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Red Cliff
Red Cliff — The future will be decided.
2008 7 23.2K R views saved
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Red Cliff

2008 7 23.2K R views saved
Red Cliff

In 208 A.D., in the final days of the Han Dynasty, shrewd Prime Minster Cao convinced the fickle Emperor Han the only way to unite all of China was to declare war on the kingdoms of Xu in the west and East Wu in the south. Thus began a military campaign of unprecedented scale. Left with no other hope for survival, the kingdoms of Xu and East Wu formed an unlikely alliance.

Countries: CN
Languages: Mandarin
Content Rating: R
Runtime: 2hrs 25min
Status: Released
Release date: 2008-07-10
Release format: Streaming — Jul 29, 2009
Comments
Ying
@o0ying0o 5 years ago

It's an awesome epic ancient move full of action, drama, wisdom, military strategy, and humor mostly from Zhuge Liang (it's very Sherlock like). That being said, this movie is LONG, like, 2 parts equal up to almost 5 hours. DO NOT WATCH THE SHORT CUT or DUB VERSION. Take your time to enjoy the pacing and morale storytelling in one afternoon.

2
Ying
@o0ying0o 5 years ago

It's an awesome epic ancient move full of action, drama, wisdom, military strategy, and humor mostly from Zhuge Liang (it's very Sherlock like). That being said, this movie is LONG, like, 2 parts equal up to almost 5 hours. DO NOT WATCH THE SHORT CUT or DUB VERSION. Take your time to enjoy the pacing and morale storytelling in one afternoon.

2
@sekhmet 11 years ago

THE epic of the new century

1
@yaniism 4 years ago

I've seen the shortened version a few times, but this is my first time with the full/original version... and honestly, it's even better. There's just more fantastic performances from this amazing cast, and everything is richer and more lush.

0
John Accardo
@johnaccardo 1 year ago

Two men aggressively playing the zither at each other as a symbol of military and political unity is the promise of cinema finally achieved.

0
@drqshadow 5 years ago

John Woo helms an ambitious, crowded interpretation of the large-scale military actions that plagued China at the end of the Han Dynasty. While its epic, sweeping scale might be the film's greatest strength, I was often too preoccupied with following the encyclopedically long-winded subtitles to appreciate the visuals as much as I would have liked. Even at a long hundred-thirty minutes, the plot seems breathless and anxious as it hurries through back story, character moment and closed-door strategic debate at a breakneck pace. There's just so much story to tell here, with none of it deemed dispensable by Woo, that even two lengthy motion pictures don't seem like enough space to contain it all.

While the planning and execution behind Red Cliff's sublime fight scenes (much of which boil down to a Dynasty Warriors-style plan of "just send one man to wipe out the infantry") is flashy and memorable, I found more value in the thoughtful musings and observations of the calm, collected diplomatic envoy Zhuge Liang. His carefully considered strategic suggestions are profound and moving, like a delicate flower growing amidst the ruins of a spent battlefield. Though one-sided in nature, with an enemy master as vaguely evil and simple as they come, it still leaves us with the perfect setup for what I can only presume will be the mother of all epic-scale scuffles. Deep and dedicated, it's often more verbose than it needs to be.

0
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