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Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon

Wo hu cang long

Taiwan, Hong Kong

2000

120 Min
Color
Mandarin
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
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DIR Ang Lee

EXEC James Schamus

PROD Li-Kong Hsu, William Kong, Ang Lee

SCR Hui-Ling Wang, James Schamus, Kuo Jung Tsai

DP Peter Pau

CAST Michelle Yeoh, Zhang Ziyi, Chen Chang, Sihung Lung, Pei-pei Cheng, Chow Yun-fat

MUSIC Tan Dun

Synopsis

Taiwanese filmmaker Ang Lee took a break from making Western period dramas to fashion this wild and woolly martial arts spectacular featuring special effects and action sequences courtesy of the choreographer of The Matrix (1999), Yuen Woo Ping. In the early 19th century, martial arts master Li Mu Bai (Chow Yun-Fat) is about to retire and enter a life of meditation, though he quietly longs to avenge the death of his master, who was killed by Jade Fox (Cheng Pei-pei). He gives his sword, a fabled 400-year-old weapon known as Green Destiny, to his friend, fellow martial arts wizard and secret love Yu Shu Lien (Michelle Yeoh), so that she may deliver it to Sir Te (Sihung Lung). Upon arrival in Peking, Yu happens upon Jen (Zhang Ziyi), a vivacious, willful politician’s daughter. That night, a mysterious masked thief swipes Green Destiny, with Yu in hot pursuit — resulting in the first of several martial arts action set pieces during the film. Li arrives in Beijing and eventually discovers that Jen is not only the masked thief but is also in cahoots with the evil Jade. In spite of this, Li sees great talent in Jen as a fighter and offers to school her in the finer points of martial arts and selflessness, an offer that Jen promptly rebukes. This film was first screened to much acclaim at the 2000 Cannes, Toronto, and New York film festivals and became a favorite when Academy Awards nominations were announced in 2001: Tiger snagged ten nods and later secured four wins for Best Cinematography, Score, Art Direction, and Foreign Language Film. —allmovie guide

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Enrico Green

28Jan10

the martial arts scenes are breathtaking but the real strength of the story is the silent, forbidden love between Michelle Yeoh and Chow Yun-Fat. you can feel the secret longing hiding underneath their calm controlled exteriors. the story manages to fit in love, teenage rebellion and family intersperse with amazing kung-fu scenes. perhaps the most meditative kung-fu movie ever.  
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thedoctor_isin

21Jan10

Not a movie I would watch again and again, but what a treat it is to discover unexpectedly on some random television channel.  
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paulo.sales

13Jan10

soberbo !  
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Phil Worfel

10Sep09

An epic that opened the eyes of so many to the martial arts serial structure. Daring in its execution and a definite success. Unfortunately it grew tired to me after a one too many viewings and parodies.   

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010809anglee184

The Auteurs Daily: Ang Lee and Nick Ray

By David Hudson on August 1, 2009
Most of the world does not live in New York City, but when any series opens there, the rest of us, whether or not we're able to see the films, are treated to the often-terrific criticism it occasions
read article

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