About as viscerally and visually exciting as film can get, and yet it is also fully, ripely romantic in a way that few modern films would dare.
House of Flying Daggers (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:38
Fresh:36
Rotten:2
Average Rating:8.1/10
Consensus: The visual splendor of the movie makes up for the weak story.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for sequences of stylized martial arts violence, and some sexuality
Runtime: 1 hr 59 mins
Genre: Foreign Films
Theatrical Release:Dec 3, 2004 Limited
Box Office: $10,928,042
Synopsis: It is 859AD, and the Tang Dynasty, one of the most enlightened empires in Chinese history at its height, is in decline. The Emperor is incompetent and the government is corrupt. Unrest is spreading... It is 859AD, and the Tang Dynasty, one of the most enlightened empires in Chinese history at its height, is in decline. The Emperor is incompetent and the government is corrupt. Unrest is spreading throughout the land, and many rebel armies are forming in protest. The largest, and most prestigious, is an underground alliance called the “House of Flying Daggers.” The House of Flying Daggers operates mysteriously, stealing from the rich to give to the poor. Thus, they have earned the support and admiration of the people and expanded quickly. Based in Feng Tian County, close to the Imperial Capital, the House of Flying Daggers has long been a thorn in the side of the local deputies, their hated rivals. The deputies are enraged because, even after they fought and killed the leader of the House of Flying Daggers, the House continues to thrive. Under the leadership of a mysterious new leader, the House of Flying Daggers grows ever more powerful. Feng Tian County’s two local captains, Leo (ANDY LAU TAK WAH) and Jin (TAKESHI KANESHIRO) are ordered to capture the new leader within ten days. Captain Leo suspects that Mei (ZHANG ZIYI), the beautiful new dancer at the local Peony Pavilion, is actually the daughter of the old leader. He hatches a plan to arrest her and bring her in for questioning. When Mei refuses to divulge any information on the House of Flying Daggers, the two captains set up another plan. This time, Captain Jin will pretend to be a lone warrior called Wind and rescue Mei from prison, earning her trust and escorting her to the secret headquarters of the House of Flying Daggers. The plan works, and on their long journey to the House, Jin and Mei warm to each other. Before long, Mei has developed feelings for her enigmatic protector, and Jin is surprised to find himself falling for Mei’s headstrong charm. Both struggle to contain their feelings, but under the starry night, their irrepressible desire is almost beyond their control. Danger lurks in the forest surrounding them, and the wind is still, as if sensing the tension in the air. What lies ahead for Jin and Mei, these star-crossed lovers? If this is true love, then why are there plots in their heads…and secrets in their hearts? [More]
Starring: Zhang Ziyi, Takeshi Kaneshiro, Andy Lau, Lu Feng
Starring: Zhang Ziyi, Takeshi Kaneshiro, Andy Lau, Lu Feng, Song Dandan
Director: Yimou Zhang
Director: Yimou Zhang
Screenwriter: Yimou Zhang
Producer: Bill Kong, Yimou Zhang
Composer: Shigeru Umebayashi
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for House of Flying Daggers
As stunning as it is, it also serves notice that House of Flying Daggers will have none of the complexities of Hero.
Zhang proves that Hero was no accident with House of Flying Daggers, another Chinese period piece resplendent with a dazzling palette and soaring, ambitious fight sequences.
An intoxicating cocktail of splendid visuals, spectacular action, state-of-the-art computer-generated imagery and some old-fashioned swashbuckling worthy of Hollywood's Golden Age.
Zhang ... mixes old-school inventiveness with cutting-edge special effects.
It's the ravishment of romance, adventure, nobility, betrayal, all those big, primary-colored old-fashioned movie emotions.
Like an extraordinary-looking but intellectually limited fashion model.
It's action opera, sword-and-sorcery song-and-dance, and it's a heart-pumping, jaw-dropping thrill.
We get a movie that's easy to look at but that leaves us emotionally cold.
Though less of a virtuoso work than Hero, House of Flying Daggers is much more emotionally immediate.
In a way, Flying Daggers might be compared to the great old MGM musicals that were driven in part by showy set pieces.
The film is so good to look at and listen to that, as with some operas, the story is almost beside the point, serving primarily to get us from one spectacular scene to another.
It has sequences of balletic martial arts action that can knock you back, open-mouthed, in your comfy multiplex chair. Yet the movie amounts to frustratingly little by the time it's over.
House of Flying Daggers pierces the mind's eye with its crazy beautiful images, then rends the heart.
House of Flying Daggers is loaded with the kinds of visual wonders that make adult moviegoers feel like giddy kids.
The director has taken the martial-arts genre to its ultimate flowering: to ennoble women as full-fledged warriors capable of defending their own honor before deciding on the man they chose to love.
Offers more of [Zhang Yimou's] beautiful photography, graceful staging, intricately choreographed fight scenes and metaphorical imagery.
It's as thrilling and lushly beautiful a movie as has been released all year, matched only by Zhang's epic Hero.
Latest News for House of Flying Daggers
December 04, 2007:
Francis Lawrence Confirms I Am Legend Reshoots; Set to Adapt Palahniuk Tome
Looking for the truth about those I Am Legend reshoots? How about what's next for the film's director, Francis Lawrence? More...
November 23, 2006:
Trailer & Poster for Yimou's "Curse of the Golden Flower"
The latest from from the director of "House of Flying Daggers" and "Hero" is on its way, which means we're due for a few new posters and maybe even a... More...
November 01, 2006:
Fantastic New Pics from Yimou's "Golden Flower"
I'll keep this short and sweet: If you're a fan of movies like "Hero" and "House of Flying Daggers," you probably have a rather large interest in seeing... 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...
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