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March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
2 Plot
Hero

Wikipedia

 
Hero (Chinese language|Chinese: 英雄; pinyin: yīng xióng) is a film first released in China on October 24, 2002. It was both the most expensive and the highest-grossing motion picture in Chinese cinema history. It hit US theaters on August 27, 2004 despite the fact that the Asian DVD had already been available for over a year. It became the top-grossing film in the first week of its US debut, at US$18M, and continued to lead the US box office in its second week at US$11.5M. It fell to the 4th place in its third week at US$4.4M. It set a record as the highest-grossing opening-weekend foreign language film in the United States. The US edition of the DVD, with Mandarin, English and French sound track, was released on November 30, 2004.

Hero is a film|movie of the wuxia genre, directed by Zhang Yimou. It stars Jet Li as the nameless hero. A team of assassins are played by Maggie Cheung (Flying Snow), Tony Leung Chiu Wai (Broken Sword), Donnie Yen (Long Sky), and Zhang Ziyi (Moon). Chen Daoming plays their intended target, the Qin Shi Huang|King of Qin.




spoiler

The movie is set during the Warring States Period. It tells the story of assassination attempts on the king of Qin by legendary warriors who seek revenge for his subjugation of their nation. The king justifies his actions in the cause of unifying China and its written language. In the text at the end of the film, the king is identified as Ying Zheng, who in 221 BC did indeed unite China under his command and become its first emperor, Qin Shi Huang (lived 259 BC|259-210 BC; reigned 246 BC|246-210 BC).

The film was Zhang Yimou|Zhang's first attempt at this genre, and it uses a highly unusual structure. Conflicting versions of the events are recounted by different characters, in a structure reminiscent of Kurosawa's Rashomon (movie)|Rashomon (1950). Each section uses a different color scheme depending on the narrator, similar to how everything turns green in the virtual world of The Matrix; Zhang's movies often feature rigorous color schemes.

The film has a tragic structure; its six main characters come to realize that China's unity depends on their own decisions and actions. This feeling of patriotic responsibility conflicts with their own personal desires for revenge, and with their relationships to each other. Ultimately, the film's conclusion is that of a classic tragedy.




Although inspired in part by the success of movies such as Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, the film failed to be as successful as its makers hoped, in part due to criticism overseas at a perceived totalitarianism|pro-totalitarian and Chinese reunification|pro-Chinese reunification subtext. Such suspicions were probably aroused by the support given to the film by the Chinese government. These critics argue that the ulterior meaning of the film is the triumph of security and stability over liberty and human rights and that the concept of all under heaven is used to justify the incorporation of Tibet within the People's Republic of China and promote the reunification of Taiwan with mainland China. This would not be the only time that Zhang Yimou has been thus criticized; Zhang purportedly withdrew from the 1999 Cannes Film Festival to protest similar criticism, though some believe that Zhang had other reasons http://wikisource.org/wiki/Zhang_Yimou_withdraws_from_Cannes.

However defenders of Zhang Yimou and his film point out that the Chinese government's support of "Hero" is hardly different to the US army providing support to film makers portraying the US military in a positive light. Others reject entirely that Zhang Yimou had any political motives in making the film, although given his past record this seems somewhat unlikely.



  • Jiuzhaigou Valley: The flying fight scene between Nameless and Broken Sword was filmed above the waters of Arrow Bamboo Lake in the Jiuzhaigou Valley of northern Sichuan.





  • Cinema of China




  • http://www.herothemovie.com/ Official site

  • imdb title|id=0299977|title=Hero

  • http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=hmovies&s=orr113004 Review of Hero and its politics at The New Republic

  • http://csc.ziyi.org/filmography/hero/index.html Zhang Ziyi CSC: Hero

  • http://www.helloziyi.us/Movies/Hero.htm Hero


Category:2002 films
Category:Chinese sword era films

fr:Hero (film) it:Hero ja:HERO de:Hero (Film) zh:英雄 (电影)

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hero".


Last Modified:   2005-02-27


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