Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA gifted female warrior is destined to marry the emperor and bring prosperity to the dynasty.A gifted female warrior is destined to marry the emperor and bring prosperity to the dynasty.A gifted female warrior is destined to marry the emperor and bring prosperity to the dynasty.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire et 4 nominations au total
Raymond Ho-Yin Wong
- Rebel Wu Tsi
- (as Raymond Wong)
Suet Lam
- Prime Minister An
- (as Lam Suet)
Tin Sang Lung
- Court Historian
- (as Lung Tin Sang)
Wai-Leung Hung
- Court Advisor
- (as Hung Wai Leung)
Ka-Sang Cheng
- General Tien
- (as Cheng Ka Seng)
Shiu-Hung Hui
- Emperor of Chu
- (as Hui Siu Hung)
Ai-Wai
- Emperor of Yen
- (as Al Wai)
Wong Chun
- Emperor of Qin
- (as Chun Wong)
Tian-Lin Wang
- Earth God
- (as Wong Tin Lam)
Man-Wai Wong
- Earth God
- (as Bonnie Wong)
Leung Siu
- Envoy of Yen
- (as Siu Leung)
Wai-Man Cheuk
- Wu Yen's Bandit
- (as Dede Chuck)
Avis à la une
This delightful production shows that great acting, good script and effective directing are still the basis of good cinema. This film takes a life of its own and transports us effortlessly to a fairytale world where virtues and vices are greatly exaggerated and fantastical elements are smoothly incorporated with our mundane understanding of the world.
The writer/director Ka-Fai Wai and his fellow director Johnny To elected to play with subjectivity and let the audience continuously use its imagination. For instance, they chose to have the emperor played by a woman and allow for a mere mark on the face to be the symbol of utter ugliness. In that , and in all other aspects of the feature, they succeeded in maintaining the feel of a true fairytale. The sets and decor, the use of camera, the singing narration, and the over-the-top screenplay and acting all felt authentic to the genre. This respect of tradition is in fact the starting point of the ingenuity and originality of the movie.
The foundation of the movie lie in the hands of three potent actress who play their various parts to perfection. The intensity of the acting transcends even the language barrier. The versatility of Anita Mui is breathe-taking. Sammi Cheng plays the strong role of Wu Yen with conviction and intensity, while Cecilia Cheng plays the conniving enchantress so well that you literally hate her. Even the supporting actors add flare to the movie in their small roles, especially the emperor's cohort.
The script is of high quality with strong dialogue, witty humor (both subtle and overt), and a storyline full of surprised. Here again, Wai and Yau opted to keep the children story/fairytale feel with extravagant situations and moral implications prominent. This may feel a slight bit tedious as elements are repeated as if to emphasize points to a child, but it serves its purpose in involving us into the story and in keeping the package coherent in its aim and structure. Besides, the screenplay has enough steam to allow a few short, strategically placed, stagnating moments.
The only unfortunate thing about this movie is that I don't speak Cantonese. The dialogue is so rich that I am certain to have missed some extra nuances. Also, the subtitles are cut short just as the movie is ending to leave place to the credit. I found this very regretful and I urge anyone who understands the language to fill me in on what happens at the end (you can email me). I also hope that the DVD version might remedy that problem.
In conclusion, this movie is a humble masterpiece with an enormous amount of laughs, an interesting plot and an emotionally charged love story. Go see it!! (9/10)
The writer/director Ka-Fai Wai and his fellow director Johnny To elected to play with subjectivity and let the audience continuously use its imagination. For instance, they chose to have the emperor played by a woman and allow for a mere mark on the face to be the symbol of utter ugliness. In that , and in all other aspects of the feature, they succeeded in maintaining the feel of a true fairytale. The sets and decor, the use of camera, the singing narration, and the over-the-top screenplay and acting all felt authentic to the genre. This respect of tradition is in fact the starting point of the ingenuity and originality of the movie.
The foundation of the movie lie in the hands of three potent actress who play their various parts to perfection. The intensity of the acting transcends even the language barrier. The versatility of Anita Mui is breathe-taking. Sammi Cheng plays the strong role of Wu Yen with conviction and intensity, while Cecilia Cheng plays the conniving enchantress so well that you literally hate her. Even the supporting actors add flare to the movie in their small roles, especially the emperor's cohort.
