Ying xiong (2002)

reviewed by
Rose 'Bams' Cooper


'3BlackChicks Review...'
HERO ("Ying xiong"; 2004/US)   
Rated PG-13; running time 96 minutes 
Studio: Miramax (US) 

Genre: Historical/Martial Arts/Drama

Language: Mandarin Chinese, with English subtitles

Seen at: Eastwood Neighborhood Cinema Group (Lansing, Michigan)

IMDB site: http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0299977/combined

Writers: Zhang Yimou, Feng Li, Bin Wang

Director: Zhang Yimou

Cast: Jet Li, Tony Leung, Maggie Cheung, Zhang Ziyi,

 Chen Dao Ming, Donnie Yen
Review Copyright Rose Cooper, 2004
Review URL: 

http://www.3blackchicks.com/2004reviews/bamshero.html

I've been looking forward to something that would get me excited about

the movies again. I need look no more: HERO will definitely work.

THE STORY (WARNING: **spoilers contained below**)

Of the seven warring states in pre-united China, the Kingdom of Qin

was the most powerful - and, the most notorious. Qin's ruthless King

(Chen Dao Ming) lived in constant fear of being assassinated, even as

he was building a vast army in his quest to conquer the seven states.

Hearing of his remarkable adventures, the King brought forth a humble

prefect known only as Nameless (Jet Li), who was said to have taken

down the King's three greatest adversaries: Broken Sword (Tony Leung),

Flying Snow (Maggie Cheung), and Sky (Donnie Yen).

HERO begins as Nameless tells the King the tale of how he conquered

the three, thereby defeating their plotted assassination of the King;

but is Nameless' tale a tall one?
THE UPSHOT

The convenient comparisons of HERO to CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON

will long be made. And as a lover of the latter, it's likely no

surprise that I equally loved the former. But if wire-fu is all you

see when you view HERO, you're only seeing half the picture. If that

much.

No, HERO is so much more than walking-on-thin-air stunts (and by the

way, for those who still pshaw at the silliness of walking-on-thin-air

stunts, I have one word for you: "Spiderman". And I don't wanna hear

"...but he has a web-thrower!"). Part graceful ballet, part art film,

part opera, part eastern Western - and, yes, part martial arts

actioner - HERO thrilled me with its aesthetics even while it managed

to leave me a wee bit baffled about what really happened in the end.

But if I have to see a good film with an intriguing story more than

once to soak it all in, hey, I ain't mad at 'em.

Though Jet Li is the headliner of HERO - and, to my mind, much better

here than in silly American flicks like ROMEO MUST DIE - the real

heroes of HERO were its supporting cast and crew. The tragi-romance

of Broken Sword and Snow (accented splendidly by Zhang Ziyi as Moon)

was the most intriguing mix in my mind; Leung and Cheung awed me in

the way they made their characters so easily flow together. And while

I would like to have seen more of Donnie Yen's Sky, Nameless'

never-ending story brought that character back enough to almost

satisfy me.

The solid support didn't just end with the cast. Christopher Doyle's

cinematography was stunning, as was the martial arts choreography by

Wei Tung. Even violinist Itzhak Perlman got in on the action; the

musical action, that is. Putting it all together behind the scenes,

director Zhang Yimou blended ballet, art, opera, Western, historical

drama, and martial arts into a somewhat confusing, yet sublime,

concoction.

That it took nearly two years, and the silly "Quentin Tarantino

presents" tagline, to bring HERO from Hong Kong to America, doesn't

surprise me at all. I'm just glad it finally made it to our shores.

And needless to say, HERO will see me in the theater again soon...and

will rest right next to CROUCHING TIGER on my DVD shelf the day it

hits the video stands. 
BAMMER'S BOTTOM LINE

I'm definitely excited about the movies again, if only for a week. To

this critic, HERO makes up for a dozen Jet N Tha Hood flicks.

    HERO rating:  greenlight
Rose "Bams" Cooper                    
3BlackChicks Review                     
Entertainment Reviews With Flava!                
Copyright Rose Cooper, 2004             
EMAIL: bams@3blackchicks.com                
http://www.3blackchicks.com/
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