IMDb RATING
5.9/10
22K
YOUR RATING
When corrupt Roman leader Tiberius arrives with a giant army to claim the Silk Road, Huo An teams up his army with an elite Legion of defected Roman soldiers led by General Lucius to protect... Read allWhen corrupt Roman leader Tiberius arrives with a giant army to claim the Silk Road, Huo An teams up his army with an elite Legion of defected Roman soldiers led by General Lucius to protect his country and his new friends.When corrupt Roman leader Tiberius arrives with a giant army to claim the Silk Road, Huo An teams up his army with an elite Legion of defected Roman soldiers led by General Lucius to protect his country and his new friends.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 2 nominations total
Tin-Chiu Hung
- Red Sun
- (as Sammy Hung)
Shaofeng Feng
- General Huo Qubing
- (as William Feng)
Xiangdong Xu
- Secretary
- (as Xiang Dong Xu)
Yoo Seung-jun
- Cougar
- (as Steve Yoo)
Alijang Kuerban
- Huo An Deputy
- (as Aliku)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Colorful film with plenty of battles, emotion, fantasy, imaginaton, martial arts and sword-play.¨Dragon Blade¨ is a rich , enjoyable and romantic take on the Chinese Martial Arts genre with Roman battles, along with inventive choreography and it also belongs to ¨Wusia¨ theme, China's heroic swordsman subgenre. Huo An (Jackie Chan), leader of the ¨Silk Road¨ Guard, is unjustly condemned to slavery along with his fellow guards. Meanwhile, the Roman general Lucius (John Cusack) escapes to China, fleeing from the evil and ambitious Tiberius (Adrien Brody), after rescuing a blind little prince. Later, Huo An and Lucius' paths will cross. When the Eagle meets the Dragon !. When empires collide...legends are born !. Heroes will rise !. Armies will fall !.
This is a breathtaking movie full of noisy action , bloody combats , groundbreaking attacks , impressive battles and a lot of digital effects. It deals with two armies, both Chinese and Roman while confronting an unimaginable and seemingly invincible forcé. Lavishly produced, it was the most expensive Chinese film ever, with a budget of $65 million. The picture relies heavily on the really excessive special effects by means of 3D Computer Generator with extreme digitalization. The film contains breathtaking war battles , overwhelming struggles, spectacular images and a cast of thousands, due to the huge amount of actors and crew involved. The desert stage was provided by Gobi Desert, China, and other locations as Dunhuang, Gansu, and Studios: Hengdian World, Dongyang, Zhejiang, China. In the sunny desert actors and crew encountered hard shooting conditions due to the heat, sandstorms, thunders, their heavy costumes, and long filming hours.
This charming film is packed with fights in Jackie Chan-style, fantasy, humor, magic, betrayal, great entertainment and lots of fun. A fantastic film including a deadly confrontation and martial arts that satisfies on both accounts, concerning some heroes on a dangerous and long-awaited search for freedom. Director Daniel Lee puts the personal touch as just as deft even as he extends his grasp to show the timeless Chinese legends and historical facts, being based on his own enjoyable script. Action , adventure , romance , drama , heroes , heroines, tradition and martial arts blend in this attractive movie that belongs to Oriental genre. Providing overwhelming images, impressive production design, sense of style and revealing the breathtaking vistas of mythic China as well as the facinating Rome. The emotional impact of the fantastic adventure is as real and spectacular as the choreographed fight scenes are grateful and brilliant. Stars a stunning cast with notorious Chinese and American actors, such as Jackie Chan, John Cusack, Adrien Brody, Sharni Vinson, Choi Siwon, Peng Lin, Tin-Chiu Hung, Shaofeng Feng, among others.
Being inspired by true events about ¨The Silk Road¨: It is the name by which an extensive network of land and sea trade routes, opened by China since at least the 1st century BC, has been known since the 19th century1, which interconnected most of the Asian continent with terminals in the islands of Southeast Asia, the European Mediterranean and the east coast of Africa. Its various routes began in the city of Chang'an (now Xi'an), then capital of China, passing through, among others, Karakorum (Mongolia), the Khunjerab Pass (China / Pakistan), Susa (Persia), the Fergana Valley (Tajikistan), Samarkand (Uzbekistan), Taxila (Pakistan), Antioch (Turkey), Alexandria (Egypt), Kazan (Russia) and Constantinople (now Istanbul, Turkey).
