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Once Upon a Time in China

Titolo originale: Wong Fei Hung
  • 1991
  • R
  • 2h 14min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,2/10
20.871
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
POPOLARITÀ
4088
7012
Once Upon a Time in China (1991)
Trailer for Once Upon A Time In China
Riproduci trailer2:01
1 video
40 foto
Arti marzialiAzioneKung FuWuxia

Il leggendario eroe delle arti marziali Wong Fei-Hung combatte contro il saccheggio della Cina da parte delle forze straniere. Quando la zia Yee torna dall'America, Wong Fei-Hung assume il r... Leggi tuttoIl leggendario eroe delle arti marziali Wong Fei-Hung combatte contro il saccheggio della Cina da parte delle forze straniere. Quando la zia Yee torna dall'America, Wong Fei-Hung assume il ruolo del suo protettore.Il leggendario eroe delle arti marziali Wong Fei-Hung combatte contro il saccheggio della Cina da parte delle forze straniere. Quando la zia Yee torna dall'America, Wong Fei-Hung assume il ruolo del suo protettore.

  • Regia
    • Hark Tsui
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Hark Tsui
    • Kai-Chi Yuen
    • Yiu-Ming Leung
  • Star
    • Jet Li
    • Rosamund Kwan
    • Biao Yuen
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,2/10
    20.871
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    POPOLARITÀ
    4088
    7012
    • Regia
      • Hark Tsui
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Hark Tsui
      • Kai-Chi Yuen
      • Yiu-Ming Leung
    • Star
      • Jet Li
      • Rosamund Kwan
      • Biao Yuen
    • 80Recensioni degli utenti
    • 65Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 5 vittorie e 4 candidature totali

    Video1

    Once Upon A Time In China
    Trailer 2:01
    Once Upon A Time In China

    Foto40

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    Interpreti principali35

    Modifica
    Jet Li
    Jet Li
    • Wong Fei Hung
    Rosamund Kwan
    Rosamund Kwan
    • 13th Aunt
    Biao Yuen
    Biao Yuen
    • Leung Foon
    Jacky Cheung
    Jacky Cheung
    • Buck Teeth So
    Kent Cheng
    Kent Cheng
    • Porky Wing
    Kam-Fai Yuen
    • Kai
    Shi-Kwan Yen
    Shi-Kwan Yen
    • Iron Robe Yim
    • (as Yee Kwan Yan)
    Shun Lau
    Shun Lau
    • Naval Commander Lau
    Wu Ma
    Wu Ma
    • Grand-Uncle Cheung
    Jianguo Qiu
    • Shaho Gang Leader Tong
    Cheung-Yan Yuen
    Cheung-Yan Yuen
    • Yim's Opponent
    Chi-Yeung Wong
    Chi-Yeung Wong
    • Commander Man
    Shun-Yee Yuen
    • Honorable Manchu Soldier
    Xiong Xinxin
    Xiong Xinxin
    • Shaho Gang Member
    • (as Xin Xin Xiong)
    Jonathan Isgar
    • Jackson
    Mark King
    • British General Wickens
    Steve Tartalia
    • Tiger
    Colin George
    • Jesuit Priest
    • Regia
      • Hark Tsui
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Hark Tsui
      • Kai-Chi Yuen
      • Yiu-Ming Leung
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti80

    7,220.8K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    patrokov

    This is much more than a Kung Fu Movie

    Wong Fei Hung is a legendary Chinese hero (like James Bond) whoe has some 90 films about him before this movie. In fact Jackie Chan plays Wong Fei Hung in Legend of Drunken Master. So this movie is not merely a kung fu movie. This movie's main theme is of Chinese culture vs Western culture as it is embodied by martial arts vs guns. How can China remain beautiful in its art that requires years of dedication to master, when success can be so cheaply purchased with Western firearms? Wong Fei Hung must make sense of it somehow, and in the end shows that while you can't fight guns with kung fu, that kung fu in the right hands can be just as deadly as guns. (It's not the gun... it's the bullets.)

    Woven into this main theme is the theme of a lost sense of Chineseness and lack of communication. The characters who cut off their queues (their symbol of loyalty to the Qing dynasty) because of desperation or confusion or ambition. The Chinese/American who cannot read Chinese. The mistaken Lion dance.

