Red Cliff International Version - Part I & Part II (2009)
Red Cliff International Version - Part I & Part II Image Cover
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Director:John Woo
Studio:Magnolia Home Entertainment
Rating:4.5 (34 votes)
Rated:Unrated
Date Added:2010-03-31
ASIN:B0030A6ICG
UPC:0876964002684
Price:$29.98
Genre:Action & Adventure
Release:2010-03-23
Duration:288
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:2.35:1
Sound:AC-3
Languages:Chinese
Subtitles:English, Spanish
John Woo  ...  (Director)
  ...  (Writer)
 
Tony Leung  ...  
Takeshi Kaneshiro  ...  
Summary: Director John Woo's "Red Cliff" boasts some mighty impressive numbers. It took four screenwriters to adapt the 800,000-word source material, a 14th-century Chinese novel called "Romance of the Three Kingdoms". There are also three editors, two directors of photography, hundreds of horses, and a combined cast and crew numbering in the thousands, making it reportedly the most expensive movie ever made in China. There are quite a few minutes, too, as it has a running time of 2 hours 28 minutes. That's only about half the length of the cut released in Asia, a fact that has led some critics to dismiss the American release as merely a bowdlerized version of the real deal. That may be, but this depiction of the titular battle that took place in AD 208 and is credited with changing the entire face of China is still an epic and magnificent piece of entertainment. The principal characters include Cao Cao (Zhang Fengyi), a power-hungry general and self-appointed prime minister who convinces the weak-willed emperor that two rebellious leaders in the south, Liu Bei (You Yong) and Sun Quan (Chang Chen), must be stopped; Cao Cao's antagonists also include the brilliant strategist Zhuge Liang (Takeshi Kaneshiro) and the heroic warrior Zhou Yu (Tony Leung), whose wife (Chiling Lin) is a legendary beauty. Cao Cao has a huge advantage in manpower, not to mention an impressive fleet of warships. But he is arrogant, while his opponents are not merely humble and brave but clever (Cao Cao's diabolical plan to send the contagious bodies of soldiers who have died from typhoid fever to the Southlanders' camp works temporarily, but the latter counter with ingenious strategies of their own, like using fog, wind, and fire to destroy Cao Cao's ships). All of this is depicted in the most spectacular battles scenes since the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy, with a steady supply of gorgeous shots and indelible images. Woo, whose previous films range from the terrific "Hard Boiled" and "The Killer" to the lamentable Ben Affleck thriller "Paycheck", is in his element here, and "Red Cliff" is a treat. "--Sam Graham"