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IMDbPro

Les Larmes d'un héros

Original title: Ying xiong wu lei
  • 1984
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Eddy Ko in Les Larmes d'un héros (1984)
Gun FuActionDramaWar

The Thai government hires a group of Chinese mercenaries to capture a powerful drug lord from the Golden Triangle. The mercenaries manage to capture the drug lord, but soon find themselves p... Read allThe Thai government hires a group of Chinese mercenaries to capture a powerful drug lord from the Golden Triangle. The mercenaries manage to capture the drug lord, but soon find themselves pursued by his forces, and the forces of a bitter Thai officer. The Chinese mercenaries are... Read allThe Thai government hires a group of Chinese mercenaries to capture a powerful drug lord from the Golden Triangle. The mercenaries manage to capture the drug lord, but soon find themselves pursued by his forces, and the forces of a bitter Thai officer. The Chinese mercenaries are vastly outnumbered, and as their numbers begin to dwindle, their desperation pulls them i... Read all

  • Director
    • John Woo
  • Writers
    • Peter Ho-Sun Chan
    • Leung-Chun Chiu
    • John Woo
  • Stars
    • Eddy Ko
    • Ching-Ying Lam
    • Philippe Loffredo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Woo
    • Writers
      • Peter Ho-Sun Chan
      • Leung-Chun Chiu
      • John Woo
    • Stars
      • Eddy Ko
      • Ching-Ying Lam
      • Philippe Loffredo
    • 23User reviews
    • 33Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos27

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    Top cast24

    Edit
    Eddy Ko
    Eddy Ko
    • Chan Chung
    Ching-Ying Lam
    Ching-Ying Lam
    • Vietnamese officer
    Philippe Loffredo
    • Louis
    Cécile Le Bailly
    • French girl
    Yuet-Sang Chin
    Yuet-Sang Chin
    • Chin
    Kam Kong Chow
    Kam Kong Chow
    Yo-Sim Ha
    Lee Hye-suk
    Lee Hye-suk
    Jang Il-shik
      Geun-Bo Im
      Doo Hee Jang
      Ho Kon Kim
      Chau-Sang Lau
      Chau-Sang Lau
        Ying-Chun Ma
        Il-Gwon Park
        Yun-Chiang Peng
        Yun-Chiang Peng
        • Soldier
        Naetado Sakaodue
        Kuo Sheng
        • Director
          • John Woo
        • Writers
          • Peter Ho-Sun Chan
          • Leung-Chun Chiu
          • John Woo
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews23

        6.31.5K
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        10

        Featured reviews

        8AwesomeWolf

        Amongst all the bullets and explosions, there might be a movie

        Version: Cantonese audio, English subtitles (by SBS)

        While watching the first scene of 'Heroes Shed No Tears':

        Me: "Wow, I wonder how much the producers spent on explosions in that 5 minutes alone?"

        My Friend: "Why is he carrying two machine guns?"

        Me: "Why not?"

        Later:

        My friend: "Do you understand this?"

        Me: "I understand machine-guns and explosions."

        My friend: "I don't get it, but those cadavers fly a lot..."

        Got the idea yet? I think 'Heroes Shed No Tears' was Woo's first film in the explosive style has since become famous for. I've seen some of his early kung-fu and comedy movies, but this is earliest Woo film I've seen where there were more explosions than words spoken in the movie. Awesome.

        Chan Chung (Eddy Ko) leads a group of Chinese mercenaries in capturing a Thai drug-lord. Capturing him easily enough, the Chinese mercenaries find themselves on the run from angry drug-runners, a corrupt Thai army unit (whose officer is missing an eye thanks to Chung), and a group of native hunters hired by the Thai soldiers. Ohohoh, there'll be plenty of blood and explosions before this one is half over.

        Essentially, 'Heroes Shed No Tears' is an old kung-fu film, replacing kung-fu with explosives and machine guns. There's a hell of a lot of people shooting and blowing stuff up, much like the old kung-fu films where there was a hell of a lot of kung-fu, and not much else. Most of the time that may have been used to develop the plot is used to blow stuff up, which I guess does kind of further the plot by allowing the characters to move to the next scene, blow something up, and then move to the scene after that. Most of the characters are cannon fodder, while Chung and his son play out the movie as if it were 'Lone Wolf with Cub', replacing swords with guns. Awesome

        'Heroes Shed No Tears' is so mindlessly violent that even the most hardcore might get bored after a while, but it was so explosively compelling and awesome enough to entertain me. Woo fans should really check this out - 8/10

        Awesome count: The word 'awesome' was used three times in this review.
        eibon09

        Before Eastern Condors There Was Heroes Shed No Tears

        Ying Xiong Wei Lei/Heroes Shed No Tears(1986) was a pivotal feature in the early 80s for the director, John Woo. This was the first John Woo movie that included heavy use of gunplay. Although filmed in 1984/85, Heroes Shed No Tears(1986) did not get released until after the box office success of A Better Tomorrow(1986). Before this, Woo was mainly known for his comedies and Kung Fu flicks. Heroes Shed No Tears(1986) combines explosive action with some good martial arts.

