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Pushing Hands

Original title: Tui shou
  • 1991
  • PG-13
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
5.2K
YOUR RATING
Sihung Lung in Pushing Hands (1991)
All the while, Master Chu tries to find his place in the foreign American world.
Play trailer2:00
1 Video
10 Photos
ComedyDrama

All the while, Master Chu tries to find his place in the foreign American world.All the while, Master Chu tries to find his place in the foreign American world.All the while, Master Chu tries to find his place in the foreign American world.

  • Director
    • Ang Lee
  • Writers
    • Ang Lee
    • James Schamus
  • Stars
    • Sihung Lung
    • Lai Wang
    • Bozhao Wang
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    5.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ang Lee
    • Writers
      • Ang Lee
      • James Schamus
    • Stars
      • Sihung Lung
      • Lai Wang
      • Bozhao Wang
    • 22User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 7 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:00
    Trailer

    Photos10

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    Top cast25

    Edit
    Sihung Lung
    Sihung Lung
    • Mr. Chu
    Lai Wang
    Lai Wang
    • Mrs. Chen
    Bozhao Wang
    Bozhao Wang
    • Alex Chu
    • (as Ye-tong Wang)
    Deb Snyder
    Deb Snyder
    • Martha Chu
    Fanny De Luz
    • Linda
    Haan Lee
    • Jeremy Chu
    Hung-Chang Wang
    • Boss Huang
    Jeanne Kuo Chang
    • New Cooking Teacher
    James Lou
    • Mr. Chao
    B.C. Lee
    • Waiter Lee
    Chit-Man Chan
    Chit-Man Chan
    • Chef Tsien
    Victor Chan
    Victor Chan
    • Gangster
    Bin Chao
    • Waiter Wong
    Audrey Haight
    • Anchorwoman
    Jackson King
    • Gangster
    Eugene Lau
    • Gangster
    Bar-Chya Lee
    • Waiter Lee
    Richard Light
    • Gangster
    • Director
      • Ang Lee
    • Writers
      • Ang Lee
      • James Schamus
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    7.25.1K
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    Featured reviews

    10bagua-2

    This film demonstrates that an important issue, the aging of one's parents, can be blended with comedy and kung-fu successfully!

    Rarely have I seen the highest level of martial arts, internal kung-fu, portrayed in it's proper perspective. It is hard these days for people to realize that 'soft' style kung-fu will enable an old man to defeat many young men without much effort. With all the silly 'wire-fu' out there in the movies most people have no idea that there is a subtle way to defeat strength through 'chi energy' power lines.

    There is no question that Ang Lee has the ability to put kung-fu back at the top of the martial art world. Through his well thought out story line and his perfect blend of drama and comedy he has taken a deep look at the struggle that exists today for thousands of people as they care for their elderly parents. This is truly a movie that can bond many generations.
    10Matador

    Better than the Joy Luck Club

    Pushing Hands is Ang Lee's beautiful film about an elderly Chinese man transplanted into his son's American home. While most films about this subject, which for some reason critics like to call "East meets West", hyperbolize the struggles that immigrant Chinese must face, Pushing Hands tends to focus on minutia instead. For example, the elderly grandfather does not know that tin foil cannot be put into the microwave, which leads to a scolding by his caucasian daughter-in-law. All the conflict in the film is grounded in the real world, as opposed to some very abstract 'generational conflict'. Because of this I found this film to be much more rewarding than most other films about Asian-Americans. A must-see for Chinese-Americans and Caucasians alike. Personally, I'd like to watch it with my Chinese grandparents.

    Listen for James Schamus's cameo as the voice on the answering machine at the beginning of the film.
    7l-07256

    Who is the promoter of fate?

    When I was in class that day, I asked the students what did the "pushing hand" say? Almost all of them, including those who haven't seen "Pushing Hands", answer the collision between Chinese and Western cultures, so I wonder why it is so unified. After reading Baidu Encyclopedia, I understand! What is the "homesickness" is indeed the standard of the central idea, but there is no performance in the movie, and it is not allowed to pay for the payment. Inserting a digression, about the very interesting thing about this film, on the day of the release of "Pusher", the box office was flat. On the same day, I won nine nominations at the Golden Horse Award, and after winning the best actor, supporting actress and special prize, the box office immediately after the next day. Big rise. It seems that we have to hear about it, only to know it. After reading the comments, we know what the movie is about? "Pushing Hands" Virgo is often the most like the author himself, so "Pushing Hands" is very good, and the sharp parts are hidden under the gentle and popular narrative. The whole film is staring at Lao Zhu alone, so look at "Pushing Hands" and see Lao Zhu. Taijiquan Professor Zhuo-Taiji Pusher, in the words of Lao Zhu in the film, is: We practice the inner family, pay attention to refining the spirit, practicing the spirit, and waiting for the level of refining the spirit, it is very It's hard to practice again. Lao Zhu is an old man who admits to lose. I practiced pushing my hand to teach Lao Zhu at this level, but I feel that life has become utterly weak. The loneliness and emptiness faced after retirement were all due to the reason that the son came to the United States, and the son married the wife of the foreign woman. All the pressure was passed on to his son and he could see it in the next minute. So Lao Zhu did not accept his life and wanted to fight. Teaching Tai Chi in Chinatown, the action after meeting Chinese Mrs. Chen is completely like a boy in first love. Later, after the hope was shattered, Lao Zhu still refused to admit defeat and left home! This "jailbreak" failed again. In the face of the humiliation of the restaurant owner, Lao Zhu's bloody Fang's defeat of the "enemy" still lost his cultivation.
    cosmo_kramer-3

    Sometimes small productions can give you quite a treat.

