Bolo
- Jenny Umbhau as Lai
- Henry Yuk as Long Zii
- Kenneth Fok as Jacob
- Dustin Nguyen as Zing
- Emily Child as Lucy O'Hara
- Graham Hopkins as Byron Mercer
- David Butler as Russell Flannagan
- Brendan Sean Murray as Jack Damon
- André Jacobs as Lymon Merriweather
- Patrick Baladi as Robert Crestwood
- Frank Rautenbach as Leonard Patterson
- Gaosi Raditholo as Abigail
- Nicholas Pauling as Harrison
- Robert Hobbs as Stone
- Jacques Bessenger as McLeod
- Warrick Grier as Seamus O'Shea
- Andrew Jones-Davies as Paul O'Shea
- Christiaan Schoombie as Harlan French
- Erica Wessels as Billie
- C.S. Lee as Lu
- Andrew Stock as Father Flynn
- Craig Urbani as Mason
- Rachel Colwell as Wankeia
- Bianca Amato as Nancy
- Ashley Dowds as Shepherd
- James Lew as Sifu Li Qiang
Episodes
# | Title | Writer(s) | Director | Air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "The Itchy Onion" | Jonathan Tropper | Assaf Bernstein | April 5, 2019 | |
San Francisco, 1878. Ah Sahm, a newly arrived Chinese immigrant with serious fighting skills, is introduced to Chinatown's most ruthless tong, the Hop Wei, by Chao, a fixer. After impressing Young Jun, son of tong leader Father Jun, Ah Sahm is branded and taken to a brothel, where he befriends Ah Toy, a courtesan with connections. Later, in search of a woman who left China two years earlier, Ah Sahm crosses paths with Mai Ling and Li Yong, followers of the rival tong leader Long Zii, who is trying to avoid an opium war with the Hop We — a war that Walter Buckley, deputy to San Francisco Mayor Samuel Blake, actively promotes. Meanwhile, after two Chinese laborers are killed by white thugs, police sergeant "Big Bill" O'Hara is tasked with creating a Chinatown squad. Enlisting southern-born cop Richard Henry Lee, Bill soon finds that the hostility between the Chinese and white dock workers, whose unofficial leader is Irish tough Dylan Leary, is unlikely to end anytime soon. | |||||
2 | "There's No China in the Bible" | Jonathan Tropper | Loni Peristere | April 12, 2019 | |
Intercepting a shipment of opium at the docks, Young Jun, with Ah Sahm and his Hop Wei lieutenant Bolo in tow, decides to send a message to Long Zii. Big Bill and Lee investigate a grisly murder scene in an alley next to an Irish bar, The Banshee. Penny Blake, the young wife of San Francisco's mayor, finds herself in a bind while visiting the wharf with her Chinese manservant, Jacob. Ah Sahm pays a steep price for playing the hero. The Long Zii clean up a mess, and brace for more bloodshed. | |||||
3 | "John Chinaman" | Adam Targum | Loni Peristere | April 19, 2019 | |
Leary pressures gentleman industrialist Byron Mercer, who is Penny's father, to hire his men for a cable-car track job — despite the fact that Mayor Blake hasn't yet awarded Mercer the contract. Accused of assault and perhaps worse, Ah Sahm gets a cold shoulder from the Hop Wei, with his fate in the hands of an unexpected ally. Buckley urges Mai Ling to eschew restraint and start a war with the Hop Wei. | |||||
4 | "The White Mountain" | Kenneth Lin | David Petrarca | April 26, 2019 | |
Big Bill finds himself compromised by his gambling excesses, but discovers a possible solution after an opium-den raid. Penny reveals the circumstances that prompted her to marry Mayor Blake, who's determined to show voters he won't tolerate San Francisco's "Yellow Peril." After meeting with leaders of the Fung Hai tong, Mai Ling offers Ah Sahm a way out of a protracted — and bloody — tong war. | |||||
5 | "The Blood and the Sh*t" | Kenneth Lin | Kevin Tancharoen | May 3, 2019 | |
