Tang tan 1900
- 2025
- 2h 18min
En 1900, una mujer blanca fue asesinada en Chinatown, en San Francisco, y el sospechoso era un hombre chino. El asesinato causó conmoción social y la gente exigió el cierre de Chinatown.En 1900, una mujer blanca fue asesinada en Chinatown, en San Francisco, y el sospechoso era un hombre chino. El asesinato causó conmoción social y la gente exigió el cierre de Chinatown.En 1900, una mujer blanca fue asesinada en Chinatown, en San Francisco, y el sospechoso era un hombre chino. El asesinato causó conmoción social y la gente exigió el cierre de Chinatown.
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Elenco
- Premios
- 3 premios ganados y 2 nominaciones en total
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
While Detective Chinatown 1900 tries to blend comedy with a dark chapter of history, its tonal imbalance weakens the overall experience. The film relies too much on exposition rather than strong storytelling, making its mystery feel contrived and overly reliant on coincidences. Comedy feels misplaced given the heavy subject matter, and while the cast delivers solid performances, the writing struggles to treat its audience with intelligence. A more serious approach, with only minimal humor, would have made for a much stronger film. Ultimately, it's a forgettable entry that fails to leave a lasting impact.
Detective Chinatown 1900, originally known as Tang Ren Jie Tan an 1900, is the fourth entry in the commercially successful comedic investigative franchise. The story takes place in San Francisco's Chinatown where a young Caucasian woman and an elderly First Nations man are found dead in a back alley. The main suspect is the son of a Chinese businessman who cannot provide an alibi for the time of the crime. The father thus hires a quirky, naive and inexperienced Chinese medicine physician as well as the son of the murdered elderly man who happens to be an orphaned Chinese man who had been adopted by a First Nations tribe and who has developed particularly sharp senses.
This movie initially does many things very well. The colourful, detailed and diversified settings look astonishing throughout even though they obviously represent a much more beautiful version of the actual San Francisco's Chinatown. The costumes and make-up also deserve much praise and bring viewers back to a time set between traditional manners and modern perspectives. The quirky characters are introduced step by step which helps the audience to warm up with them when additional information is delivered in a prologue as well as in several flashbacks. The story itself is quite compelling as well since the body count quickly rises and economical, political and social aspects come into play.
However, the film loses its entertaining structure halfway through the rising action. Comedic moments are awkwardly intertwined with investigative passages. Critical comments about the treatment of Chinese immigrants to the United States of America are intertwined with a vapid love story pulled out of thin air. The most important First Nations member in this whole film is played by a Chinese actor who essentially plays a shameful caricature of a truly fascinating culture and even the supporting actors are portrayed as people who constantly misunderstand situations on an almost shockingly stupid level. Criticizing the way Americans have treated Chinese immigrants is indeed important but this film loses itself in racist stereotypes that can be summarized as all important American characters being rotten to the core and all important Chinese characters being inherently heroic. The film goes even further by justifying a violent revolution against monarchy that will ultimately establish a socialist country. As if that weren't enough, the movie even concludes with the megalomaniac statement that one day China will become the most powerful country in the whole wide world. What started as a very good movie develops a very bitter aftertaste due to its aggressive, brainwashing and omnipresent political propaganda. The director, scriptwriters and political influencers behind this film really seem to be taking its audience for complete idiots who can easily be manipulated. To me, this propagandistic movie feels like a desperate cry for help, nationalism and pride in a desperate time when China suffers its most dreadful economic crisis following a long-winded deadly pandemic and numerous particularly outspoken protests against the state system itself.
Now, don't get me wrong at all, I'm positively amazed by Chinese culture, history and society and even share many of the country's economical, political and social values but this movie's radical propaganda show will even drive off people who actually sympathize with the People's Republic of China. This is what must be called a disastrous political own goal.
At the end of the day, let's try to be perfectly fair with our final verdict. This movie is a very entertaining crime comedy that entertains throughout. Its disturbing, extremist and unnecessary propagandistic elements however slow the enjoyment of this film down significantly. Recent reviews by Chinese members of the audience who have found a way to express themselves freely seem to confirm this analysis time and time again.