    Sihung Lung, the actor who played Master Chu, the aging tai chi master, gave a very convincing and sincere performance in this film. It was no wonder that he won the Golden Horse (Taiwan's equivalent for the Oscars) for Best Actor in this film. His performance was extremely touching, as tears jerked into my eyes as I see an aging and traditional Chinese father trying to get along with his westernized family while also trying to adjust to life in a new place and culture. The film encourages people, especially new immigrants, to emphasize and put themselves in their parents' shoes. Try to understand how difficult it is for them to come and settle in a new place and try not to push them away. Be patient with them, take a step back and everything may be better.

    The movie title, "Pushing Hands", is very appropriate, as this is the term for an exercise in tai chi in which a person achieves balance by giving up balance. In this non-aggressive exercise between 2 people, a person offers no resistance at all to the pressure or push that the other person is exerting and keeps borrowing this strength until they feel they have fused into one and thus have achieved harmony. This was what Master Chu did. Although his daughter-in-law kept misunderstanding him, causing much discontent and eventually got his son to try to sent him away, he offered no resentment or a temper tantrum. He simply walked away gracefully. This action caused his son to appreciate him and remember why he got his father to live together in the first place in a tear jerking scene and finally they worked out a solution. They decided to give each other space by living separately instead of pushing each other away. In the end everyone was much happier, as even the daughter-in-law learned to accept the father, symbolized by her decorating the guest room for him and asking the question if he would ever visit. The father achieved the balance that he seek in Tai-Chi.

    Ang Li is simply amazing and sensational. He did what he could with the limited budget and created a very warm and tear jerking film. Although this film was not the highest quality (the version I saw was very unclear and skips sometimes) and it could feel slow at times, especially the beginning sequence, the film was a great work in directing. The film picked up its pace after the slow beginning without any big fighting scenes or explosions and never felt boring afterwards. Also, from the beginning sequence, where he was able to show the dissension and gap between the daughter-in-law and the father by using just different scenes and visuals, to scenes throughout the film where he used lighting and different camera angles to show the internal pain and sadness that the father experience, it was, simply put, a great piece of art considering the budget. It showcased the talent of Li and gave the audience a glimpse of the man who would bring us the memorable Couching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.
    7Jeremy_Urquhart

    A good debut for Ang Lee

    I do really love how when it comes to Ang Lee, there are no two films he's made that feel completely similar. He's up there with Spielberg when it comes to covering a wide variety of genres and tones, and maybe slightly more consistent, too. Pushing Hands was his debut, and while it reminded me a little of Eat Drink Man Woman in parts, it was still pretty different overall, in terms of its story and how it wasn't afraid to present a slightly heightened reality at times, too.

    This does mean it's not as well balanced as Lee's 1994 film (and it doesn't hit as hard emotionally, either), but it does stand as a strong debut, and a film I mostly enjoyed quite a bit. It's a tiny bit rough around the edges, but only when you compare it to what Ang Lee was capable of doing just a few years later. Considering he was starting out here, it's a very confident and well-made debut.

    Not all the humour hits, and some scenes end a bit abruptly. And as mentioned, the detours it almost takes into becoming a martial arts movie are unexpected (but will probably end up being one of the most memorable things about it). At its core though, it's a movie about family drama and the difficulties of growing old, and I think when it focuses on those things, it's quite effective. Lee's an empathetic filmmaker, and you always feel something for his main characters, and even in his debut, that's no exception.

    While it's not one of his best films, I think it's still pretty easy to recommend and enjoy. I look forward to watching The Wedding Banquet soon, as I think that was his second film, and I've heard the general consensus is it's almost as good as the excellent Eat Drink Man Woman.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Goofs
      The son, Alex, has physiognomy that is unmistakably that of someone Beijing, and the actor speaks with a Beijing accent, but the father, who demonstrates Taiwanese cultural practices, has the appearance of someone from farther south, such as near Shanghai. Regardless of whom the father might have married, the couple could not have produced a child with such Northern characteristics. This is a casting error more than a character error.
    • Connections
      Featured in Century of Cinema: Naamsaang-neuiseung (1996)

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 7, 1991 (Taiwan)
    • Countries of origin
      • Taiwan
      • United States
    • Languages
      • Mandarin
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Manos que empujan
    • Filming locations
      • Chinatown, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Ang Lee Productions
      • Central Motion Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $400,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $152,322
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $9,567
      • Jun 4, 1995
    • Gross worldwide
      • $152,322
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 45m(105 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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