You have never seen a movie like Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon because there has never been a movie like it.
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (1999)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:143
Fresh:139
Rotten:4
Average Rating:8.5/10
Consensus: The story is compelling, the acting is stellar, and the direction is fantastic. Chow Yun Fat and Michelle Yeoh provide the action of The Matrix plus the romance of Titanic.
Runtime: 2 hrs
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Dec 8, 2000 Limited
Box Office: $127,652,038
Synopsis: Known for making films about familial relationships, director Ang Lee surprised everyone with his martial arts epic CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON. Based on a novel by Wang Du Lu, CROUCHING TIGER... Known for making films about familial relationships, director Ang Lee surprised everyone with his martial arts epic CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON. Based on a novel by Wang Du Lu, CROUCHING TIGER starts with the revenge plot common in the wuxia stories that Lee loved as a child, then adds a feminist twist. Li Mu Bai (Chow Yun Fat) is a legendary martial artist who has decided to pass on his sword, the Green Destiny, to a friend. Soon afterward, the sword is stolen by a masked female, setting in motion events that test the bonds of family, love, duty, and sisterhood. Chow appears with three generations of female stars: Cheng Pei Pei, a 1960s action heroine; Michelle Yeoh, the beauty queen turned 1980s action goddess; and newcomer Zhang Ziyi, who smolders as the princess who wants more than domestic tranquillity. Famed action choreographer Yuen Woo-Ping (THE MATRIX) stages jaw-dropping zero-G fights across rooftops, rivers, and bamboo trees, while Yo-Yo Ma punctuates the fisticuffs with dramatic cello solos. Described by Lee as "SENSE AND SENSIBILITY with martial arts," CROUCHING TIGER recalls the best wuxia films of the 1960s and pushes the genre in new directions. [More]
Starring: Chow Yun Fat, Michelle Yeoh, Chang Chen, Ziyi Zhang
Starring: Chow Yun Fat, Michelle Yeoh, Chang Chen, Ziyi Zhang, Sihung Lung, Pei Pei Cheng, Fa Zeng Li, Xian Gao, Yan Hai, Deming Wang, Li Li
Director: Ang Lee
Director: Ang Lee
Screenwriter: James Schamus, Hui Ling Wang, Kuo Jung Tsai
Producer: Bill Kong, Li Kong Hsu, Ang Lee
Composer: Tan Dun
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
A movie that casts a flickering spell from the very outset, not with colorful excess but with restraint.
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon isn’t just one of the best movies of the year; it’s one of the best movies, period.
Crouching Tiger is a fine introduction to the genre for newcomers, though specialists might find it thin in comparison to the real thing.
Whenever Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon resorts to flying fists or soaring sword battles, the Force is definitely with it.
Despite scrupulous attention to expository detail, Lee fails to dramatize the conflict within Jen, or any of the characters.
Within age-old contrivances emerge deeply affecting characters. Poetry.
The film is a composite of so many genres, techniques, and age-old conceits that it can't help but miss each and every one by a mile.
The fight scenes are as enchantingly imagined as they are astonishingly executed.
The first fight scene, which brings all the principals together, will make you want to applaud. And each action sequence builds on what has come before, increasing the stakes with a dignified hilarity.
Coolly elegant, slyly humorous and visually breathtaking... If there's such a thing as inspired silliness, this picture surely embodies it.
Think back and try to recall the last time you saw a hero on the screen who stepped aside to serve others by making himself a zero.
Latest News for Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
September 13, 2006:
Yeoh Joins "True North" and "Babylon A.D."
When we last saw Michelle Yeoh on the big screen, she was teaching Zhang Ziyi the finer points of how to stop a man in his tracks with a blink of the eyes in "Memoirs of a... More...
September 13, 2006:
TORONTO: Zhang Ziyi, Yuen Woo-Ping's Latest "Banquet" Not Very Fulfilling
Zhang Ziyi and action director Yuen Woo-Ping last worked together in "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon," a movie which helped change audience perception that martial... More...
September 05, 2006:
Solid Cast for John Woo's New "Battle"
John Woo is settling in on the early stages of his next moviie, "The Battle of Red Cliff," an epic story based on the beloved Chinese novel "Romance of the Three... More...
June 06, 2006:
Weinsteins to Mount a Live-Action "Mulan"
Like most of us, The Brothers Weinstein are deeply in love with Asian actress Zhang Ziyi. But unlike the rest of us, they have the money to hire the gal for a three-picture deal... More...
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