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Shanghai Triad

Original title: Yao a yao, yao dao wai po qiao
  • 1995
  • R
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
6.3K
YOUR RATING
Gong Li in Shanghai Triad (1995)
Theatrical Trailer from Sony Pictures Classics
Play trailer4:38
1 Video
78 Photos
CrimeDramaHistoryRomanceThriller

A provincial boy related to a Shanghai crime family is recruited by his uncle into cosmopolitan Shanghai in the 1930s to be a servant to a ganglord's mistress.A provincial boy related to a Shanghai crime family is recruited by his uncle into cosmopolitan Shanghai in the 1930s to be a servant to a ganglord's mistress.A provincial boy related to a Shanghai crime family is recruited by his uncle into cosmopolitan Shanghai in the 1930s to be a servant to a ganglord's mistress.

  • Director
    • Yimou Zhang
  • Writers
    • Feiyu Bi
    • Bin Wang
    • Li Xiao
  • Stars
    • Gong Li
    • Baotian Li
    • Xiaoxiao Wang
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    6.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Yimou Zhang
    • Writers
      • Feiyu Bi
      • Bin Wang
      • Li Xiao
    • Stars
      • Gong Li
      • Baotian Li
      • Xiaoxiao Wang
    • 40User reviews
    • 30Critic reviews
    • 77Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 5 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Shanghai Triad
    Trailer 4:38
    Shanghai Triad

    Photos78

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Gong Li
    Gong Li
    • Xiao Jingbao
    Baotian Li
    Baotian Li
    • Tang, the Gang Boss
    Xiaoxiao Wang
    Xiaoxiao Wang
    • Shuisheng, the boy
    Xuejian Li
    Xuejian Li
    • Liu, 6th Uncle
    Chun Sun
    Chun Sun
    • Song, Tang's No. 2
    Biao Fu
    Biao Fu
    • Zheng, Tang's No.3
    Shu Chen
    Shu Chen
    • Shi Ye
    Jiang Liu
    • Fat Yu
    Baoying Jiang
    • Cuihua, the Widow
    Qianquan Yang
    Qianquan Yang
    • Ah Jiao
    Ying Gao
    Weiming Gao
    Shuliang Lian
    Ya'nan Wang
    Ya'nan Wang
    Zhang Yayun
    Guo Hao
    Jiasheng Zhen
    Ni Zengshao
    • Director
      • Yimou Zhang
    • Writers
      • Feiyu Bi
      • Bin Wang
      • Li Xiao
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews40

    7.16.2K
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    Featured reviews

    10dr_foreman

    A stunner in every respect

    Here's something you don't see every day - a mobster movie that focuses on the evil of criminals, instead of their coolness. "Shanghai Triad" shows you how mob violence destroys the life of a gangster's moll and endangers her innocent, fresh-from-the-country servant. It's exactly the kind of story you wouldn't see in a Hollywood movie - which is, I suppose, why we watch this weird foreign stuff!

    Gong Li is, as ever, forceful and compelling, with a role that's infinitely more interesting than what America's "lead" actresses usually get. She's very glamorous here, and totally unlike the peasant characters she played in "To Live" and several other films. What a wonderful, versatile actress.

    The film's other strengths include gorgeous, award-winning cinematography, interesting point-of-view shots, and an effective shift from an urban to a country setting that's pulled off very smoothly. It's a shame that this is the last film that director Zhang Yimou and Gong Li made together, but at least it caps off their collaboration on a high note.
    trpdean

    A Simple Beautifully Told Story

    This is a fine movie - wonderfully acted, beautifully shot, quite simple. Without being heavy-handed, one comes to sense the presence of real evil that tempts and corrupts and destroys. It's a little slow at times because the story is so simple - yet the slowness and simplicity does allow the messages of the movie to hit home. Something else I like is that the protagonist boy is not made to be cute or winning - he just is who he is - largely an observer but sometimes acting with generosity and sometimes with contempt.

    Much has been said by others about the beautiful cinematography and that's certainly true - but I'm also struck by the amazing work of those who constructed or chose the sets, costumes, background characters - they were quite memorable. What a star in Gong Li, and what a director!

    I don't agree with those who contrast this with American movies - surely we feel the same evil in watching either version of Scarface or The Petrified Forest or The Road to Perdition.

    In fact, I would say this movie is most like The Road to Perdition of any I've seen - not in its story particularly but in its tone, its simplicity, its contrasts of character, its cinematography.

    This is also a good movie for those who say they don't like foreign movies - you'll like this one.
    10jeff_stryker

    A film of both aesthetic beauty and immense heart

    When I first saw Zhang Yimou's wonderful 'Raise the Red Lantern', I missed all but the last 30 minutes. This is the most regretful episode of my life for the film has now been deleted. My life was honestly changed as that half an hour was a real time anomoly, obeying the theory of relativity and breaking that particular convention by immersing me so fully that it seemed to last forever and yet, not long enough. 'Shanghai Triad' does not contain that one off quality, however, it is in itself a fascinating film. The colour scheme, of many Yimou films remains, his use of colour is deeply moving as it becomes sublime and almost 'old school'. You can see movies of the studio system being played out again but in a whole new style. Red is so prominent once again and for reasons we can only speculate. Personally I see the colour red as an exciting colour, it conveys to me a sense of a past in which I did not belong to, how I did not exist. The fascination I have in history pre-1982 and more importantly the early 20th century glamour and ancient history.

