चीन, सन 1860 का दशक: अपनी सेना का वध हो जाने के बाद, जनरल क्विंगयुन, दो डाकू सरदारों के साथ विद्रोहियों पर हमलों शामिल होता है और खून की कसम लेता है. वे द्रोही सुज्हू और नानजिंग पर नज़र रखने... सभी पढ़ेंचीन, सन 1860 का दशक: अपनी सेना का वध हो जाने के बाद, जनरल क्विंगयुन, दो डाकू सरदारों के साथ विद्रोहियों पर हमलों शामिल होता है और खून की कसम लेता है. वे द्रोही सुज्हू और नानजिंग पर नज़र रखने के लिए किन्ग के प्रति निष्ठावान सेना का गठन करते हैं.चीन, सन 1860 का दशक: अपनी सेना का वध हो जाने के बाद, जनरल क्विंगयुन, दो डाकू सरदारों के साथ विद्रोहियों पर हमलों शामिल होता है और खून की कसम लेता है. वे द्रोही सुज्हू और नानजिंग पर नज़र रखने के लिए किन्ग के प्रति निष्ठावान सेना का गठन करते हैं.
- पुरस्कार
- 18 जीत और कुल 28 नामांकन
- General Pang Qingyun
- (as Lianjie Li)
- Jiang Wuyang
- (as Wu Jincheng)
- Gouzi
- (as Yachao Wang)
- Duan Feng
- (as Aaron Shang)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
The setting for the film is the Taiping Rebellion, but really the film is not about the war. Instead, it's about survival, fear, betrayal, disillusionment, corruption, death and sacrifice. If you're thinking, "Lighten up a bit," that's what I thought too. While there are moments of triumph and prevailing loyalty, those moments are fleeting.
The quality of this film becomes most apparent when compared to other Chinese productions of similar genre. My memory of watching another historical war movie called Three Kingdoms has become a fading memory on a dusty shelf after I watched Warlords. It's the kind of movie that makes you want to tell others about it.
An excellent cast led by Jet Li makes sure that everything else in the movie is just frosting around the cake of well-developed characters. That's not to say that the frosting is inferior. This movie has everything going for it: choreography, special effects, sound and story. It has a something for everyone, although Warlords is definitely a boys' movie, full of politics, brotherhood and carnage. Actually, for a movie with so many serious themes, the action has over-the-top silly violence, but in any case, it's a sight to behold because of how well it's put together. The story is raw and keeps the mind occupied with some of its steeper turns.
The cinematography is grim, just like the ret of the film. Never before have I felt as cold and as dry while watching a movie. Playing with colour, the artists create a gloomy picture of the situation the poor soldiers find themselves in, as they are stuck in the trenches. Grit and dirt fly off the screen during battles.
If you liked movies like Troy, chances are you'll enjoy this much darker Eastern family member, possibly one of the best movies ever created, but heed this warning: it was so heavy that I don't ever want to see it again.
Peter Chan's "The Warlords" is a period epic in every sense of the word. Chan covers a lot of ground here depicting war and the consequences thereof consisting of his anti-war sentiments. It tells the story of three "brothers" played brilliantly by Jet Li (Fearless), Andy Lau (Infernal Affairs) and Takeshi Kaneshiro (House Of Flying Daggers) who make a pact of brotherhood to one another that consists of killing anyone who harms one of the brothers and killing any brother who harms another brother as they lead an army through war after war taking over city after city.
It's incredible to watch the thought process of making vital decisions during a battle or within their own army to defy humanity for the "greater good". It shows the internal and external struggle of these decisions by opposing points of view. The emotions felt by these men translate in any language and leave you emotionally drained after watching the film through to its tragic end.
The cinematography is outstanding, the budget is huge, the directing brilliant and the war scenes brutal as can be. We're talking decapitations, gushing blood, limbs sliced off and a man being blown up by a cannonball. Chan is delivering a truth in the brutality of war rather than dressing it up to keep (most of it) realistic.
War is hell.... and this film will take you there and back. Highest recommendation.
Watching "Warlords," screened for the first time in North America Saturday night in the Castro Theater, part of the San Francisco International Film Festival, at times one might have thought that most of those casualties are shown - often in close-ups - in the film.
Beginning with a view reminiscent of the Normandy invasion sequence of "Saving Private Ryan," the film by Peter Chan and Wai Man Yip depicts combat vividly and intensely. Chung Man Yee's production design peaks at times in virtually unprecedented battle-field spectacles.
There is no resolution, no peace, and only a quasi-relevant love story (featuring Jinglei Xu), but "Warlords" goes well beyond just fightin' and killin' and dyin'. Right from the beginning, as Jet Li's General Pang picks himself up from under the bodies of his dead soldiers, you notice two things: Jet Li's complete lack of vanity and the ability of this martial-arts star to act convincingly and well.
The Manchu style of the head shaved in front and the hair gathered in a ponytail in the back looks hideous when it's all messed up, especially with blood. Jet Li not only appears half dead in his first appearance, but he is taking a bad-hair day to its absolute worst. And then, you also notice that Famous Jet Li - who is NOT flying through the air in this film - has been replaced by an honest and talented actor who brings to life a complex, conflicted, tragic character.
With shifting alliances, goals, and always at the edge of extinction, Pang and his two "blood brothers," Takeshi Kaneshiro's soulful Jiang Wuyang and Andy Lau's towering Zhao Erhu (perhaps Lau's best-ever performance), struggle from small-time wars all the way to the taking of Nanking on behalf of the fast-fading central (so to speak) government in Beijing. The same history-based story has been told, in more modest terms, in Zhang Che's 1973 "The Blood Brothers." A historical war film, a brutal but not gratuitously violent drama, "Warlords" impresses, even stuns, but in the end fails to provide catharsis or even an attempt to make sense of the senseless - something Zhang Yimou came close to in "Hero" (also with Jet Li, playing a similar historic character).
I don't wanna spoil further. I want to say that i am really disappointed in the west for turning a blind eye to eastern movies in general. This movie is an epic. It deserves 20 000 votes. I cannot believe some of the movies that reach Nr 1 at the Box Office when only a relative few informed bothering with movies like this.
This is some timeless movie making.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe main battle sequence had a detailed script treatment of over 20 pages and a maximum of 8 cameras rolling simultaneously.
- गूफ़During battles, the horses fall down without being hit. Clearly they were tripped by wire.
- भाव
General Pang Qingyun: Remember my face, so you can seek vengeance in the next life.
- इसके अलावा अन्य वर्जनThe UK version is cut by 16 secs to remove shots of cruel horsefalls.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in Films of Fury: The Kung Fu Movie Movie (2011)
टॉप पसंद
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- आधिकारिक साइटें
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- The Warlords
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- उत्पादन कंपनियां
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- बजट
- $4,00,00,000(अनुमानित)
- US और कनाडा में सकल
- $1,29,078
- US और कनाडा में पहले सप्ताह में कुल कमाई
- $10,073
- 4 अप्रैल 2010
- दुनिया भर में सकल
- $4,28,83,181
- चलने की अवधि2 घंटे 6 मिनट
- रंग
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 2.35 : 1