    Beyond this conflict, the movie has countless inside jokes for the fans of Honk Kong cinema. The trampolines at the end were a tribute to the early kung fu movies that used them before wire techniques were introduced. The scene where the two disciples have to dress up in the Peking Opera: Sammo Hung (TV's Martial Law) traditionally played the role of the butcher in this series. He, along with the other character who dressed up in the movie were originally trained in Peking opera and form there entered kung fu movies. So it was an inside joke. The nerdy character is played by one of Hong Kong's most popular pop singers.

    This movie is simply incredible, even though the kung fu is not as satisfying as in some of Jet Li's other movies (The Legend and Fist of Legend). I recommend seeing it on DVD. That way you can see the original movie with subtitles. Then you can go back and watch it with a running commentary. Stay away from the English dubbed version, as it cuts scenes from the movie.
    7lastliberal

    A Chinese classic

    Two of my favorite films are "One Upon a Time in America" and Once Upon a Time in the West." So naturally, I would be attracted to this film just to see if it matches the others. It does.

    Jet Li stars as the legendary Chinese hero Wong Fei-Hong. He is fighting against intruders from the West. Yep, invading armies like us. The people of China are not going to give in. He is asked to train the locals in kung fu.

    Things get complicated with the arrival of Wong's "Aunt" Yee (Rosamund Kwan), just back from a two-year stay in the West. She is not really his Aunt, so romance simmers between the two.

    There are plenty of evildoers in this film. Gangs looking for protection money, corrupt government officials (no surprise there!), and those nasty foreigners.

    You will want to watch this film more than once. Jet Li's performance, coupled with his kung fu wizardry, carries the viewer through any shaky patches. The fight scenes are the main attraction, of course, and the film delivers the goods again and again.
    Chrysanthepop

    Not Exactly A Classic but Brilliant Nonetheless

    Jet Li's done some exceptional work in China. I have not been impressed by anything he did in America. Tsui Hark's 'Wong Fei Hung' has already been stretched into several sequels of which I have only seen the first. 'Wong Fei Hung' has all the ingredients to make it an enjoyable epic movie. There is a story with a heart, some very well crafted choreography, good acting, and enough action and culture. It's set on a historical backdrop of a pre-Communist China. The characters are very well written (with the exception of the non-Chinese who act like caricature villains). Jet Li, Biao Yuen, Rosamund Kwan, Jacky Cheung and Kent Cheng all act well. It also presents some taboo elements such as Wong's affection for his 'aunt' (it was taboo during the time) but this is all skillfully underused which prevents the film from appearing too preachy. The film has several layers but it tries to tackle too many things at once and becomes unnecessarily complicated at some point. The film slightly drags in the first half and the choreography of the action scenes without the main cast looked a little shoddy. Yet, the characters are very likable and the story also offers a lot to enjoy that I am looking forward to its sequels. In my humble opinion, it's certainly one of the better martial arts films and has a lot more substance than pretentious films like 'Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon'. the only other Tsui Hark film I've seen is the magnificent 'Chat gim' and I've liked what I've seen so far.
    9aimayli

    Great martial film, too ambitious with all its intended messages

    This movie, directed by Tsui Hark, embodied some of the best Kong-fu fight sequences to be found anywhere in the entire genre. Not only were the fights choreographed with amazing skill and dexterity, there was also supreme creativity and use of forces at work here. The angle placement of the camera was always effective and the fight scenes between the hero and his enemies are set up with admirable presence and dignity. Furthermore, the editing was bold and crisp; for the most part everything flowed very well from one scene to the next. Jet Li was unparalleled in his martial arts glamour. His stern demeanor accentuated his role as a leader and a man of principle.

    Jet Li played Wong Feihong, a doctor who also happened to be renowned for his skill in martial arts. Against his will, he became involved in combating the local gang, whose rivalry and antagonism was set up by a flimsy pretext. (Apparently gang violence usually are created over the most trifle of instances) On the one hand, Feihong, had to deal with the local thugs, on the other, he had to deal with government officials and foreign mercenaries.

    Along for the ride were some touching characters playing Wong Feihong's students, the stuttering Western-educated nerd and the formidably huge pork merchant. The addition of Aunt 13 to the cast added shy romance, providing a nice contrast to all the fighting and constant strife and chaos.

    The movie featured a convincing historical backdrop and captured the national Chinese character well, at least, the 19th century, pre-Communist era. The music score was very nicely done and complemented the film well. At times, the movie evoked as much emotion as the characters themselves.

