Synopsis: Master Hong Kong filmmaker Wong Kar-Wai directed this lyrical, dream-like martial arts epic. A famously troubled shoot, the film took two years and 40 million dollars to produce (a shocking sum for a national cinema populated with low-budget quickies) and features a virtual who's who of the Hong Kong film world. Conceived as a prequel to the popular martial arts novel The Eagle-Shooting Hero by Jin Yong, the movie is less a straightforward action thriller than a visually striking meditation on memory and love. It nominally centers on Ouyang Feng (Leslie Cheung), who ekes out a lonely existence as an itinerant hired sword. Getting on in years and tormented by memories of a lost love, he also works an agent for other mercenary assassins from his remote desert abode. Ouyang's old friend and fellow swordsman, Huang Yaoshi (Tony Leung Kar-Fai, who starred in the The Lover) drowns his lovelorn misery in a magical wine that makes him forget. Later, a mysterious young man named Murong Yang (Brigitte Lin) hires Ouyang to kill his sister's unfaithful suitor, Huang Yaoshi. The following day, that spurned sister, Murong Yin (Lin again), hires Ouyang to protect her dearly beloved. Meanwhile, Hong Qi (pop star Jacky Cheung) finds some redemption for a life of killing by accepting a poor girl's offer to avenge her brother's death -- a task that Ouyang brusquely shunned. In another subplot, a master swordsman (Tony Leung Chiu-Wai) is slowly going blind. He agrees to defend a village from horse thieves so that he can afford to go home and see his wife before his eyesight fails completely. This film is one of the most celebrated examples of 1990s Hong Kong cinema: it won multiple awards in its native Hong Kong, along with a Golden Osella for Best Cinematography at the 1994 Venice Film Festival.
In the years following Ashes of Time's initial theatrical release, the original negatives were lost and multiple versions of the film began to crop up all across the globe. As a result, director Wong Kar-wai longed to compile these various versions into a restored, remastered, and definitive final cut. With Ashes of Time Redux, the director restructures the film according to seasons, effectively clarifying the central narratives, and digitally colorizes the film to render cinematographer Christopher Doyle's masterful imagery all the more lavish and intoxicatingly gorgeous.
Reviews:
Roger Ebert |
VariateyAsiaOnline.com |
FilmCritic.com |
Rotten Tomatoes |
IMDb (external reviews)Quote: |
ASHES OF TIME is celebrated art house director Wong Kar-wai's deconstruction of the wuxia pian featuring a powerhouse lineup of Hong Kong superstars, a challenging revision of a classic wuxia novel, the gorgeous cinematography of Christopher Doyle, and rare, wire-enhanced choreography of Sammo Hung. -- Mark Pollard |
IMDb:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1233247/IMDb Rating: 7.5/10 (566 votes)
Tomatometer: 80%
Directed by: Wong Kar-Wai
Cast:
Leslie Cheung .... Ouyang Feng
Tony Leung Kar-Fai .... Huang Yaoshi
Brigitte Lin .... Murong Yin/Murong Yang
Tony Leung Chiu-Wai .... Blind Swordsman
Maggie Cheung .... Brother's Wife
Code: |
Title: Dung che sai duk redux (2008) AKA Ashes of Time Redux Source: Bluray / Untouched Size: 1.565.115.716 (1/3 DVDR) Runtime: 01:33:19 Format: MKV
Video Codec: H264 (x264 rev.1114) Video Bitrate: 1849 kbps Resolution: 720x460 (Anamorphic, displayed at 1.85 AR) Aspect Ratio: 1.85 (SAR: 32/27) Frame rate: 23.976 fps
Audio Codec: AC3 (5.1 channels) Audio Bitrate: 384 kbps Sampling Rate: 48 KHz
Language: Cantonese & Mandarin Subtitles (muxed in): SRT: English
SA: HP @ Level 4.1 |
Screenshots resized to displayed AR:
ed2k:
ashes.of.time.redux.2008.bdrip.x264.ac3.6ch-[gx].mkv [1.46 Gb] [
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