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Le règne des assassins

Titre original : Jian yu
  • 2010
  • R
  • 1h 57min
NOTE IMDb
6,8/10
9,4 k
MA NOTE
Le règne des assassins (2010)
WuxiaActionAventure

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueDrizzle/Zeng Jing tries to start a new life after she had betrayed her gang and hid the remains of monk.Drizzle/Zeng Jing tries to start a new life after she had betrayed her gang and hid the remains of monk.Drizzle/Zeng Jing tries to start a new life after she had betrayed her gang and hid the remains of monk.

  • Réalisation
    • Chao-Bin Su
    • John Woo
  • Scénario
    • Chao-Bin Su
  • Casting principal
    • Michelle Yeoh
    • Jung Woo-sung
    • Xueqi Wang
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,8/10
    9,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Chao-Bin Su
      • John Woo
    • Scénario
      • Chao-Bin Su
    • Casting principal
      • Michelle Yeoh
      • Jung Woo-sung
      • Xueqi Wang
    • 47avis d'utilisateurs
    • 57avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 3 victoires et 21 nominations au total

    Photos65

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    Rôles principaux34

    Modifier
    Michelle Yeoh
    Michelle Yeoh
    • Zeng Jing
    Jung Woo-sung
    Jung Woo-sung
    • Jiang Ah-sheng
    Xueqi Wang
    Xueqi Wang
    • Cao Feng, The Wheel King
    Barbie Hsu
    Barbie Hsu
    • Ye Zhanqing (Turquoise)
    Shawn Yue
    Shawn Yue
    • Lei Bin
    Xiaodong Guo
    Xiaodong Guo
    • Zhang Renfeng
    Kelly Lin
    Kelly Lin
    • Xi Yu
    Yiyan Jiang
    • Tian Qingtong
    Leon Dai
    Leon Dai
    • Lian Sheng, the Magician
    Hee Ching Paw
    Hee Ching Paw
    • Mrs. Cai
    Matt Wu
    Matt Wu
    • Killer Bear
    Shih-Chieh King
    Shih-Chieh King
    • Doctor Li
    Pace Wu
    Pace Wu
    • Qing Jian (Kongdong Teal Sword)
    Zonghan Li
    Zonghan Li
    • Lu Zhu (Wisdom)
    • (as Calvin Li)
    Angeles Woo
    • Eater Bear
    Xiaoguang Hu
    • Song Yang 5 Leader
    Zhi Han
    • Song Yang 5 Member 1
    Qingxing Han
    Qingxing Han
    • Song Yang 5 Member 2
    • Réalisation
      • Chao-Bin Su
      • John Woo
    • Scénario
      • Chao-Bin Su
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs47

    6,89.3K
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    Avis à la une

    8mmushrm

    Best I've seen in a while.

    I really enjoyed this movie and have to say its one of the best movies of this genre that I have seen in awhile.

    The fight scenes were good, nothing that disregards the laws of physics and gravity too much. Quick action sequences, no shots that goes in slow motion and focuses on the flow of the hair kind of effects. The characters are so-so. I will not say that they are overly interesting but they don't distract from the story either.

    The best part of the movie for me was how it actually caught me off guard. The plot twist actually made me laugh as I never saw it coming and I thought I have seen it all in martial art movies.

    There are some parts that are funny some that are sexy. parts that are exciting and parts that are wholesome. I really recommend this movie. Don't let the rather formulaic and somewhat confusing opening throw you off. Its good :)
    8trentreid-1

    Classic Wuxia Tone Without The Trendier Clichés

    Excellent wuxia pan with Yeoh in top form dramatically as well as in weapons work. It was refreshing to see the pan-Asian casting done for specifically appropriate characters and acting ability, but without much overt typecasting. Wang Xueqi anchors the film opposite Yeoh more than Jung perhaps, but in the best genre fashion the villains are given gradation and more complex motive and arc than one often sees in action film.

    An initial introductory sequence put me off, with a lot of intermittent cinematography and freeze-frames on specific characters. Fortunately, this device is not repeated or characteristic. Kam's score is more understated than usual, and plays well with string accompaniment to the more tightly choreographed parts. Leon Dai's assassin styles and names himself after a Taoist Magician, which initially seemed too light. However, this changed quickly, and although he lent much color to later scenes the overall tone fit well.