The motion picture was professionally directed by Daniel Lee, but with some plot holes and too many flashbacks that break the ordinary action. Director Lee imbues every look, every gesture with grace and resonance, he has always been a filmmaker of finesse and fine feeling, directing acceptably this film. In his starts Lee became a director of television series. He also worked as an assistant for the famous film director Ann Hui when filming The Romance of Book and Sword (1987), which is based on Louis Cha's classic Wuxia novel. In early the 90s, Lee's talents in film-making was noticed by the master of Wuxia film, Cheh Chang, who later recognized that himself, Hark Tsui, and Daniel Lee are the "three generations of Wuxia film-making." Lee's film is characterized with the heavy black costumes and visual style, with the extreme emphases on masculinity as well as the bond of brotherhood, in which reflects the director's perspective of romanticism. Daniel Lee has made spectacular and hit films, such as: ¨Song of assassins¨, ¨The Climbers¨, ¨Time riders¨, ¨White Vengeance¨, ¨14 Blades¨, ¨Three Kingdoms¨, ¨Star Runner¨, ¨Dragon Squad¨,¨Master Swordsman Lu Xiaofeng¨, ¨Moonlight express¨, ¨A Fighter's Blues¨, ¨Black Mask¨, and several others.
This is a breathtaking movie full of noisy action , bloody combats , groundbreaking attacks , impressive battles and a lot of digital effects. It deals with two armies, both Chinese and Roman while confronting an unimaginable and seemingly invincible forcé. Lavishly produced, it was the most expensive Chinese film ever, with a budget of $65 million. The picture relies heavily on the really excessive special effects by means of 3D Computer Generator with extreme digitalization. The film contains breathtaking war battles , overwhelming struggles, spectacular images and a cast of thousands, due to the huge amount of actors and crew involved. The desert stage was provided by Gobi Desert, China, and other locations as Dunhuang, Gansu, and Studios: Hengdian World, Dongyang, Zhejiang, China. In the sunny desert actors and crew encountered hard shooting conditions due to the heat, sandstorms, thunders, their heavy costumes, and long filming hours.
This charming film is packed with fights in Jackie Chan-style, fantasy, humor, magic, betrayal, great entertainment and lots of fun. A fantastic film including a deadly confrontation and martial arts that satisfies on both accounts, concerning some heroes on a dangerous and long-awaited search for freedom. Director Daniel Lee puts the personal touch as just as deft even as he extends his grasp to show the timeless Chinese legends and historical facts, being based on his own enjoyable script. Action , adventure , romance , drama , heroes , heroines, tradition and martial arts blend in this attractive movie that belongs to Oriental genre. Providing overwhelming images, impressive production design, sense of style and revealing the breathtaking vistas of mythic China as well as the facinating Rome. The emotional impact of the fantastic adventure is as real and spectacular as the choreographed fight scenes are grateful and brilliant. Stars a stunning cast with notorious Chinese and American actors, such as Jackie Chan, John Cusack, Adrien Brody, Sharni Vinson, Choi Siwon, Peng Lin, Tin-Chiu Hung, Shaofeng Feng, among others.
Being inspired by true events about ¨The Silk Road¨: It is the name by which an extensive network of land and sea trade routes, opened by China since at least the 1st century BC, has been known since the 19th century1, which interconnected most of the Asian continent with terminals in the islands of Southeast Asia, the European Mediterranean and the east coast of Africa. Its various routes began in the city of Chang'an (now Xi'an), then capital of China, passing through, among others, Karakorum (Mongolia), the Khunjerab Pass (China / Pakistan), Susa (Persia), the Fergana Valley (Tajikistan), Samarkand (Uzbekistan), Taxila (Pakistan), Antioch (Turkey), Alexandria (Egypt), Kazan (Russia) and Constantinople (now Istanbul, Turkey).
The motion picture was professionally directed by Daniel Lee, but with some plot holes and too many flashbacks that break the ordinary action. Director Lee imbues every look, every gesture with grace and resonance, he has always been a filmmaker of finesse and fine feeling, directing acceptably this film. In his starts Lee became a director of television series. He also worked as an assistant for the famous film director Ann Hui when filming The Romance of Book and Sword (1987), which is based on Louis Cha's classic Wuxia novel. In early the 90s, Lee's talents in film-making was noticed by the master of Wuxia film, Cheh Chang, who later recognized that himself, Hark Tsui, and Daniel Lee are the "three generations of Wuxia film-making." Lee's film is characterized with the heavy black costumes and visual style, with the extreme emphases on masculinity as well as the bond of brotherhood, in which reflects the director's perspective of romanticism. Daniel Lee has made spectacular and hit films, such as: ¨Song of assassins¨, ¨The Climbers¨, ¨Time riders¨, ¨White Vengeance¨, ¨14 Blades¨, ¨Three Kingdoms¨, ¨Star Runner¨, ¨Dragon Squad¨,¨Master Swordsman Lu Xiaofeng¨, ¨Moonlight express¨, ¨A Fighter's Blues¨, ¨Black Mask¨, and several others.
