Story:
After years under the service of the Chinese Emperor,
Lai Xi, a Japanese emissary, wishes to return to Japan,
but is instead sent to the west to capture wanted criminals.
The only way for him to go back to Japan is to capture
and execute Lt. Li, an ex-soldier, who is wanted by
the emperor for his mutiny against the emperor army.
Li
and Lai Xi will finally meet, but agree to delay their
final fight until Li finish his agreement to bring
back to safety a caravan carrying a Buddhist monk.
However to Li’s ignorance, the monk is secretly
carrying a sacred and powerful pagoda that attracts
the attention of a region’s ruthless overlord.
Followed by his former friends soldiers, Li will face
the cruelty of the desert, the region’s barbaric
bandits and the brutality of the overlord’s
men before he can finally face his ultimate fight
with Lai Xi.
Review: The long and old Silk Road, there
were always all kinds of people: merchant, foreigners,
soldiers, and of course heroes. In a lot of Chinese
legends, the west of China, the place forever covered
by the sands, where the Silk Road passed by, was always
where the knights appeared. This is where this story
takes place, it happened in the strongest period of
Chinese history—Tang, and the director He Ping
used almost 20 years’ preparation to describe
it.
There
has been a lot of discussions in China about how people
compared this movie with Hero directed by Zhang Yimou.
Maybe it was because of their similar names in Chinese.
I personally cannot see any strong similarity. These
are two completely different movies: from the history
background, the way they shot, the characters, the
story type and whatever. If we must do some comparisons,
that is: both movies tried to create big epic story,
however Warriors at last forgot the creation of the
characters; Hero’s story line was a bit pale,
but at least all the characters were plentiful.
In
fact, if someone watched the South-Korean movie Musa,
they should find much more similarity. Both happened
in the desert, both needed protect something to somewhere,
both had enemies tracking them and both had a woman
as the vase. A strange coincidence? Or an incredible
similarity? However, I don’t think the director
He Ping just wanted to make a copy, or else he wouldn’t
have used 20 years to prepare his film.
If
the first half of the movie is a Wu Xia type or 8th
century’s police action type, the last half
fall in the fantasy genre. Comparing to the ending
of Musa, this movie’s ending gave us a lot of
unbelievable elements. Seems it wanted to tell us
that heroes are not born as heroes but in fact normal
as everybody. However, one day they had good luck
and God choose to help them, so they become heroes.
Does this means that the heroes in Warriors of Heaven
and Earth are not true hero but heroes for the situation?
Did it want to proof the old Chinese word: “the
heroic appears by the current situation”? What
exactly are we were really forward to is not very
clear as it seem that the director began to fell insufficiency
of idea in the middle of the shooting.
This
time, I won’t talk about Jiang Wen as there
is no doubted about it, he’s an excellent actor.
But how about Nakai Kiichi, the famous Japanese actor?
I didn’t had chance to watch any of his movies
before, except a TV series he played with Faye Wong
several years ago. This time, he plays a Japanese
emissary who is strong in appearance but soft in heart.
He always wants to go home but can’t, so his
missing become the words in his letters to his old
mother. He always speaks Chinese with very strange
accent, but every time he speaks, you can feel the
power. He didn’t say a lot, but he is such a
good player that you cannot neglect his existence.
Watching
this movie, you will get some great surprises in the
beginning, but also few disappointments when you reach
the end. It’s not a perfect movie, but it is
a beautiful movie that shows us the different scenery
of the western China. As a Chinese recent commercial
movie, Warrior of Heaven and Earth, is a fine example
at what we can expect in quality for future Chinese
movie.