A truly dazzling achievement, even measured against Tsui's own considerable accomplishments...
Once Upon a Time in China (1991)
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Reviews Counted:27
Fresh:24
Rotten:3
Average Rating:7.4/10
Theatrical Release:Apr 27, 2001 Limited
Synopsis: In one of the recurring gags of ONCE UPON A TIME IN CHINA, attempts to take Wong Fei Hung's picture always fail. The failure to capture the image of Wong (Jet Li) serves as an appropriate metaphor... In one of the recurring gags of ONCE UPON A TIME IN CHINA, attempts to take Wong Fei Hung's picture always fail. The failure to capture the image of Wong (Jet Li) serves as an appropriate metaphor for the place of the Ching Dynasty folk hero in Chinese cultural memory. A legendary master of a variety of kung fu styles, Wong has been subject to numerous interpretations in dime novels and films since the 1930s. In the late 1970s an irreverent portrait of the young Wong Fei Hung emerged in DRUNKEN MASTER. In director Tsui Hark's hand, the beloved historical figure is given the full lionized treatment as he fights for dignity and self-determination against Western imperialists. A revisionist drama that recalls the struggle of the small-property owner fighting for her land in Sergio Leone's ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST, Hark's epic is both a tragic and heroic examination of China's transition to modernity. Like the best of Hark's films (ZU: WARRIORS OF THE MAGIC MOUNTAIN), ONCE UPON A TIME contains imaginative fight sequences, including "no-shadow" kicks and a thrilling battle using bamboo ladders. [More]
Starring: Jet Li, Rosamund Kwan, Yuen Biao, Kent Cheng
Starring: Jet Li, Rosamund Kwan, Yuen Biao, Kent Cheng, Jacky Cheung, Wu Ma
Director: Tsui Hark
Director: Tsui Hark
Studio: Sony Pictures Entertainment
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Reviews for Once Upon a Time in China
Its real strengths are its choreography, its flashes of wit, and its all-round exuberance.
Half political thriller, half martial arts film, the first Once Upon a Time in China is filled with archetypal, yet emotionally layered, characters and moments that make you yell at the screen with excitement.
Aided immeasurably by the acrobatic skills of its brilliant star, Once Upon A Time in China delivers the kinetic goods.
The astonishing hook-and-ladder battle alone is worth the ticket price.
Successfully pays homage to ancient tradition and history by making it entertaining and interesting to non-Chinese audiences.
The fight scenes are the main attraction, of course, and the film delivers the goods again and again.
Beautiful Hong Kong movie. Wonderful story about the technological invasion, and outstanding fight scenes.
The editing here is far from good, and the continuity is constantly thrown off from one shot to the next; we’re talking about different positioning of objects, object-size changes, characters disappearing and re-appearing.
Gets better as it goes along, building up to a prolonged shipboard finale.
Raises the bar for a genre often thought of as meaningless dribble, showing that a Kung Fu movie can be more than just spectacular fight sequences.
Brilliant commentary elevates entertaining Hong Kong action flick to must-see status.
Tsui was smart enough to craft his film as an observant period piece, but also smart enough not to let the kung-fu go soft as a result.
Tsui's camera lurches, pinwheels and whirligigs all over the place to catch every move perfectly.
Not perfect in an objective critical sense, but it's a masterpiece of the genre.
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