The story in the movie is a complete mess. I'm not going to go into details, but if you are considering watching this movie, you must have already accepted that legions of Romans in China is OK. It would be more plausible if they shifted the accent a bit more into fantasy (e.g. different kingdoms, one is more like Roman Empire and another like China, but not actual countries), so there are not so many complaints about historical inaccuracies, but it is what is and according to them, it's based on historical facts. There are also a bit too many secondary undeveloped characters.
So, as the title says, you would enjoy it if you just watch it for Jackie. The sword fights are pretty good; other fights, well some are not bad, some are meh. I watched it to the end, skipped only a few times, overall not his worst movie, but far from his best one.
Summary: Recommended only for true Jackie Chan's fans.
So, as the title says, you would enjoy it if you just watch it for Jackie. The sword fights are pretty good; other fights, well some are not bad, some are meh. I watched it to the end, skipped only a few times, overall not his worst movie, but far from his best one.
Summary: Recommended only for true Jackie Chan's fans.
Let me set one thing straight before I begin this review, I am not here to defend this movie's honour, indeed I can see that it does have a great many flaws. However it is absolutely undeserving of many of the criticisms put forth in other reviews and I feel that someone has to put the record straight, and call out a worrying trend.
This movie was not perfect, it was mechanically sound, the acting while nowhere near award winning, was human enough I could enjoy it, and the choreography and special effects though they rarely came into play were even enjoyable. All this could be fairly pointed out to add to a product that is sub par, and yet what are almost all the most vehement protractors of this film gnashing their teeth about? The realism! Yes in a fantasy martial arts movie people are concerned with the plot, with geography, with trifling details.
Now look, I understand people having personal preferences for more grounded realistic movies. I also understand how some people cannot suspend their disbelief over such a mighty chasm, but to call this movie terrible, garbage, or any other pejorative for that is simply wrong. It is wrong, because it misses what this movie, and movies like it are supposed to be. Like many older films out of china, what this movie is striving to be is a throwback to idealized legends. To stories who's actors are idealistic people, who embody ideals and provide a moral message. This kind of storytelling is present in nearly all culture's legends and tales. This is what I like to term as a whimsical film. Now I admit it is not a shining example for all to follow, but it needs to be judged by other standards. Just as a romcom needs to be judged by different standards than that of true cinematic brilliance. A movie like this doesn't have to be realistic, it shouldn't be. Furthermore to see so many people demanding realism, expecting everything must play out like a well thought out novel frankly saddens me. It saddens me because I fear that this prevalent attitude is why we get so few movies these days that are willing to be silly, to be unrealistic, to give us idealistic and hopelessly unworkable moral lessons.
Maybe you disagree, maybe you think I'm a blithering idiot so full of sh*t it's pouring out my mouth. That's okay too, but please, next time you see a fantasy movie like this, please try to enjoy the flow and the essence of the movie, before resorting to cold literary analysis of it.
Anyways to wrap up this rant disguised as a review, my personal thoughts on the movie were that it was enjoyable, though I'd hesitate to recommend it to anyone but people who share my love of fantastic and improbable meetings of ancient cultures for a fantasy romp. 6/10 it's okay.
This movie was not perfect, it was mechanically sound, the acting while nowhere near award winning, was human enough I could enjoy it, and the choreography and special effects though they rarely came into play were even enjoyable. All this could be fairly pointed out to add to a product that is sub par, and yet what are almost all the most vehement protractors of this film gnashing their teeth about? The realism! Yes in a fantasy martial arts movie people are concerned with the plot, with geography, with trifling details.
Now look, I understand people having personal preferences for more grounded realistic movies. I also understand how some people cannot suspend their disbelief over such a mighty chasm, but to call this movie terrible, garbage, or any other pejorative for that is simply wrong. It is wrong, because it misses what this movie, and movies like it are supposed to be. Like many older films out of china, what this movie is striving to be is a throwback to idealized legends. To stories who's actors are idealistic people, who embody ideals and provide a moral message. This kind of storytelling is present in nearly all culture's legends and tales. This is what I like to term as a whimsical film. Now I admit it is not a shining example for all to follow, but it needs to be judged by other standards. Just as a romcom needs to be judged by different standards than that of true cinematic brilliance. A movie like this doesn't have to be realistic, it shouldn't be. Furthermore to see so many people demanding realism, expecting everything must play out like a well thought out novel frankly saddens me. It saddens me because I fear that this prevalent attitude is why we get so few movies these days that are willing to be silly, to be unrealistic, to give us idealistic and hopelessly unworkable moral lessons.
Maybe you disagree, maybe you think I'm a blithering idiot so full of sh*t it's pouring out my mouth. That's okay too, but please, next time you see a fantasy movie like this, please try to enjoy the flow and the essence of the movie, before resorting to cold literary analysis of it.
