Near the end of the Tang Dynasty, police deputies Jin (Kaneshiro) and Leo (Lau) tangle with Mei (Zhang), a dancer suspected of having ties to a revolutionary faction known as the House of Flying Daggers. Enraptured by her, the deputies concoct a plan to save her from capture, and Jin leads her north in what becomes a perilous .. Read more
| Starring | Andy Lau, Ziyi Zhang, Takeshi Kaneshiro |
|---|---|
| Director | Yimou Zhang |
| Genres | Action/Adventure, Romance, World Cinema |
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Near the end of the Tang Dynasty, police deputies Jin (Kaneshiro) and Leo (Lau) tangle with Mei (Zhang), a dancer suspected of having ties to a revolutionary faction known as the House of Flying Daggers. Enraptured by her, the deputies concoct a plan to save her from capture, and Jin leads her north in what becomes a perilous journey into the unknown.
| Starring | Andy Lau, Ziyi Zhang, Takeshi Kaneshiro |
|---|---|
| Director | Yimou Zhang |
| Studio | PATHE DISTRIBUTION |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 59 mins Blu-ray: 2 hrs 4 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Action/Adventure, Romance, World Cinema |
| Language | DVD: Mandarin Blu-ray: Mandarin |
| Subtitles | DVD: English Blu-ray: English |
| Released | DVD: 02 May 2005 Blu-ray: 06 Oct 2008 Production year: 2004 |
| Format | DVD |
Hero director Zhang Yimou returns to the swordfighting genre with this visually ravishing and artfully directed martial arts drama. Set in the year 859, the declining Tang dynasty faces revolt from a secret, Robin Hood and his Merry Men-like society known as the House of Flying Daggers. Can all-singing, all-dancing, blind knife-throwing showgirl Mei (Zhang Ziyi) guide undercover police captain Leo (Andy Lau) to their mysterious new leader? The film's stand-out sequences include the quite amazing Echo Dance — a routine involving scarves, drums and ricocheting beans — and a lush green bamboo-forest showdown. But these early highlights are never quite equalled, as too many drawn-out climaxes and a tepid romantic subplot proceed to bog it down. However, Zhang Yimou's masterful panache, poetic finesse and gravity-bending fight choreography are a continual delight, even if Zhang Ziyi's acrobatic femme fatale steals the entire show.
Lavish cinematography, splendidly concocted martial arts moments and some stalwart performances are finally not enough to compensate for a thin and soggy script.
Do not go and watch this film expecting two hours of pioneering martial arts scenes. If you want that, rent one of the Matrix films, god knows that's all they're good for.
What you should look forward to is involving relationships and a story that is far more thoughtful and complex than you average sword-flick. Zhang Yimou, as with his previous film 'Hero', creates a breath-taking view of the part fantasy, part ledgend world in which the characters live. He also weaves intricate plotlines that provide welcome suprises throughout the film.
Finally, he does drop in the occasional bit of fisticuffs... most of which will be the most exciting and balletic sword/dagger/hand-to-hand combat scenes you will see in a cinema.
One thing he can't do though, is coax a decent performance out of his actors. Only Zhang Ziyi convinces as a blind but deadly dancer.
From a martial arts point of view this film is a wonder. Whilst Hero and crouching tiger are based upon very over the top shaolin kung fu, Flying daggers gives us a much more realistic view of the quality of the actors skills. There are massive questions to the amount of acuacy in there range attacks. However what you get to see is fantastic. If you are a martial artist you will want to buy this film to watch it over and over. The film itsself is a true story but very dramatised. It does help If you know a lil chinese as you may be ditracted by the subtitles. Just make sure you watch it a few times!!!
Miami Vice and Hannibal Rising star Gong Li was roundly criticized in the Chinese press recently after speaking up for environmental issues in the senate while wearing fur. So it goes: Gong is as close to royalty as China allows these days, and that privilege doesn't come without scrutiny (she has also used her delegate status to try to curb media intrusions into privacy). It's all a long way from the roles that made her name nearly twenty years ago now: in Red Sorghum, Ju Dou, Raise the Red... Read more