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Tigre et dragon 2

Original title: Wo hu cang long: Qing ming bao jian
  • 2016
  • PG-13
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
21K
YOUR RATING
Tigre et dragon 2 (2016)
A story of lost love, young love, a legendary sword and one last opportunity at redemption.
Play trailer1:33
1 Video
60 Photos
Martial ArtsWuxiaActionAdventureDramaFantasy

A story of lost love, young love, a legendary sword and one last opportunity at redemption.A story of lost love, young love, a legendary sword and one last opportunity at redemption.A story of lost love, young love, a legendary sword and one last opportunity at redemption.

  • Director
    • Yuen Woo-Ping
  • Writers
    • John Fusco
    • Du Lu Wang
    • Bey Logan
  • Stars
    • Donnie Yen
    • Michelle Yeoh
    • Harry Shum Jr.
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    21K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Yuen Woo-Ping
    • Writers
      • John Fusco
      • Du Lu Wang
      • Bey Logan
    • Stars
      • Donnie Yen
      • Michelle Yeoh
      • Harry Shum Jr.
    • 96User reviews
    • 68Critic reviews
    • 47Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:33
    Official Trailer

    Photos59

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    Top cast30

    Edit
    Donnie Yen
    Donnie Yen
    • Silent Wolf
    Michelle Yeoh
    Michelle Yeoh
    • Yu Shu Lien
    Harry Shum Jr.
    Harry Shum Jr.
    • Wei Fang
    Natasha Liu Bordizzo
    Natasha Liu Bordizzo
    • Snow Vase
    Jason Scott Lee
    Jason Scott Lee
    • Hades Dai
    Eugenia Yuan
    Eugenia Yuan
    • Blind Enchantress
    Roger Yuan
    Roger Yuan
    • Iron Crow
    JuJu Chan Szeto
    JuJu Chan Szeto
    • Silver Dart Shi
    • (as JuJu Chan)
    Chris Pang
    Chris Pang
    • Flying Blade
    Woon Young Park
    Woon Young Park
    • Thunder Fist
    Darryl Quon
    Darryl Quon
    • Turtle Ma
    Veronica Ngo
    Veronica Ngo
    • Mantis
    • (as Thanh Van Ngo)
    Gary Young
    Gary Young
    • Te Junior
    Andrew Stehlin
    Andrew Stehlin
    • Black Tiger
    Trevor Sai Louie
    Trevor Sai Louie
    • Guard Captain
    Angela Chan
    • Young Snow Vase
    Jermaine Yee
    • Young Wei-Fang
    Shuya Chang
    • Han Mei
    • Director
      • Yuen Woo-Ping
    • Writers
      • John Fusco
      • Du Lu Wang
      • Bey Logan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews96

    6.121.4K
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    Featured reviews

    6R-Clercx

    A very flawed attempt to Americanize a Chinese art-house classic

    Obviously their was a decent production budget and energy spend on this martial arts movie set in ancient China. Much effort went into (re)creating sets, costumes and choreography. That's the good part...

    However, it's out of place to go through all the effort to evoke a historical time period, only to let all Chinese characters speak English (in a time period where only very few Chinese intellectuals would be able to speak any other other language than Chinese). Either the producers didn't have faith in a movie audience to read subtitles or to accept a movie with any other spoken language than English. The original movie did manage to do that however: to appeal as well to a mainstream audience AND lovers of exotic foreign language martial arts movies.

    Sword of Destiny doesn't do anything which hasn't been done much better before. Martial Arts in itself as a genre, having being so popular mainly in the 70s and 80s has explored about any camera angle, fast montage and special effect. Tarantino already directed the ultimate homage in Kill Bill.

    Sword of Destiny, although with some credits to the production in itself never amazes, unless you've never seen a martial arts movie before. Like in the previous Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon there is a lot of cable work and floating going on. As if fast paced and shot martial arts scenes weren't enough, in this series the fighting characters are elevated to near super heroes, resulting in choreography and fighting scenes which aren't credible anymore.

    This is exactly where for instance Bruce Lee-flicks were far superior: as a viewer you saw incredible sequences but yet they remained credible. In Sword of Destiny the character has seized to be human and becomes a fantasy.

    Sword of Destiny finally ends up being neither: too slick to be accepted by a die hard audience of authentic martial arts movies, too Americanized to appeal to lovers of historical art house costume movies.

    Going through all the effort to evoke an ancient Chinese period and let all Chinese characters speak English is simply foolish.