    The splendour of the whole thing is beyond belief, it could almost have the production values of a Hollywood mainstream movie. It shows that perhaps you can create a better effect with lower production values. The Tang household is splendid, but it's vastness perfectly encapsulates a lonely feeling that puts you in the place of the child as well as any cliched point of view shots ever could. It is moments like these that prove Yimou's background as a cinematographer, he is a master of the visual, able to simply show a character's mood in an implicit sweep of camera and minutely fine detail within the mise-en-scene excluding cliche from his work completely. This is the sort of filmmaking we would associate with Ridley Scott, Scott is a visualist, he works with far darker tones than Yimou, which from a personal point of view, makes Yimou my prefered choice, but Scott himself blended both dark and light in 'Thelma and Louise' like Yimou has done for most of his career. The characters themselves have layers of light and dark which are conveyed well in all of their surroundings.

    This comparison with Scott brings me to the point in Triad when the empathy shifts from the boy to be shared by him and Bijou. This does echo a bit of the Roy Batty syndrome which was probably the reason for 'Blade Runner's' limited success on it's original release, or so says Robert McKee. But Gong Li's performance is outstanding. She nails Bijou's nasty streak to a tee and then compels us to believe that she is more than that. Of course it is helped when the viewer feels that the situation she is in is a frightening one, not unlike mountaineering where one false step could end up in death, at what ever height you are at. Li is one of the finest actresses in the world, not to mention that her beauty is unparalleled. (Despite the fact that she is just four years younger than my mother) The film may not be seen as very moral but it is clear that it has heart as we feel so bad about the events that end the film. Li shows her hardness of character and complete vulnerability then finally her loss of control, shame and regret. This heart is not made of solid stone, rather a quite flexible rubber.

    It requires a period of reflection, one that does not equal that of 'Raise the Red Lantern' but is the only film to have such a numbing effect since. By now though, I have Lantern in such a high regard that it borders on gaining a mythical quality as I have yet to see it in it's entirety. It's not every day that a heavily opinionated young man will be reduced to a pathetic single syllable, but when Triad is finished, many of you will be reduced to it too, lay back and just clear your head of anything other than the film, all that enters the head will be "Wow".
    8simon_booth

    Visually outstanding

    A young boy is brought to 1930's Shanghai from the countryside to be the manservant of a gang boss's mistress. The mistress (Gong Li) is a glamourous nightclub singer and a royal bitch. Soon after he arrives, the boy is witness to a power play in the underworld that results in the uncovering of lots of treachery and quite a bit of violence.

    It's a nicely constructed story with good acting from everybody involved. It's fairly straightforward, but satisfying, and seeing the gang land activity from the perspectives of two outsiders makes it all the more interesting.

    SHANGHAI TRIAD became my favourite Zhang Yimou film when I saw it some years ago, for the simple reason that it was one of the most beautiful films I'd seen. The production design, costumes, lighting and camerawork are all quite remarkable - creating stunning images from the opulence of Shanghai's nightclubs and mansions to the simplicity of the rural island where the second half of the film takes place.

    Unfortunately, the R1 DVD fails to do the film justice. The colours are far too subdued, giving the film a rather lifeless look, and the demon of the digital age, Edge Enhancement, rears its ugly head again. The result looks rather like a VHS transfer, but I'd swear in court that the film looked a lot better on my UK VHS copy (mainly because of the colours). Poor Zhang Yimou, he hardly ever seems to get good representation on DVD.

    The film is recommended for fans of Zhang Yimou or Gong Li, though without the vibrant cinematography the film wouldn't be ranked as his best by many people. If you've already got the film on VHS, it's not worth "upgrading" to the DVD though.
    6ccthemovieman-1

    Story Can''t Live Up To Great Visuals

    The big plus here is in the visual department It is gorgeously filmed with deep, rich colors.

    The story isn't that much. You keep excepting it to get better. It holds that promise but doesn't deliver until the ending, which has a neat no-nonsense twist. I really liked and admired that ending and wish more movies had realistic finishes like this.

    Gong Li, who stars in here, plays a character that is interesting for the first half of the film but her spoiled-brat routine gets annoying after awhile. The main gangster, however, is an interesting guy throughout.

    I've watched this twice and, frankly, expected more both times.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This was a difficult film for Yimou Zhang to make. His relationship with his leading lady Gong Li was coming to an acrimonious end and the Chinese authorities were deliberately hassling him with complicated and elusive work permits. That was mainly because they were still annoyed with him for submitting his previous film Vivre ! (1994) to the Cannes Film Festival without their permission.
    • Quotes

      Xiao Jingbao: [to Song] Just because you fucked me you think you're the boss?

    • Connections
      Featured in 53rd Annual Golden Globe Awards (1996)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 8, 1995 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • China
    • Language
      • Mandarin
    • Also known as
      • Hội Tam Hoàng Thượng Hải
    • Filming locations
      • Shanghai, China(location)
    • Production companies
      • Alpha Films
      • La Sept Cinéma
      • Ministère des Affaires étrangères et du Développement International
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,086,101
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $209,098
      • Dec 25, 1995
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,086,101
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 48 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
      • Dolby SR
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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