Transporting precious cargo via stagecoach through the Sierra Nevada, Ah Sahm and Young Jun are forced to spend the night with three strangers at a frontier saloon in the middle of nowhere. The detour turns perilous when Harlan French, a notorious outlaw, shows up with his henchmen, looking for a lucrative payday. | |||||
6 | "Chewed Up, Spit Out, and Stepped On" | Evan Endicott & Josh Stoddard | David Petrarca | May 10, 2019 | |
Tensions escalate between the Hop Wei and Long Zii after an assassination attempt during a boisterous Chinatown parade. Big Bill sets out to pay his debt to Jack Damon, leaving Lee to keep watch over Lucy and the kids. Mayor Blake and Deputy Mayor Buckley get a mandate from Robert Crestwood, a senator with eyes on the White House. | |||||
7 | "The Tiger and the Fox" | Brad Caleb Kane | Lin Oeding | May 17, 2019 | |
Ah Sahm faces a dilemma when Father Jun sends Bolo to hunt down Long Zii and Mai Ling. Ah Toy recruits a special girl from a whore monger, and takes on a business partner for a land deal. Penny is faced with an unsavory choice in order to save her home. Lee's past catches up with him. | |||||
8 | "They Don't Pay Us Enough to Think" | Evan Endicott & Josh Stoddard | Lin Oeding | May 24, 2019 | |
After a bloodbath on the streets of Chinatown, the Hop Wei and Long Zii consider a novel way to end hostilities. Ah Toy and her real-estate business partner, Leonard Patterson, hit a fork in the road in their effort to buy a valuable piece of land. After promising jobs to Leary's Irish workers, Mercer toasts Crestwood at a fundraiser, while Penny struggles to hold her tongue. Mai Ling warns her brother against waging a battle he may not win. | |||||
9 | "Chinese Boxing" | Jonathan Tropper | Loni Peristere | May 31, 2019 | |
Chinatown gathers to witness a "prize fight" between elite warriors from the Hop Wei and Long Zii. Buckley plays a bluff in hopes of getting Mercer to lower his fee. Ah Sahm remembers his roots as a fighter, as Ah Toy warns him of the dangers that await. Bill and Lee question Wang Chao about the recent series of sword killings in San Francisco. | |||||
10 | "If You're Going to Bow, Bow Low" | Jonathan Tropper | Loni Peristere | June 7, 2019 | |
Ah Sahm rejects his warrior roots and retreats into the netherworld of the Chinese working class. A guilty Big Bill stands vigil for Lee at the hospital. With the police roughing up tong members in retaliation for their violence, Zing and the Fung Hai make a show of force to compel Mai Ling to honor her partnership. Burned by Buckley, Leary decides to take matters into his own hands at Mercer's factory. Seeking to snap Ah Sahm out of his funk, Chao shares a harrowing story of personal hardship. Ah Toy preaches a not-so-ancient message to Ah Sahm: In the middle of chaos lies opportunity. |
Production
- On August 30, 2016, Warrior received a pilot order from Cinemax.[3]
- A year later on June 7, 2017, Warrior was given a series order.[1]
- On October 11, 2017, Andrew Koji, Olivia Cheng, Jason Tobin, Dianne Doan, Kieran Bew, Dean Jagger, Joanna Vanderham, Tom Weston-Jones, Hoon Lee, Joe Taslim, Langley Kirkwood, Christian McKay, and Christian McKay were cast.[4]
- Production began on October 22, 2017, in Cape Town, South Africa.[4]
Gallery
Promotional Images
Videos
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Bruce Lee-Inspired Tong Wars Drama ‘Warrior’ From Justin Lin & ‘Banshee’ Co-Creator Gets Cinemax Series Order - Deadline
- ↑ Tong Wars Drama Series "Warrior," Based on the Writings of Martial Arts Legend Bruce Lee, Debuts April 5 on Cinemax - The Futon Critic
- ↑ Bruce Lee-Inspired Crime Drama ‘Warrior’ From Justin Lin & ‘Banshee’ Co-Creator Gets Cinemax Pilot Order - Deadline
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 ‘Warrior’: Cinemax Sets Cast & Director For Bruce Lee-Inspired Martial Arts Series - Deadline