    Sword of Destiny is exactly where American mainstream cinema has gone wrong: in a cash-in attempt to 'Americanize' classics in other countries, they end up with would-be blockbusters without soul or authenticity what so ever. You watch it, you forget it: it's not good, not super bad either, it ends up being a movie you hardly remember the next day, unlike the original.
    7Calicodreamin

    Great action

    Amazing action scenes and beautiful cinematography. The fights are choreographed beautifully and even had the added benefit of a little cinema magic to get the superhuman agility of the samurai. The plot was easy to follow and I didn't feel like it relied to heavily on the first crouching tiger so that you could follow along even without having seen it. Enjoyed watching.
    Dr_Sagan

    A weak sequel with lots of forced plot elements...

    Sword of Destiny (2016) tries to pick up several years after the events of Ang Lee's Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000).

    Yu Shu Lien (Michelle Yeoh) holds again in her hands Li Mu Bai's legendary sword, known as the Green Destiny, and here is where the forced elements starting to emerge... A ferocious villain and his clan is after the sword. A conflicted young couple is needed to enrich the plot and to give a feel of Zhang Ziyi who is missing from the cast. A character who I wont spoil you who he is, played by Donnie Yen, and who has an unbelievable connection with the first movie. And of course the usual revenge sub-plots etc etc.

    Unfortunately, the feel of the movie has nothing to do with Ang Lee's multi-awarded film. It feels like a generic wuxia movie. Too much cable-flying, most of it unnecessary if you ask me, uninspiring fights, over-processed and unnatural imagery... and the music, despite the reprize of Tan Dun's original theme from 2000, is not a perfect fit.

    Overall: Yuen Woo-Ping, the grandmaster of kung-fu choreography makes a sub-par movie with CTHD2. You might want to check it out, out of curiosity if you liked the original more than 15 years ago. But honestly, despite the return of Michelle Yeoh don't expect much...
    5fjmsoftware

    Very weak, brainless and heartless sequel.

    I definitely expected this to be weaker, more superficial and more action-obsessed than the original just judging by its trailer, but it was actually worse in many more ways than I had thought of.

    First ugly thing that hits you is the ruined color gamut, with all colors squeezed into two narrow bands around red and green (like the "teal and orange" madness that has gripped Hollywood this past decade, but shifted to the side toward red and green). Why must you do this to our eyes, movie studios, why? What have we done to deserve this? What's next, having to buy premium versions of the movie just to get the rest of the color spectrum?

    Next comes the complete lack of originality of whatever crumbs of a story there are in there, the entirely boring and soulless dialogue, the cardboard-thin characters that couldn't make you care about them if their lives depended on it, and ending with the mediocre fight scenes. The whole thing was centered around the fighting and they couldn't even get that part at the level of grace and artistry and impact of the fights in the original film.

    And to top it all off, they reversed the languages and wrote the original dialogue in English and added Chinese as a dub. This isn't catastrophic - at least the dub is there so you can make the experience reasonably similar to the original -, but it's still somewhat annoying and a bad production choice.

    This was a very poor use of Yeoh's potential. All in all, my favourite character ended up being the girl fighter from the villain's crew, who just did her job and did it well, without wasting our time with too much meaningless dialogue or with any other hopeless attempts at gaining a depth the screenwriters never gave her in the first place.
    Xsplizzle

    Overall I enjoyed it, but there are some bad points.

    It was a decently enjoyable movie, i probably would have enjoyed it more if it didn't have the crouching tiger, hidden dragon tag to it (as it raised expectations)

    Problems i had with it were that it was rather short, there was almost no character development, the story line was quite clichéd and the fight scenes didn't seem as fluid as the original, the musical score wasn't nearly as impressive as the original either.

    I am struggling to find anything about the film that is better than average.

    Overall not a bad film, just not something i will watch again, A generous 6/10

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      A different prop was used for the Green Destiny than the first film's.
    • Quotes

      Yu Shu Lien: Honor, duty, excuses for bloodshed. That is why I left it behind, all those years ago.

    • Connections
      Follows Tigre et Dragon (2000)
    • Soundtracks
      The Eternal Vow
      from the feature film Tigre et Dragon (2000)

      Composed by Dun Tan

      Published by Sony/ATV Tunes LLC

      Produced and Arranged by Christopher Tin

      Featured piano soloist Láng Lang

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: Sword of Destiny?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 26, 2016 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • China
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Tigre et Dragon 2
    • Filming locations
      • New Zealand
    • Production companies
      • Netflix
      • The Weinstein Company
      • China Film Group Corporation (CFGC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $85,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $38,659,039
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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