    It's got a very classic feel, applying wirework sparingly and focusing on the intertwined dialogue and motives of a large cast within the jiang hu milieu. The fights are intricate, concentrating on exotic weapons and styles, but mixing it up with some proxy fighting and concealed technique. It neatly avoids recently popular pitfalls such as overt cgi spectacle, massing sheer volumes of Mainland extras, or lingering on glamour shots of pecs and shimmering hair weaves. Instead, we get clearly delineated spaces for a series of crafted set pieces which fit into a whole - not something to be written around by committee. Hopefully, fans will respond and more filmmakers take notice.
    8alisonc-1

    Michelle Yeoh Once Again Illuminates a Martial Arts Film

    The Dark Stone gang is tracing the remains of a Buddhist priest, because the rumour is that the person who owns those remains will rule over the kung fu world. One of the assassins kills the person who owns half of the corpse, and then makes off with it, thereby betraying her gang. She then meets Wisdom, a martial arts master turned monk, who teaches her that her deed was wrong; she therefore seeks a physician who can change her face for her, turning her into Zeng Jing (the lovely Michelle Yeoh). In her new identity, she becomes a fabric merchant in the big city, where she meets and falls in love with messenger Jiang A-sheng (Woo-sung Jung); soon they marry and appear to have a tranquil life together. But all is not as it seems; not only is Zeng Jing not who she says she is, but neither is Jiang A-sheng, and in the meantime her old gang, among others, continues to search for their erstwhile companion - and the remains of the monk....

    This 2010 film was Michelle Yeoh's first wuxia film since the acclaimed "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon," and she is as beautiful and graceful as ever, playing a rather complex character who is adept at hiding who she really is, yet capable of sincerely falling in love even when she's, perhaps first and foremost, a killer. The martial arts fights are amazing, but never silly-looking, and the supporting characters are all well-drawn, including a young woman brought into the gang to take Zeng Jing's place, a "magician" who uses both martial arts and magic to defeat his enemies, and the leader of the Dark Stone gang, a eunuch who wants nothing more than to be a "real man," yet who is more skilled a fighter then all of them. Must of this story takes place in city-scapes and at night, so we don't have the lovely landscapes sometimes seen in historical martial arts films, but with Yeoh illuminating the screen with her graceful presence, who needs mere trees and mountains?
    moviexclusive

    A classic entry into the 'wuxia' genre, this martial-arts epic delivers an experience both thrilling and poignant

    Ten years ago, Lee Ang's "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" breathed new life into the 'wuxia' genre and opened up the world of Chinese cinema to mainstream Western audiences. Had "Reign of Assassins" arrived ten years earlier, it could have very well have achieved the same groundbreaking success as Lee Ang's classic, for make no mistake- this dazzling martial arts epic ranks among one of the best of its kind.

    In writer/director Su Chao-Pin's ancient China- as told over an enchanting animated sequence- there are different sects of assassins after the ancient remains of a mystical Indian monk. Among the most deadly are a squad known as the Dark Stone, led by the formidable and distinctively raspy-voiced Wheel King (Wang Xueqi). Drizzle (Kelly Lin) is the most powerful member of the squad, but she has had enough of her life of killing and goes under the knife to emerge as Zeng Jing (Michelle Yeoh).

    Just the names of the characters will do well to convince you that this is pure fantasy, but while the world may be make-believe, the characters within them are firmly grounded. Su's script takes its time in the first hour to set up the romance between Zeng Jing and messenger boy Jiang Ah-Sheng (Korean star Jung Woo-sung)- their courtship unfolding with a gentle touch of humour and more than a hint of the film's title - as well as their subsequent married life. Audiences waiting for some action will have to be a bit more patient, as Su wants his audience to get to know his characters well and gives them time to grow on you.

    It is almost a good hour into the film by the time Wheel King and his gang of assassins- Lei Bin (Shawn Yue), the Magician (Leon Dai) and Zhan Qing (Barbie Hsu)- track down Zeng Jing on their quest to find the remains. Yet the care and attention to detail that Su pays to each one of his characters pays off beautifully in the second half. Refusing to cast his characters as black-and-white heroes and villains, Su gives each a back-story that blends slickly into the various circumstances the plot throws them into. And in between the balletic action choreographed by Hong Kong's Tung Wai, Su draws on the relationships among the various characters for some intriguing drama- especially the dynamics between Zeng Jing, Wheel King and his three fellow assassins.

