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IMDbPro

Les cendres du temps

Original title: Dung che sai duk
  • 1994
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
18K
YOUR RATING
Leslie Cheung in Les cendres du temps (1994)
A broken-hearted hit man moves to the desert where he finds skilled swordsmen to carry out his contract killings.
Play trailer2:20
7 Videos
88 Photos
Martial ArtsWuxiaActionDrama

A broken-hearted hit man moves to the desert where he finds skilled swordsmen to carry out his contract killings.A broken-hearted hit man moves to the desert where he finds skilled swordsmen to carry out his contract killings.A broken-hearted hit man moves to the desert where he finds skilled swordsmen to carry out his contract killings.

  • Director
    • Wong Kar-Wai
  • Writers
    • Louis Cha
    • Wong Kar-Wai
  • Stars
    • Brigitte Lin
    • Maggie Cheung
    • Leslie Cheung
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    18K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Wong Kar-Wai
    • Writers
      • Louis Cha
      • Wong Kar-Wai
    • Stars
      • Brigitte Lin
      • Maggie Cheung
      • Leslie Cheung
    • 61User reviews
    • 126Critic reviews
    • 69Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 9 wins & 13 nominations total

    Videos7

    Ashes of Time Redux
    Trailer 2:20
    Ashes of Time Redux
    Ashes Of Time Redux: Her
    Clip 1:28
    Ashes Of Time Redux: Her
    Ashes Of Time Redux: Her
    Clip 1:28
    Ashes Of Time Redux: Her
    Ashes Of Time Redux: Certain
    Clip 1:25
    Ashes Of Time Redux: Certain
    Ashes Of Time Redux: Want
    Clip 1:02
    Ashes Of Time Redux: Want
    Ashes Of Time Redux: Painful
    Clip 2:20
    Ashes Of Time Redux: Painful
    Ashes Of Time Redux: Score
    Clip 0:54
    Ashes Of Time Redux: Score

    Photos88

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    Top cast13

    Edit
    Brigitte Lin
    Brigitte Lin
    • Mu-rong Yin…
    Maggie Cheung
    Maggie Cheung
    • The Woman
    Leslie Cheung
    Leslie Cheung
    • Ou-yang Feng
    Tony Leung Chiu-wai
    Tony Leung Chiu-wai
    • Blind Swordsman
    • (as Tony Chiu Wai Leung)
    Jacky Cheung
    Jacky Cheung
    • Hung Chi
    Tony Ka Fai Leung
    Tony Ka Fai Leung
    • Huang Yao-shi
    Li Bai
    • Hung Chi's Wife
    Carina Lau
    Carina Lau
    • Peach Blossom
    Charlie Yeung
    Charlie Yeung
    • Young Girl
    Joey Wang
    Joey Wang
      Collin Chou
      Collin Chou
      • Swordsman
      • (uncredited)
      Shun Lau
      Shun Lau
      • Leader of Ouyang's Opponents in Opening Battle
      • (uncredited)
      Li Yin
      • Rebel swordsman
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Wong Kar-Wai
      • Writers
        • Louis Cha
        • Wong Kar-Wai
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews61

      7.017.8K
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      Featured reviews

      moviesbest

      A Timeless and Unique Masterpiece !!! Be Warned !!

      I have my message headed with a WARNING because I don't want any readers to be misled and go rushing for this movie thinking it's like anyone of those Chinese Wuxia movies. This is not an action based movie, it only has "sword fighting" world as a background. This is what always made WKW's films different from any others'. This film has probably the least action scenes compared to any other sword fighting films made within the last 15 years.

      I called it Timeless because seen again today, you don't find it outdated like some others' films. This is among the only 4 Chinese films that I will enjoy watching again every 2 or 3 years and I think this is the most "timeless" among the 4.(The other 3 are Love Eterne(Li Han Hsiang), A Touch of Zen(King Hu) and Days of Being Wild(WKW))

      This is the kind of film that you know it's great even if you don't understand it. You don't need to understand its story in order to enjoy it. It's message is simply about "memories" and "regrets". It said something like "Regrets is the most painful feeling" and "regrets and unhappiness because of memories".It's the most complicated among WKW's 7 or 8 films(till 2046 and Eros). I don't fully understand it during the first viewing but I was totally surprised and mesmerized. I am the type that will consider a film good only if after watching, surprised me and felt that i could not thought of such a film. If I can expect or imagine a film's outcome, I will not call it great. Even after 4 viewings now, I am not totally sure I have figured out all its sequences yet but it doesn't matter. Some of the scenes and editions are paced so fast that you may not recall seeing it. Just like his recent 2046. This is the work of a brilliant director,because you need more than 1 viewing to fully get it so you must buy a copy for future viewing. Heard that even the Venice Filmfest Jury has to give it a prize although they don't understand what's it about.

