At the center of it all is, of course, Zhang. Charismatic and intense, she excels in her most grown-up role to date.
Purple Butterfly (2004)
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Reviews Counted:8
Fresh:4
Rotten:4
Average Rating:5.8/10
Consensus: Ye Lou's Purple Butterfly is atmospheric and moody, but the story is frustratingly muddled.
Theatrical Release:Nov 26, 2004 Limited
Synopsis: This melancholic, brooding romantic thriller stars Zhang Ziyi (HERO; CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON) as Ding Hui, a Chinese woman who is part of a secret anti-Japanese terrorist organization in... This melancholic, brooding romantic thriller stars Zhang Ziyi (HERO; CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON) as Ding Hui, a Chinese woman who is part of a secret anti-Japanese terrorist organization in 1931 Shanghai. Three years earlier, under her real name, Cynthia, she was a factory worker in Manchuria carrying on a romance with a Japanese man named Itami (Toru Nakamura) who has since become head of Japan's Shanghai branch of the secret service. As Japan and China prepare to go to war, Itami and Cynthia are doomed to face off against each other. Meanwhile, an innocent couple gets caught in the crossfire during a train station shootout, and the grief-stricken survivor, Szeto (Ye Liu), becomes a double agent in the war between the Chinese and Japanese spy groups. PURPLE BUTTERFLY is all about mood: lots of lingering close-ups of characters sulking in the rain, smoking lots of cigarettes in squalid rooms, or dying slowly from bullets lodged near the heart. The film's dreamy romance, restless handheld camerawork, and nonlinear plot recall the films of Wong Kar Wai, and fans of that director's work should be similarly seduced by this elegant Asian period film noir. A mesmerizing score by Jörg Lemberg helps the disparate pieces of the puzzle fall into place. [More]
Starring: Ziyi Zhang, Liu Ye, Feng Yuangzheng, Toru Nakamura
Starring: Ziyi Zhang, Liu Ye, Feng Yuangzheng, Toru Nakamura, Li Bingbing
Director: Ye Lou
Director: Ye Lou
Screenwriter: Ye Lou
Producer: Wang Wei, Yongde Zhu
Composer: Jorg Lemberg
Studio: Palm Pictures
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Reviews for Purple Butterfly
There are two movies battling for supremacy in Butterfly, and both lose. As does the audience.
As atmospheric and moody as a film noir, the stylish, sometimes perplexing Purple Butterfly is a remarkable period piece, evoking the bustling, dense and increasingly dangerous Shanghai of the '30s.
Mr. Lou synthesizes a wide range of styles and influences -- from Casablanca to Wong Kar-wai -- resulting in a movie that, for all its haunting strangeness, seems curiously familiar.
Too often, Purple Butterfly is as impenetrable as Zhang's placid, obdurate beauty.
An often remarkable, often infuriating lateral spin on genre material that desperately needs another sesh at the editing table.
Lou Ye ... has chosen a murky and disjointed means to narrate this story.
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