The script is of high quality with strong dialogue, witty humor (both subtle and overt), and a storyline full of surprised. Here again, Wai and Yau opted to keep the children story/fairytale feel with extravagant situations and moral implications prominent. This may feel a slight bit tedious as elements are repeated as if to emphasize points to a child, but it serves its purpose in involving us into the story and in keeping the package coherent in its aim and structure. Besides, the screenplay has enough steam to allow a few short, strategically placed, stagnating moments.
The only unfortunate thing about this movie is that I don't speak Cantonese. The dialogue is so rich that I am certain to have missed some extra nuances. Also, the subtitles are cut short just as the movie is ending to leave place to the credit. I found this very regretful and I urge anyone who understands the language to fill me in on what happens at the end (you can email me). I also hope that the DVD version might remedy that problem.
In conclusion, this movie is a humble masterpiece with an enormous amount of laughs, an interesting plot and an emotionally charged love story. Go see it!! (9/10)
10eah
I enjoyed this movie far more than I expected to. The whole cast of characters (or charicatures) was wonderful - particularly Anita Mui. This is light-hearted, whimsical storytelling about as good as it gets. A little bizarre at times, but a fun story throughout.
Another gender bending three girl Chinese kung fu movie, this time played for laughs. Anita Mui mugs incessantly for the camera, Sammi Cheng wanders around not getting the joke, and Cecilia Cheung is nice to look at. Slow in parts but a reasonably amusing way to spend a couple of hours if you're feeling out of sorts. Apparently a quickie Chinese New Year effort that has the production values of a high school skit.
Bizarre doesn't even begin to describe this film, nor does off-beat. A shallow emperor, a determined warrior princess and one very foxy women who keeps switching back and forth like a ping-pong ball.
But to be honest, it is a funny little film in every sense of the word I confess, this was the very first time I'd ever seen Cecilia Cheung, Sammi Cheng or Anita Mui in a film but I have to say the sillier it got, the more it grew on me. Special mention should be given to Mui who has her hands full with role playing and the same goes for Cecilia Cheung. And even if it teeming with divas, this twisted tale has a truly off-beat charm and in this case, a little charm goes a long way-- at least far enough to keep you with it to find out where it will go next.
But to be honest, it is a funny little film in every sense of the word I confess, this was the very first time I'd ever seen Cecilia Cheung, Sammi Cheng or Anita Mui in a film but I have to say the sillier it got, the more it grew on me. Special mention should be given to Mui who has her hands full with role playing and the same goes for Cecilia Cheung. And even if it teeming with divas, this twisted tale has a truly off-beat charm and in this case, a little charm goes a long way-- at least far enough to keep you with it to find out where it will go next.
Lets be honest here, this movie is silly in all senses of the word. The plot changes sporadically and the shallow emperor Qi's antics may well be unrealistic.
However, all that somehow disappears from the mind when watching it, sure its a strange film and not one loaded with realistic actions, but overall it portrays a comic little tale of the rather pathetic and unfaithful Emperor, the obvious heroine, and the conflicted, cunning yet still appealing fox fairy played by Cecilia Cheung. It won't appeal to all audiences, but as an eastern comic "drama" it will leave a mark - and I couldn't help liking it. Silly is not equivalent to bad, leave your insistence for realism and accuracy at the door and you will like it as well.
However, all that somehow disappears from the mind when watching it, sure its a strange film and not one loaded with realistic actions, but overall it portrays a comic little tale of the rather pathetic and unfaithful Emperor, the obvious heroine, and the conflicted, cunning yet still appealing fox fairy played by Cecilia Cheung. It won't appeal to all audiences, but as an eastern comic "drama" it will leave a mark - and I couldn't help liking it. Silly is not equivalent to bad, leave your insistence for realism and accuracy at the door and you will like it as well.
Le saviez-vous
- ConnexionsFollowed by Qixuan wang yu Zhong Wu Yan (2004)
- Bandes originalesFeeling Alone
Performed by Sammi Cheng
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Détails
- Durée
- 2h 3min(123 min)
- Couleur
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