    The only problem with this film may be its overly ambitious goals of trying to tackle everything at once. There was the sentiment of saving China from "foreign devils" as well as the sentiment that China was rotting and corrupt at its core, with the Chinese betraying the Chinese. There was also the strong sense of there being too few good men like Wong Feihong, with a strong desire to do right by his country. Over all, the movie's message was multi-layered and complex and can be confusing to the unschooled audience.

    Still, this movie, made in 1991, showed off Jet Li's lyrical martial arts grace in full glory and in its best moments, takes fighting to a transcendent level.
    chaos-rampant

    Hard fist, soft eye

    I think this is both troubling as a film and revealing of Chinese character. As a standalone, it is I suppose fairly enjoyable, the cinematography is nice, the story long but intimate in spots, the fights some of them amazing. But, this is not just a standalone, it has a rich context - the protagonist is a popular folk hero, the times of foreign oppression and inept administration it depicts were real and left punishing scars in the Chinese soul.

    Something else bothers though. As a student of the Chinese model, I encounter this elsewhere, I believe it does a lot of bad, and turns away as many people as it brings in. What they Chinese do usually has both hard and soft aspects, Confucius and Tao would be on opposite ends of this, kung fu and meditation. When Western people are exposed to it, say with a film like this, unwittingly we register it as one picture. It endears, it's a scented romance.

    What isn't so easy to appreciate though is that to get that single harmonious picture the Chinese obsessively flatten their multifaceted experience, this is evident in the continuous reinvention, passionately undertaken, of both their political and martial arts narratives, and of course their penchant for opera. Naturally, corners have to be cut in the name of a tidy narrative.

    And this carries over in (cinematically) packaging these things in ways that eliminate subtler levels in what they do. Because the harmonizing effort is forcible, it can't help but take out of these things their soft wind, which is their real power in both the Taoist and creative sense. If you accept as I do that wisdom is tolerance and capacity for cognitive dissonance, this artificial harmony wherever encountered dumbs us down.

    In the film, you have the good sifu vs evil sifu, the good-natured but bumbling disciples, the evil street gang, the cruel army bureaucrat and foreign officials - all of them 'hard' stereotypes from the Boxer era, acted in a hard (external) manner.

    And I believe the point at some stage was to contrast soft 'chi' based awareness in the Jet Li character with hard 'iron body' kung fu in the rival master as the difference in karmas they set in motion. This has been flattened in favor of more or less the same kung fu.

    So hard politics, hard acting (mirrored in the opera stage and two 'fake' actors), hard martial arts in the service of mythmaking. Is there anything soft here, internal? The woman. She has come back from the West, straddles both worlds. She has come back with a camera, which she uses to snap pictures.

    Her eye is 'soft', stills motion, caresses the shadow of the one she loves. Too bad they didn't make more room for this, using it to cultivate dissonance, reflection, innate capacities for clarity and beauty, which could then transfer over to the fights.

    The music is marvelous though. And the camera glides as though on wires of its own.

    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Wong Fei-hung was a famous practitioner of hung gar kung fu, although the techniques Jet Li uses are mostly of the long fist method and tai chi.
    • Blooper
      (at around 54 mins) A 31-star US flag is seen shortly after an adult Wong Fei Hung attempts to defend the Po Chi Lam clinic from a fiery attack. The 31-star flag was used from July 4, 1851 to July 3, 1858. Wong Fei Hung was born on July 9, 1847, and so could not have been older than a few days shy of his eleventh birthday when this flag was still in use. Also, the rows of stars shown on the 31-star flag are inverted. The flag shown has rows of 7, 6, 6, 5, and 7 stars respectively (from top to bottom). The actual flag has rows of 7, 5, 6, 6, and 7 stars top to bottom.
    • Citazioni

      Yim: No matter how good our kung-fu is, it will never defeat guns.

    • Versioni alternative
      A version distributed by 'Made in Hong Kong' UK has a running time of 140 mins. with a extra 10 minutes previously unreleased on video.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in The Art of Action: Martial Arts in Motion Picture (2002)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 15 agosto 1991 (Hong Kong)
    • Paese di origine
      • Hong Kong
    • Lingue
      • Catonese
      • Inglese
      • Francese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Wong Fei Hung
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Golden Harvest Company
      • Film Workshop
      • Paragon Films Ltd.
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 3.826.459 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 2h 14min(134 min)
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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