Top review. Simply the closest thing to a perfect movie ever made! This is one of the few times a classic Chinese novel has been accurately brought to life on the big screen. So why do I say this film is so great? I would give a kidney to find a CD of the soundtrack. And never has a film made you want to see the sequel so bad in your life. My only regret is that Ronny Yu will never be able to top this film. Flat-out brilliant!
Details Edit. Release date August 26, Hong Kong. Hong Kong. Bach Phat Ma Nu. Mandarin Films Distribution. Technical specs Edit. Runtime 1 hour 32 minutes. Related news. Jan 23 Trailers from Hell.
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For You. Q Awards. Light On. Variety Show. Search History. Download and experience. Member login. Login to watch trendy content Login. Subtitle Translation My Account English. History Watch Later Reservation. Oddly, that's something I love about the Japanese kaidan of an earlier era - I find it gives them an otherworldly atmosphere - but here it merely served to foreground the artifice. Being set-bound necessitates a shallow depth of field and lots of close-up shooting, giving the whole thing a heavily stylized, insubstantial aura.
This is compounded by utilizing more dutch angles than an Amsterdam grifter. I'm not sure, but it feels like the story might be drawn from Chinese Folklore: a woman, raised by wolves, whose hair turns white and can be colour-corrected only through the obtaining of some incredibly rare, immortal flower that grows exclusively in the snowbound peaks of a semi-mythical mountain range. Our hero has located this flower and waited 10 years, guarding its precious petals, in the hope that the wolf girl will one day forgive him and come looking for it.
Buddy, I don't think she's coming. Time to move on.
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