      Those who don't know how to appreciate a good film may not understand a WKW film as he seldom stick to a particular genre, his films' genre is simply WKW and it's all about sights and sound in WKW-style. Original, stylish and trend setting. After his Ashes of Time and Fallen Angels swept all the major awards during the HK Film Awards in the same year, 2 most prominent HK directors changed style and tried to follow WKW-style but both failed(Tsui Hark in Dao(Blade) and Stanley Kwan in Hold Me Tight.

      WKW has mentioned that movies, to him is most is sights and sound and we see it clearly in this film. The music and the cinematography is the best.

      Those who don't like WKW films may criticize that he don't has a script or don't know what he wants until the final edition. I totally disagree. I think WKW always know what he wants and completed the film just the way he wants it, otherwise how could all his films are being so well received by critics ?. As for the viewers, what we want is the finished work. We don't care the original idea or the casts. We only care for the outcome. I mentioned it because this film took 2 years to complete and along the way, plot and actors have changed.

      Leslie Cheung - nominated for best acting here but I find him better in 2 other WKW films, Days of Being Wild and Happy Together(WKW won best director at Cannes). Brigitte Lin is superb in a dual character role/s. Tony Leung and Carina Lau are always good(usually and only) in WKW films. Maggie Cheung(unbilled) has her best 2 single take shots(her fans must keep this.) Even pop idol Michelle Yeung who never act well appeared like she acted.

      I strongly recommend this film to any film student or critics. Those who like "2046" or Tsui Hark's The Blade will like it. This is not WKW's best but I consider it his most UNIQUE. Like any other WKW movies, it's a collectors' item and a future classic, if not already one.
      tedg

      All Along the Watchtower

      Kar-Wai is one of the three best directors working today. Many feel this is his best work. Surely it is the greatest leap since his previous, but I find the Mood-2046 pair more important, even lifealtering.

      If you come into this expecting a story that unfolds in good order and makes sense, you will be disappointed. The overlapping of layers, the folding of narrative, the merging of images is what we're in for.

      There are two famous stories about this. The first is that at some point he quit work, then quickly went off to make "Chunking Express," during which he "found himself" ...

      The other story has to do with "Pulp Fiction." Tarantino is a huge borrower of ideas. Having already written a couple "raw" movies that people admire, he stumbled upon Kar-Wai in the midst of making this — a long affair. All the clever bits in the structure of "Pulp" are from this, just as surely as all the clever bits in "Star Wars" are from Kurosawa.

      What are those bits? Multiple persons in one body. Multiple bodies for one person. Circular storytelling where any part is the beginning. Nested narrative where one story tells another. Characters that imagine and forget each other, bringing them into our world and out.

      Death, love, yearning, accident, encounter.

      All of this at the beginning of a luscious partnership between Kar-Wai and Christopher Doyle. They are today what Greenaway and Sacha Vierny were: dangerous adventures in cinematic imagination coupled with mastery of cinematic expression.

      This takes a few too many chances and you can see precisely where Kar-Wai abandoned it to search for sense. (He always shoots in order of what you see.) But if you are ready for the transcendental thrills of his later work, you might want to start here.

      Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
      Chrysanthepop

      The Ballads Within The Ballad Of Ou-yang Feng

      'Dung Che Sai Duk' (aka 'Ashes of Time') is a beautiful visual tapestry. It is another fine example of poetry on canvas. The story does not follow a linear structure but at the same time the dazzling visuals grip the viewer and involve us in the characters' life. The first time I watched 'Dung Che Sai Duk' I was engaged throughout the entire duration but by the end I was left a little confused. This is because I overlooked the layers and some of the important details. It also didn't help that the subtitles were poor. After second viewing, this time with better subtitles, it became a lot more clearer and my appreciation has increased much more.

      Almost the entire film is set in the desert. There are plenty of swordfights to enjoy but this is secondary to the story which is mainly about unrequited love and how the fights are a projection of their anger and way of dealing with rejection. The fight scenes are well choreographed. However, I felt slow motion was overused. The editing is good but I was disappointed that so many sequences were cut from the Redux version. The dialogues are marvelously poetic. The tricky cinematography is conducted through various angles and so astonishingly effective. The soundtrack is superb and atmospheric. The cast boasts of top talented names like, Leslie Cheung, Maggie Cheung, Brigitte Lin, Tony Leung Chiu Wai, Jacky Cheung and Carina Lau all of whom do full justice to their roles with subtle performances.

      Kar Wai Wong is known for experimenting with different themes and here he does that with unrequited love. Although the treatment of the story is slightly different when compared to his other works, the same essence remains within the characters. It is a movie that stays with you and invites you to revisit.
      6susan-269

      A slow dance of color and regret

      Without a doubt, Ashes of Time is a beautiful, deeply felt movie. The acting and cinematography are outstanding. The color and camera angles are poetic. But the DVD quality is barely acceptable and the plot, what there is of it, is very confusing. The movie is less a journey from point A to point B than it is a dream-like dance around a central theme: regret for the way we treat those we love.

