Huge romantic component
If you are a fan of "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" and "Hero" then you will likely enjoy this film as well. Like its predecessors, this movie is heavy on style, costumes, cinematography, and impossible martial arts combat, bow and arrow, and knife throwing sequences. The more combatants in a scene (say the bamboo grove fighting scene) the more special effects seem to take over. On the other hand the one on one combat scenes were fairly realistic and riveting (the fight during a blizzard comes to mind). Unlike it's predecessors, there is more stress placed on the love story and character dialog then on martial arts action and large epic type scenes, likely as a result of a much smaller budget.
Jin (Takeshi Kaneshiro), our hero, is tasked with infiltrating "The flying daggers" an anti-government group, with the help of one it's members, Mei (Ziyi Zhang). A good deal of the film consists of Jin and Mei making their way thorough the country, which develops into a love interest. In fact the movie revolves around the relationships between the three main characters, with intrigue, deception, and double crossing thrown in. There are many love scenes (nothing memorable), which seems to detract from the expectation of a martial arts film, or maybe the intent was to make a love story with a martial arts back drop.
If "Crouching tiger..." and "Hero", which were epic martial arts films, then "Flying Daggers" is a smaller more intimate martial arts love story.
Jin (Takeshi Kaneshiro), our hero, is tasked with infiltrating "The flying daggers" an anti-government group, with the help of one it's members, Mei (Ziyi Zhang). A good deal of the film consists of Jin and Mei making their way thorough the country, which develops into a love interest. In fact the movie revolves around the relationships between the three main characters, with intrigue, deception, and double crossing thrown in. There are many love scenes (nothing memorable), which seems to detract from the expectation of a martial arts film, or maybe the intent was to make a love story with a martial arts back drop.
If "Crouching tiger..." and "Hero", which were epic martial arts films, then "Flying Daggers" is a smaller more intimate martial arts love story.
- movieBill
- Jun 14, 2005