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The Children of Huang Shi (2008)
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Reviews Counted:72
Fresh:22
Rotten:50
Average Rating:4.6/10
Consensus: This beautifully photographed but dramatically flat war drama recounts an important chapter in history with little cinematic freshness.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for some disturbing and violent content.
Runtime: 2 hrs 5 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:May 23, 2008 Limited
Box Office: $652,604
Synopsis: Based on real events, The Children of Huang Shi is a story set against war-torn China in the 1930’s. The film centers on a young English journalist (JONATHAN RHYS MEYERS), an American nurse (RADHA... Based on real events, The Children of Huang Shi is a story set against war-torn China in the 1930’s. The film centers on a young English journalist (JONATHAN RHYS MEYERS), an American nurse (RADHA MITCHELL) and the leader of a Chinese parti- san group (CHOW YUN FAT) who meet in desperate and unexpected circumstances. Together they rescue 60-orphaned, children leading them on an extraordinary journey, across hundreds of miles of treacherous terrain, through snow-covered mountains and an unforgiving desert. Along the way they discover the true meaning of love, responsibility and courage. --© Sony Pictures Classics [More]
Starring: Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Radha Mitchell, Chow Yun-Fat, Michelle Yeoh
Starring: Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Radha Mitchell, Chow Yun-Fat, Michelle Yeoh, David Wenham, Guang Li
Director: Roger Spottiswoode
Director: Roger Spottiswoode
Screenwriter: James MacManus, Jane Hawksley
Producer: Arthur Cohn, Wieland Schulz-Keil, Peter Loehr, Jonathan Shteinman, Martin Hagemann
Composer: David Hirschfelder
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for The Children of Huang Shi
There's a feeling of skimming the surface of a true story that would be better served by being grittier or more challenging. As well, the narrative deserves more than an obvious and improbable love story between two good-looking movie stars.
Chow actually gets saddled with the line, 'You have to tell the world what's happening here,' which was hoary back when D.W. Griffith was making movies.
Director Roger Spottiswoode uses the children and action sequences to good effect, but a lack of chemistry between Rhys Meyers and Mitchell makes the love story fizzle.
What should be a moving story is ruined by hideous acting and sloppy filmmaking.
The Children of Huang Shi means well and actually has a solid story at its core. But what Spottiswoode and company do to that good story is unforgivable.
The Children of Huang Shi is so desperate to be the Asian Schindler's List, an example of atrocity draped in abject artistry, that it forgets to lay out the context.
Clearly made with the best of intentions but never anything but boring.
The characters in The Children of Huang Shi can conquer famine, war, disease, natural disasters and addiction but not a truly horrible script.
Though there are some powerful performances, notably those of Michelle Yeoh and Chow Yun-Fat, and some sweeping visuals, the movie feels melodramatic and overheated.
Audiences tolerant of clichéd uplift may dab their eyes, but demanding moviegoers will look elsewhere.
With all the stories to be told about the war between Japan and China, it's hard to believe that this one was the most compelling or most in need of telling.
The real test of endurance is on the shoulders of an audience challenged to sit through more than two hours of predictable plot turns and recycled sentimentality.
Both a musty throwback and a mushy example of contemporary knee-jerk humanism.
A dull dramatization of -- and ill-fitting testament to -- British journalist George Hogg's experiences in war torn China.
Too much flat love interest, too much love triangle, and three stock-character grown-ups are in the end too much baggage for 'The Children of Huang Shi.'
Latest News for The Children of Huang Shi
January 17, 2009:
Breathtaking photography, but Hollywood's view of history as usual, no matter where on the planet, as mere backdrop for the personal lives of glamorous white people. Casablanca meets the white man's burden, and doesn't amount to a hill of beans. ![]()
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January 13, 2009:
Breathtaking photography, but Hollywood's view of history as usual, no matter where on the planet, as mere backdrop for the personal lives of glamorous white people. Casablanca meets the white man's burden, and doesn't amount to a hill of beans. ![]()
More...
April 21, 2008:
Trailer & Poster review ![]()
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