In Mandarin with English and Chinese subtitles
Genre: War/Drama
Director: Tony Ching Siu-Tung
Cast: Donnie Yen, Leon Lai, Kelly Cheng,
Guo Xiao-Dong, Kou Zhen-Hai
RunTime: 1 hr 39 mins
Released By: GV/Dream Movie Entertainment/MediaCorp
Raintree Pictures
Rating: PG
Official Website: http://www.anempressandthewarriors.com/
Opening Day: 27 March 2008
Synopsis:
The
movie is set in ancient China when countless kingdoms battle
for supremacy. A Princess, together with her loyal Warrior,
is thrust to defend the country when their King is killed
in a battle. When her evil cousin tried to kill her in order
to take over the kingdom, she was saved by a mysterious man
in the woods. The Princess falls in love with her saviour
who gave her a new life. With the fate of her kingdom in the
balance, she must choose between her duty and her dreams…
Movie Review:
Deep down, I wanted so much to embrace and love “An
Empress and the Warriors”. Simply because of two reasons,
one it’s helmed by renowned action-choreographer Tony
Ching Siu-Tung and the second, it starred Donnie “SPL”
Yen.
But
sad to say even the striking armour wore by the cast (as seen
on the poster) won’t be able to absorb the impact caused
by the critic’s slew of poisonous pens.
Pop
star Kelly Cheng plays the title role, a Princess named Yen
Feier whose father (the King) is murdered by an ambitious
general, Wu Ba (Guo Xiao-Dong). Aided by the loyal Muyong
Xuehu (Donnie Yen), the Princess must unite his father’s
army to defend her kingdom. The plot itself is a no-brainer
and as the story progress, you got the feeling that the supposedly
‘war’ is a poor excuse to inject some excitement
for the usual, run-out-of-mill love triangle story plot.
The
short running time not withstanding, the character developments
of the various leads is a laughable fest. In a matter of minutes,
the audience is led to believe Muyong is able to impart several
battle skills to the Princess and in a split second, our dear
Princess has fallen in love with a mysterious man (Leon Lai)
who saved her from a group of assassins. And to take things
even further, the couple even went on a joy ride in a hot-air
balloon. (Just don’t ask me who invented the balloon)
So
if you are coming in to watch some good-old kick-ass action,
there are a few adrenalin sequences here and there, nothing
really impressive this time unlike the bamboo fight in “House
of Flying Daggers”. But still, there are a couple of
nicely shots of horse carriages being flipped and smashed
(the last I came across something similar was Ridley Scott’s
Gladiator) to feed the action fanatics liked myself. The battle
sequences were excellently choreographed, on a scale where
only Tony Ching could pull off. The only setback could be
he just did Peter Chan’s The Warlords shortly before
and thus an obvious disadvantage to his credit.
Our
man, Donnie Yen has lesser kicks and muscles to show off this
time. Yen’s fans might have to be a tad patient for
this off-putting aspect. Maybe the biggest flaw is having
Kelly Cheng to play the Princess. As hard as she tries, she
just seems too contemporary to be seen in a period piece.
She might be better off in the latest edition of “Vogue”.
Yen and Lai reunite after their stint together in Tsui Hark's
Seven Swords but their performance is limited due to their
short screentime.
The
production designs on the other hand are impressive to the
core all thanks to the magical touches of Oscar winner Yee
Chung-Man. The sets are imaginative and remarkably furnished,
take for example, the treehouse where the character Duan Lan-Quan
(Leon) lived, an achievement that will definitely make the
Ewoks in “Return of the Jedi” proud.
Technically,
“An Empress and the Warriors” impresses and scored.
But the cheesy and clunky script could have been better polished.
Now this is where the huge disappointment comes in.
Movie
Rating:
(Tony
Ching pull off the technical aspects but forgot all about
the script and cast)
Review by Linus Tee
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