This movie initially does many things very well. The colourful, detailed and diversified settings look astonishing throughout even though they obviously represent a much more beautiful version of the actual San Francisco's Chinatown. The costumes and make-up also deserve much praise and bring viewers back to a time set between traditional manners and modern perspectives. The quirky characters are introduced step by step which helps the audience to warm up with them when additional information is delivered in a prologue as well as in several flashbacks. The story itself is quite compelling as well since the body count quickly rises and economical, political and social aspects come into play.
However, the film loses its entertaining structure halfway through the rising action. Comedic moments are awkwardly intertwined with investigative passages. Critical comments about the treatment of Chinese immigrants to the United States of America are intertwined with a vapid love story pulled out of thin air. The most important First Nations member in this whole film is played by a Chinese actor who essentially plays a shameful caricature of a truly fascinating culture and even the supporting actors are portrayed as people who constantly misunderstand situations on an almost shockingly stupid level. Criticizing the way Americans have treated Chinese immigrants is indeed important but this film loses itself in racist stereotypes that can be summarized as all important American characters being rotten to the core and all important Chinese characters being inherently heroic. The film goes even further by justifying a violent revolution against monarchy that will ultimately establish a socialist country. As if that weren't enough, the movie even concludes with the megalomaniac statement that one day China will become the most powerful country in the whole wide world. What started as a very good movie develops a very bitter aftertaste due to its aggressive, brainwashing and omnipresent political propaganda. The director, scriptwriters and political influencers behind this film really seem to be taking its audience for complete idiots who can easily be manipulated. To me, this propagandistic movie feels like a desperate cry for help, nationalism and pride in a desperate time when China suffers its most dreadful economic crisis following a long-winded deadly pandemic and numerous particularly outspoken protests against the state system itself.
Now, don't get me wrong at all, I'm positively amazed by Chinese culture, history and society and even share many of the country's economical, political and social values but this movie's radical propaganda show will even drive off people who actually sympathize with the People's Republic of China. This is what must be called a disastrous political own goal.
At the end of the day, let's try to be perfectly fair with our final verdict. This movie is a very entertaining crime comedy that entertains throughout. Its disturbing, extremist and unnecessary propagandistic elements however slow the enjoyment of this film down significantly. Recent reviews by Chinese members of the audience who have found a way to express themselves freely seem to confirm this analysis time and time again.
The popular "Chinatown Detective" franchise has seen some hits and misses, and this is definitely one of the hits.
I had to go to an early morning screening cause the movie is constantly booked out in China.
The story at the core of the plot is a classic whodunnit with many twists and turns. The development of an interesting and complex multiple murder plot keeps you hooked throughout. The story is large in scope, intertwined with the Qing Empress sending an imperial captain to arrest Cantonese revolutionaries in America, weapons shipments, a native American tribe, and the Chinese exclusion act.
The latter however ends up taking up a bit too much of the story, overshadowing the murder plot by the middle of the movie.
Known for its jovial detective stories where the stumbling leads solve the case through a keen eye, knowledge of Traditional Chinese Medicine, and sheer luck, the franchise this time bit off more than it could chew with a cartoonishly delivered political plot that kept on growing and taking up more screentime.
Still, this movie is definitely worth seeing and will keep you entertained throughout!
I had to go to an early morning screening cause the movie is constantly booked out in China.
The story at the core of the plot is a classic whodunnit with many twists and turns. The development of an interesting and complex multiple murder plot keeps you hooked throughout. The story is large in scope, intertwined with the Qing Empress sending an imperial captain to arrest Cantonese revolutionaries in America, weapons shipments, a native American tribe, and the Chinese exclusion act.
The latter however ends up taking up a bit too much of the story, overshadowing the murder plot by the middle of the movie.
Known for its jovial detective stories where the stumbling leads solve the case through a keen eye, knowledge of Traditional Chinese Medicine, and sheer luck, the franchise this time bit off more than it could chew with a cartoonishly delivered political plot that kept on growing and taking up more screentime.
