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House
Of The Flying Daggers
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Country
: |
China |
| Year: |
2004 |
| Genre: |
Wu
Xia |
| Format: |
DVD |
| Running
Time: |
1H59 |
| Distributor: |
Elite
Group Enterprises Inc. |
| Date
reviewed: |
12/22/2004 |
| |
|
| Producer: |
William
Kong, Weiping Zhang, Yimou Zhang, Zhenyan Zhang |
| Director: |
Yimou
Zhang |
Cast: Andy Lau, Zhang Ziyi,
Takeshi Kaneshiro, Dandan Song |
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Story:
During the last years of the Tang Dynasty, a secret
faction emerged to fight the corruption that plagued
their government. Having killed its leader, police deputies
Jin and Leo seek out to wipe out every last member of
the House of Flying Daggers clan. Their only lead is
a blind girl that works at the local brothel. From there,
the movie weaves itself into a story of love, devotion,
and betrayal.
Review: To the average movie-goer, Yimou
Zhang is that action-director of HERO (that is, if
they even recognize his name). What most people don’t
know is HERO is his first official action film. While
heavy on wuxia action, HERO still packed an emotional
punch. While the reviews and reception were mixed,
Yimou decided to enter the wuxia arena again; this
time with the mesmerizing but somewhat shallow THE
HOUSE OF FLYING DAGGERS.
One of HERO’s biggest draws is its beautiful
manipulation of nature. In THOFD, Yimou does the exact
opposite. He lets the majestic landscapes shine in
their own natural beauty. In return though, he creates
loud and vibrant costumes that when paired with the
backdrops, synergizes the cinematic beauty of the
film. As for the action scenes, they retain the effect
of ‘awe’. While not better than HERO’s
as a whole, the bamboo fight sequence is definitely
one of the top twenty fight scenes of all time. The
visual flare may be different from HERO, but Yimou
succeeds yet again in presenting us a film that hits
our ocular g-spots.
Zhang Ziyi is in everything now. Anything that has
any international market appeal from Asia, she’s
almost guaranteed to be in it. Some people may be
suffering from an overdose of the Ziyi, but at least
it’s an overdose of an actress who can act.
She may very well be this generation’s Maggie
Cheung. Takeshi Kaneshiro’s transformation of
a playboy police deputy to a hopelessly in love bodyguard
is heartbreaking and believable. Andy Lau’s
character emits a devious and sinister aura from the
minute he appears on screen, but slowly unravels that
front and shows the softer side of the character…only
to slap you in the face when he puts back on the insidious
mask. This triumvirate of superstars makes the, otherwise,
bland characters far more interesting.
While every other department of the film is top-notch,
the glue that holds it together is the story. Herein
lies one of THOFD’s biggest flaw. While the
actors make the story somewhat believable, the actual
content is on the brink of being completely ludicrous.
The devoted passion that Jin and Mei develop in the
course of 3 days is inconceivable. Even Andy Lau’s
character addresses this implausibility. The onslaught
of plot twists that come on at the second half of
the movie seems more like a gimmick rather than a
treat. While it works to a degree, it treads on the
line of failure. The ending, however, becomes the
biggest problem of the film. Anita Mui was originally
cast as the House of Flying Daggers’ leader,
but she passed away before the film’s completion.
Rather than recasting her role, Yimou rewrote the
film’s ending in respect to Anita’s passing.
Now, it’s hard to say what the original ending
would have been like, but the final cut’s ending
really betrays the tone of the film. While the last
minutes of the film are the most poetic, it sticks
out like a sore thumb compared to the rest of the
film. It is hard to judge this ending because I respect
Yimou’s decision not recast Anita’s part,
but at the same time, the ending works against the
film. It’s a tough call at the end of the day,
but the ending will ultimately be left to the viewer’s
discretion.
Film is a medium in which to entertain. If a film
opens your mind to new things, great! But judging
THE HOUSE OF FLYING DAGGERS in the most basic form
of cinema, then it succeeds in completely submerging
the audience into a role-playing opportunity and entertains
them for the two hour duration. While definitely not
Yimou’s best work, THOFD is definitely worth
the price of admission.
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DVD
[ NTSC, Region 3
] :
The region-3 DVD’s quality isn’t so bad!
I say that because the quality reminds me of the films
I use to watch on TV back in Taiwan. The quality is
reminiscent of these films and it really brings back
a nostalgic feeling for me. But to most people, this
quality is like that of an European TV show. The video
and sound is not the best, and this film deserves the
best. So, I would suggest you skip out on the Edko version
and wait for the other numerous releases that are eventually
going to come out in the near future.
Reviewed
by JoE Shieh
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| Story |
Cast |
Entertainment |
Subtitles |
Overall |
| 2.5 |
4.5 |
4 |
4.5 |
3.5 |

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| © 1999-2003 by KFC
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