Anyways to wrap up this rant disguised as a review, my personal thoughts on the movie were that it was enjoyable, though I'd hesitate to recommend it to anyone but people who share my love of fantastic and improbable meetings of ancient cultures for a fantasy romp. 6/10 it's okay.
I wont describe the actual movie here as you will be able to read other reviews already published. I will however will try to avoid you suffering the pain I have just gone through.
I was very disappointed in this movie, perhaps because I expected better from a movie with John Cusack, Adrien Brody, Jackie Chan. Perhaps I should have looked at who was directing the movie such as Daniel Lee and the typical movies he has made.... or maybe it was because the movie was just "really" bad.
I watched the movie on a quiet Wednesday night and I would estimate that a third of the audience left well before the end, some really early. When the credits came up it was like a fire evacuation alert had just came on. Please, Women and Children first.. We will all survive!
Jackie Chan fight scenes were well below par and I thought they were more like a "Charlie Chaplin/Harold Loyd" Silent movie style rather than a "Rush Hour" style.
John Cusack character was extremely boring and I could have fallen asleep in I was at home.
Adrien Brody was the only positive in the movie, but the movie was so bad that his acting was lost.
The child actor was badly filmed (always) like an old Asian hero film and I found the child annoying.
The production and cinematography of the film are cringe-worthy throughout. flashbacks are random and not in line with story. Slow motions are extensive and really annoying.
Recommendation - Go and see something else.
I was very disappointed in this movie, perhaps because I expected better from a movie with John Cusack, Adrien Brody, Jackie Chan. Perhaps I should have looked at who was directing the movie such as Daniel Lee and the typical movies he has made.... or maybe it was because the movie was just "really" bad.
I watched the movie on a quiet Wednesday night and I would estimate that a third of the audience left well before the end, some really early. When the credits came up it was like a fire evacuation alert had just came on. Please, Women and Children first.. We will all survive!
Jackie Chan fight scenes were well below par and I thought they were more like a "Charlie Chaplin/Harold Loyd" Silent movie style rather than a "Rush Hour" style.
John Cusack character was extremely boring and I could have fallen asleep in I was at home.
Adrien Brody was the only positive in the movie, but the movie was so bad that his acting was lost.
The child actor was badly filmed (always) like an old Asian hero film and I found the child annoying.
The production and cinematography of the film are cringe-worthy throughout. flashbacks are random and not in line with story. Slow motions are extensive and really annoying.
Recommendation - Go and see something else.
While the main message of the movie was about multi-cultural peace (probably what the world needs now), choreography was good (nothing less than expected from a J.C. movie), side jokes to make you giggle from this otherwise boring plot, nothing else about the movie was able to redeem it from it's cliché story progression and bad script.
1) The message about multicultural peace was smacked right in audience faces left, right, up, down from the beginning of the show. To make things worst, coupled with cheesy lines, it made a profound and wise motif seem plain cheesy, overly-simplified and lacked the depth it should have had.
2) Despite the strong development of major characters, minor/side characters were not grounded enough. Fickle change in beliefs by side characters (people of the Wild Geese Gate), once again, made the story look superficial and badly developed.
Unfortunately, great choreography, scene shots and strong casts could not save it from its draggy, underdeveloped plot and horrible script.
1) The message about multicultural peace was smacked right in audience faces left, right, up, down from the beginning of the show. To make things worst, coupled with cheesy lines, it made a profound and wise motif seem plain cheesy, overly-simplified and lacked the depth it should have had.
2) Despite the strong development of major characters, minor/side characters were not grounded enough. Fickle change in beliefs by side characters (people of the Wild Geese Gate), once again, made the story look superficial and badly developed.
Unfortunately, great choreography, scene shots and strong casts could not save it from its draggy, underdeveloped plot and horrible script.
Did you know
- TriviaJackie Chan complained politely about the sword skills of John Cusack: "(He) needed a little more work."
- GoofsIn real history, Crassus invaded Parthia, and most of his army was destroyed. The film builds on the unproven notion that some Roman prisoners managed to reach China.
In an Action Fantasy movie with self-healing Romans and impervious Asians, the factoid that it was inspired by an unproven notion is not relevant as a Goof.
- Alternate versionsInternational version is 24 minutes shorter. Among the cuts are a 4 minute scene at the start of the film about modern day archaeologists visiting the ruins of the city. Many scenes featuring Huo's wife Xiu Qing are also cut.
- SoundtracksPLEASE TELL THE WIND TO BRING MY FATHER HOME
Composed by Henry Lai
Lyrics by Hui Siu-Wing, Wang Pingjiu
Performed by Jackie Chan, Queen Wei (Wei Yunxi)
Original Publisher JAVA MUSIC PRODUCTIONS
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Tian jiang xiong shi
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $65,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $74,068
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $30,346
- Sep 6, 2015
- Gross worldwide
- $122,606,884
- Runtime2 hours 7 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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