Still, this movie is definitely worth seeing and will keep you entertained throughout!
Honestly, considering Chen Sicheng's usual... performance,
this movie is way better than the third one.
A miracle, really.
(He's tortured my expectations so low, it's kinda sad.)
But you gotta admit - dude knows how to make a Chinese New Year blockbuster.
He single-handedly invented "Spring Festival Gala: The Movie."
Whatever's trending on Douyin?
He throws it in.
Musical numbers? Check.
Plot twists? Check.
Stand-up comedy vibes? Yup.
Magic tricks?? Bro, even those.
A big happy ending with a cheesy group song? You bet.
Chen Sicheng really took the recent Spring Festival Gala vibes to heart: "Teach a lesson first, then let people have fun." Man's getting older - just wants that iron rice bowl now.
When it comes to cashing in on patriotism, even Wu Jing would have to bow and call him the godfather.
Honestly, if it weren't for Chow Yun-fat's acting saving those cringy lines, I would've been rolling my eyes halfway through.
A miracle, really.
(He's tortured my expectations so low, it's kinda sad.)
But you gotta admit - dude knows how to make a Chinese New Year blockbuster.
He single-handedly invented "Spring Festival Gala: The Movie."
Whatever's trending on Douyin?
He throws it in.
Musical numbers? Check.
Plot twists? Check.
Stand-up comedy vibes? Yup.
Magic tricks?? Bro, even those.
A big happy ending with a cheesy group song? You bet.
Chen Sicheng really took the recent Spring Festival Gala vibes to heart: "Teach a lesson first, then let people have fun." Man's getting older - just wants that iron rice bowl now.
When it comes to cashing in on patriotism, even Wu Jing would have to bow and call him the godfather.
Honestly, if it weren't for Chow Yun-fat's acting saving those cringy lines, I would've been rolling my eyes halfway through.
At times this is actually quite a fun spoof along the lines of "Sherlock Holmes" meets "Charlie Chan" by way of "High Noon" but for the most part it's a mess of a film that goes on for far too long. With the Manchu court facing the great powers we saw in "55 Days at Peking" (1963) the Empress Dowager dispatches her finest officer to San Francisco to track down a traitor. As it happens, the Holmesian "Fu" (Haoran Liu) is also in that very city on a quest for the killer of the daughter of senator "Grant" (John Cusack). Quite swiftly his investigation and the imperial mission start to overlap as the enthusiastic "Fu" and his newfound spiritual Indian guide "Gui" (Baoqiang Wang) discover that the prime suspect in the killing (Steven Zhang) is the son of local entrepreneur "Bai" (Chow Yun-Fat) and that the senator is using this to stir anti-Chinese sentiment to the point where he can force them out and seize their property. What now ensues delivers a series of rather randomly assembled escapades that mix murder mystery with western with romance and add a good dose of skullduggery to boot as they try to prove the young "Bai" was framed. Fu and Wang make for a decent enough double act at times, but the story loses it's way way too often and after a while the characterisations - especially "Bai" and "Grant" become light-weight and strained parodies. Fortunately, after about two hours, auteur Sicheng Chen must have felt he was running out of file space and so decided he'd better wrap things up - and for that last quarter of an hour the story knits together things we knew with things we didn't and presents us with a rather feeble denouement that did sort of suggest that there could be more adventures to come for the likeable "Gui" and "Fu". What is potent is the closing statement from the elder "Bai" about remembering the importance of immigrant labour in establishing a country that was all too quick to shun that working community later when it suited it, but it's made in a cack-handed and over-the-top fashion and drowned out by an overpowering score and thus loses much of an impact that might actually resonate in an USA that's still unsure how to recognise those who do/did the work but perhaps didn't all have the same/right skin colour or paperwork. It has it's moments, just nowhere near enough of them.
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 2,229,946
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 749,920
- 2 feb 2025
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 4,999,561
- Tiempo de ejecución2 horas 18 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39 : 1
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By what name was Tang tan 1900 (2025) officially released in India in English?
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