      For those who would watch the movie for the martial arts-- the main characters are mostly swordsmen and martial artists-- the movie is less than satisfying. The fight scenes are highly stylized, employing fast cuts, blurs of motion, and disorienting lighting and camera angles. The fight scenes are more about camera technique than martial arts technique.

      Ashes of Time is not a movie that can be absorbed in one viewing. For many viewers, though, it will be worth a second or even third.
      chaos-rampant

      Ashes of Time Redux

      Near the end, the proprietor of an inn perched on the windy edge of a sandy desert that stretches to the horizon has an epiphany; he has never before actually stopped to observe the desert, not as a transition, but as destination, as something that you don't calculate how to cross, but observe as a place you have crossed to reach. I have written the almost exact same idea (different setting) in one of my screenplays. This is the personal connection with a favourite film I value so much. Film becomes more than film, I see film as dream, a consciousness briefly shared then forgotten. It's that feeling of dreaming the same dream with a great artist that makes me tingle.

      This is a film like the best of novels, a web woven of fragmented image and word, drives and desires, rendered cinematically alive when the two coalesce to reveal yawning chasms of human experience, the one common shared human experience we all know. The film's opening serves as present tense and WKW builds fascinating removes from it to the point where the final story of the film climaxes in the past with shocking reverberations that make me rush through the entire film, clawing my way back to the present and previous past occurrences, to change my perspective.

      At the beginning of the film, a master swordsman arrives at an inn to offer the inn keeper a gulp from a wine that makes you forget the past. The inn keeper refuses. Throughout the film we happen upon characters, or characters happen upon the film as it passes time in that wind-torn inn by the desert, fixed in position by memory, by their inability or willinglessness to let go a human passion or folly, revenge or love however distant and impossible. We all need something to live for the inn keeper muses, and we know sometime we'll cling to the uglier most obsessive aspects of our nature to get us through the night. But this is all we have, not something to separate us from animals because even a dog will come to know the hand that strikes it, but all we have as humans to distinguish us from creation, being able to cling to that sad bitter memory of unfulfillment for years and make our unvanquished madness dear to us.

      This is all a bit of a game, life is through the remove of storytelling, it becomes myth and fabrication, but what wouldn't we give to go back and play it again. In the end we discover that the wine that makes you forget the past is regular wine and a character is only set free when he finds out his love, love he had and denied until he realized how precious it was to him and came back to find it gone, has died. But that was already two years ago and he's stood in place for those two years, allowing himself to be released from his selfimposed exile when a piece of paper reaches his hands, as though even absolution from guilt or shame or obligation can only properly come to pass in an official manner.

      WKW gives us swordplaying spectacle to go with this but he doesn't focus on it. Swords strike and fighters leap into the air in blurry shapes of color and motion yet the eye doesn't rest on the details of the fight but rather centers on facial expressions and the maddening ferocity of it all, like it's all a dance and we're dancing right in the middle of it. To say this is a wuxia is to set different expectations for it. Here poetry is not a poetry of appearances. As with his previous films, WKW tells us marvellous things about obsession and release, the yearning to remember and forget, and about letting ourselves go into new beginnings.

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      Related interests

      Bruce Lee in Opération Dragon (1973)
      Martial Arts
      Maggie Cheung in Hero (2002)
      Wuxia
      Bruce Willis in Piège de cristal (1988)
      Action
      Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
      Drama

      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        This film had an exhausting effect on Wong Kar-Wai. While on hiatus during the editing process he wrote and shot Chungking Express (1994) to "clear his head".
      • Quotes

        Ou-yang Feng: People say, when you can't have what you want, the best you can do is not to forget.

      • Alternate versions
        Wong Kar-wai revisited the film and created the Redux version which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival 2008. This version has alternative footage and changes in the order of scenes. The Redux version has new opening titles, and the season's fade-ins introducing each chapter are new. It also has a new color-scheme and a new soundtrack. Some scenes from the original version have been deleted, for example the two main character's introduction in the beginning. The overall run time of the Redux version is slightly shorter than the original theatrical version.
      • Connections
        Featured in Century of Cinema: Naamsaang-neuiseung (1996)

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      FAQ20

      • How long is Ashes of Time?Powered by Alexa
      • What are the differences between the Theatrical Version and the Redux Version?

      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • December 4, 1996 (France)
      • Countries of origin
        • Hong Kong
        • Taiwan
        • China
        • Japan
      • Official sites
        • Official site
        • Official site (Spain)
      • Languages
        • Mandarin
        • Cantonese
      • Also known as
        • Ashes of Time
      • Filming locations
        • China
      • Production companies
        • Jet Tone Production
        • Block 2 Pictures
        • Scholar Films Company
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Budget
        • HK$40,000,000 (estimated)
      • Gross US & Canada
        • $174,273
      • Opening weekend US & Canada
        • $21,372
        • Oct 12, 2008
      • Gross worldwide
        • $2,009,694
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 40m(100 min)
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.85 : 1

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