        Even if the film isn't as great or polish as John Woo's best, its still better then most of the ones that he has done in Hollywood. There are a few terrific set pieces within the movie. One, the opening gun battle with some drug runners. Two, the fight between the mercenaries and the Thai natives. Three, the martial arts fight between Eddy Ko and Ching Ying Lam.

        It was one of the few war films besides Eastern Condors(1987) and Bullet in the Head(1990) to come out of Hong Kong. Ying Xiong Wei Lei(1986) is a precursor to John Woo's Bullet in the Head(1990). The plot of the film is very similar to Eastern Condors(1987) in that both films deal with mercenaries who are sent to Southeast Asia on a secret mission. Heroes Shed No Tears is the most grim and nihilistic of all John Woo movies(that includes Bullet in the Head). Its in the tradition of films like Aguirre:The Wrath of God(1974), The Deer Hunter(1978), and Apocalypse Now(1979).

        Heroes Shed No Tears(1986) is a modern day retelling of the Lone Wolf & Cub comics. The relationship between Eddy Ko's soldier and his son has the same fatalistic bond that was present with Ogami Itto and his son, Daigoro. Its the closest thing that John Woo has ever come to doing a Lone Wolf & Cub feature. There is a scene that's right out of Lone Wolf & Cub(involves a child who covers himself in a mudhole in order to avoid being burned alive in a fire). The big influence for the one sequence is a similar sequence from Lone Wolf & Cub:Baby Cart in Peril(1973).

        Ching Ying Lam is very convincing as the cruel and sadistic Vietnamese officer. The torture scene involving Eddy Ko is the most brutal one ever done by Woo. Heroes Shed No Tears(1986) has many traits that would become part of the Heroic Bloodshed genre in Hong Kong. Has its share of fogish atmosphere and stylish cinematography. The fight near the end of the movie would be done again in the terrible Mission:Impossible 2(2000)(there was also a exact scene in Strike of Death{1975}).
        Samoan Bob

        A Rhyming Review

        There was a film that I saw

        Just the other day

        And I sat there in awe

        As it blew me away.

        It was made by John Woo

        Who is now a sell out

        His fans he does screw

        As the cash they shell out.

        So get a six-pack

        Full of cold, frosty beers

        And then sit back

        For Heroes Shed No Tears

        Watch with devotion

        This huge action feast

        With enough blood to fill an ocean

        To say the frickin' least

        Our heroes in this tale

        Are a group of Mercs

        Who blast folks all to hell

        'Specially drug lord jerks

        There's fighting, there's stabbing

        There's nuking, there's looting

        There's biting, there's grabbing

        There's puking, there's shooting

        Punches are thrown

        Black soldiers are eaten

        Eyeballs are sewn

        Children are beaten

        A fight goes on

        With nails and a tire

        Our hero loses his son

        Almost in a fire

        There's tons of dying

        But where the film falters

        Is all the damn crying

        Like it was Barbara Walters

        When our hero does cry

        It gets really lame

        For the movie does lie

        With its very own name

        But please do not fret

        It does little harm

        And I'll make you a bet

        About the scene with the arm

        If you do not jump

        When the dude gets the spears

        Shoved straight up his rump

        You've drunk too much beers

        And if you don't find it nice

        When the hut does explode

        After the role of a dice

        Then you're a humorless toad

        So get off your fat ass

        And get the hell out of here

        Cuz you'll have a damn blast

        With Heroes Shed No Tears
        8Bogey Man

        Incredibly fierce action film by John Woo

        Heroes Shed no Tears was filmed in 1984/1985 but was released only when the huge success of his next film, A Better Tomorrow, was born. Heroes Shed no Tears is not as philosophical and personal as Bullet in the Head (Woo's most personal film to date, set in Vietnam war), but it is no less fierce. A group of mercenaries is sent to get one drug smuggler, kidnap him and deliver to court. They kidnap him, but get an angry league of the drug boss' men after them in the jungle and so the savage chase and fight for life has begun.

