In comparison to Crouching Tiger , the martial arts in this film have a lot more weapons involvement. The Flying Snow vs. Moon scene in the autumn forest is superb, as is the opening scene of Sky vs. Nameless. They are fast-paced sequences that never get boring or repetitive. Jet Li's acting is quite impressive. The music in this film was also well done. The same style of music as Crouching Tiger was used, but I think they were original works. The stringed instruments played very well with the scenery and acting events.
Hero is far less religious than Crouching Tiger yet still relies on an underlying Taoist and Buddhist paradigm of temporal ethereality. The religious aspect comes out in a marriage of calligraphy and martial arts by Broken Sword, pondered by Nameless, and understood by the king of Qin. There is also an achievement of perfection by the martial artists which harkens to Buddhist enlightenment. I find these religious ideas to be a little silly, but they make for interesting movie fantasy drama.
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Article comments
1 - mike hollihan
It's the use of color in this movie that's breath-taking. The director (Zhang Yimou) literally paints his screen with rich and saturated color. Even the scene in the grey, rainy stone temple vibrates with color! (It would undoubtedly help Westerner viewers to know the Chinese cultural meaning of the colors used. White=death; red=royalty and war; etc.)
Only a couple of directors come to mind who do something similar: New Zealand's Vince Ward and England's Peter Greenaway. I can't count the number of moments in this movie that I wish were large canvasses we could stand before and marvel at. It's just that beautiful!
Coming to American theaters on August 20th in limited rerelease.
2 - Eric Olsen
Very fine job Russell, I can almost see the colors. Thanks and welcome! And a double endorsement from Mike!
3 - mike hollihan
Ah, found a Chinese color reference here
4 - brandon
This movie has been out for well over a year and the DVD (with English subtitles) has been on sale on Asian sites for almost as long. It might be a cheaper option for many. Also be sure to read up about how the movie was originally over 2 hours long, with more character development, but Zhang Yimou was forced by Miramax influence to edit it down to 1.5 hours 'so as to be more accessible to American audiences'.
5 - Phillip Winn
Dude - Russell! Are you stalking me, man?
Seriously, welcome to Blogcritics, and I'm definitely going to catch this movie. I wish I could watch the longer version on the big screen. :-(
6 - brandon
Sorry, perhaps this needs clarification. The version that is over 2 hours has never been released. The 1.5 hour Miramax version was shown in Asia as well, and that is the version found on the DVDs as well. I'm waiting for a Director's Cut as well.
7 - scrane
Good review.