    It is this tight characterisation that holds the second half of the film together. While the plot in the first half may seem "Mr and Mrs Smith" simplistic in its portrayal of a married couple unaware of the other's past, the second half of the film is anything but. Unfolding with twists and turns, it builds on an engaging first hour to become even more absorbing, culminating in a breathtaking and ultimately touching emotional finish that reaffirms the power of love to overcome hatred and vengeance and self-sacrifice.

    Though Su's film is heavy on drama, it also delivers on the action where it matters. Tung Wai avoids any pretentious visual effects in favour of old-school wire-ful swordplay in all its grace and poeticism- though he does use modern-day technology to throw in some nifty moves like bending swords and flying needles in slo-mo. The very first confrontation between Zeng and her enemies in her house is enough to set your pulse racing, and Tung Wai tops that with another equally, if not more, thrilling fight in her house later on and a two-way fight in an open courtyard. Su is less of a director of action films (his filmography reads the 2002 comedy "Better than Sex" and the 2006 horror film "Silk"), so the fact that the action sequences in here have turned out well must have been due in part to producer John Woo's participation as co-director.

    Woo's involvement has also ensured the excellent cast assembled here. Michelle Yeoh's role in this film is a welcome return to form for the actress that has not had such a meaty role tailor-made for her since Lee Ang's "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon". Her natural beauty and elegance complements Zeng Jing's graceful assassin perfectly and serves as a good foil against co-star Jung Woo-sung's rugged handsomeness. Yeoh and Jung also share great chemistry, and it is firmly to their credit that the film ends on a deeply poignant note.

    Like the best of its genre, "Reign of Assassins" has all the ingredients for a modern-day 'wuxia' classic- tight characterisation, compelling drama and exciting action topped with fantasy elements. Su Chao-pin and John Woo have created a genre classic ten years after Lee Ang's masterpiece and it is a thrilling and poignant experience worthy of the best martial arts epics.
    7tech_ctrl

    Everything a good wuxia can be.

    Reign of Assassins is a delightfully well made wuxia movie which will offer those familiar with previous entries in the genre everything they would expect; from vibrant visuals to elegantly choreographed swordplay and the fair share of melodrama which has become an integral part of this genre. I won't dive into plot details because there aren't a whole lot of them for me spend here, the plot synopsis which is provided on this site and others should give any viewer a good idea about the movies proceedings.

    Director Su Chao-Pin and veteran filmmaker John Woo exhibit considerable command when juggling the films tone between dramatic seriousness and lighthearted romance whilst ensuring smooth transitions between the two and creating an equilibrium between exposition and action with none overshadowing the other. Actress Michelle Yeoh remains as charismatic as ever while playing the lead role with confidence and effectiveness and contributes greatly to the movies more dramatic scenes.

    Overall, fans and familiars of the genre are guaranteed a great time with Reign of Assassins, those who do not enjoy wuxias in general should steer clear of this one as well.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Michelle Yeoh had initial doubts about the role as she had not used her martial arts skills since Tigre et Dragon (2000).
    • Connexions
      Featured in At the Movies: Venice Film Festival 2010 (2010)
    • Bandes originales
      Hua
      Composed by Dingding Sa & Peng Bo

      Lyrics by Salad Li & Dingding Sa

      Performed by Dingding Sa & Qing Feng Wu

    Meilleurs choix

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    FAQ21

    • How long is Reign of Assassins?Alimenté par Alexa
    • Why would Ah-Sheng marry his murderer?
    • Why were Bodhi's remains so important?
    • Why did Drizzle run away from the Dark Stone society?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 28 septembre 2010 (Chine)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Chine
      • Taïwan
      • Hong Kong
    • Site officiel
      • Official site [China]
    • Langues
      • Mandarin
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Reign of Assassins
    • Sociétés de production
      • Beijing Gallop Horse Film & TV Production
      • Media Asia Films
      • Zhejiang Dongyang Dragon Entertainment Venture Investment
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 12 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 13 388 204 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 57min(117 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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