        The usual elements of Woo are not as primary as in his more recent films, like A Better Tomorrow 1-2, The Killer and Bullet in the Head, but there are similar scenes and segments in this early film, too. Men get killed "with honor" and there are couple of "heroic bloodshed" scenes, too, like the human bomb, for instance. One important element not found too often in Woo's films is that there are many female characters in this film and they are depicted very warmly and lovingly, so Woo definitely can direct females, too, if he wants. The brief love making scene between male and female at one point is very emotional and erotic as the female is so full of love and emotion, and that really tells something about Woo's ability to direct his characters and give them charisma.

        This film is pretty close to Japanese Babycart samurai films Lone Wolf & Cub from the 1970's. The main character in Heroes Shed no Tears has a son and their relationship is very similar to Ogami Itto's and his son Daigoro's, in Lone Wolf & Cub. I don't think this is any rip off of these Japanese films, but it is obvious that Woo had seen these Japanese films and found inspiration from them. After all, Lone Wolf & Cub films are pretty close to Woo's films in their content and philosophy.

        The adrenaline amount in Heroes Shed no Tears is incredible as it is hard to think a film more fierce and angry than this. The action scenes are totally unbelievable and Ultra violent, and I was totally stunned at the fight scene near the water/lake/river at the first part of the film. The mayhem is so over-the-top and something never found in Western film. Fast paced action never lets up during the 80 minutes running time of the film. The camera use in these action scenes and other scenes as well is very professional and it is easy to see what kind of talent was hiding in Woo. This is very violent film and definitely wouldn't get the R rating in US. There are hyper bloody gun battles, head shots, stabbings, impalings, choppings and other acts of violence that truly are savage, but still pretty stylish and symbolic, as always in Woo's films. It tells something about his films' characters' values and moral, even though violence this brutal is not without its consequences in his subsequent films. Woo depicts violence, but that doesn't mean he glorifies it. Violence is always bad in Woo's films and that is left for viewer to interpret and there are no easy solutions in his films. So this kind of cinema would never come from some big studio in Hollywood, I think. This kind of cinema is too challenging for mainstream audience. Still, as I mentioned earlier, this is not as symbolic, deep and polished as Woo's subsequent films and also violence is not as symbolic as in his other films, but this was only the beginning and the director was still inventing his cinematic philosophy.

        Heroes Shed no Tears is very great piece of Hong Kong mayhem cinema, and early work of John Woo. I was very surprised when I watched this since I didn't have any expectations even though I of course knew this was Woo's film. The film is little stupid at times (there are some scenes of usual "humor" often found in Hong Kong films), so I give this 8/10 rating, which I feel is the right for this film, but this is definitely not for the casual and mainstream viewer due to its extreme imagery and attitudes! It would get more stars from me if the film had more content and something more to think about, but still I love this early effort of this great director.
        7Mike Astill

        Truly mindless violence

        Ludicrously violent war movie, notable only for being director John Woo's first foray into gung-ho gunplay that's since become his forte.

        Every plot twist is improbable or just plain ridiculous, every character a hackneyed stereotype or just there for cannon fodder, and every line of poorly subbed dialogue unintentionally funny. In other words, I thought it was great.

        Definitely worth taking a look at if you're in the mood for some truly mindless violence, or if you're a Woo completist.

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        Related interests

        Keanu Reeves in Matrix (1999)
        Gun Fu
        Bruce Willis in Piège de cristal (1988)
        Action
        Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
        Drama
        Frères d'armes (2001)
        War

        Storyline

        Edit

        Did you know

        Edit
        • Trivia
          To simulate bullet hits on walls, grass, etc., instead of using squibs, spots were marked for snipers to shoot on, even when actors were near. This method (which is common practice in Thailand, where this movie was shot) was used, because the setting up of squibs were thought to be too time consuming. Actor Eddy Ko still has a scar on his chest because one bullet ricocheted and hit him there.
        • Alternate versions
          Although rated "not under 18" German Rental-Video (New Vision) features many cuts to reduce violence
        • Connections
          Featured in Kain's Quest: A Better Tomorrow (2015)

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        FAQ11

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        Details

        Edit
        • Release date
          • July 26, 1999 (France)
        • Countries of origin
          • Hong Kong
          • South Korea
        • Languages
          • Korean
          • Cantonese
          • English
          • Thai
          • Vietnamese
        • Also known as
          • Heroes Shed No Tears
        • Filming locations
          • Thailand
        • Production company
          • Paragon Films Ltd.
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Box office

        Edit
        • Budget
          • HK$2,833,051 (estimated)
        See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

        Tech specs

        Edit
        • Runtime
          • 1h 33m(93 min)
        • Color
          • Color
        • Sound mix
          • Mono
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.85 : 1

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