Back in 2004, I used to write movie reviews for the USM student
newspaper, the "Student Printz". Because I occasionally feel lazy, and
it seems a shame that all of five people ever read these, I've
decided to repost them here, in the original versions that I emailed
to my editor, Noel, all those years ago.
If I were to use one word to describe Hero, that one word would be: ballet. That’s really it in a nutshell: beautiful, well performed, poetic and just not very thrilling.
If I were to use one word to describe Hero, that one word would be: ballet. That’s really it in a nutshell: beautiful, well performed, poetic and just not very thrilling.
Hero (or Ying
xiong, as it is known in its native China) takes place over 2,200
years ago in the land of pre-unified China, where the king of Qin is
attempting to conquer the six kingdoms of China in order to become
the land’s first Emperor. Standing in the king’s way are the
three assassins who have tried for years to kill him and free the
land from oppression: Flying Snow, Broken Sword, and Sky
(respectively, Maggie Cheung, Tommy Leung Chiu Wai, and Donnie Yen).
Fortunately for the king, word has just reached him that one of his
own prefects, known only as Nameless, has successfully killed these
three assassins, and now the king wishes to know: how? Enter
Nameless (Jet Li, playing the same statuesque, stoic part he plays in
every movie. At least he plays the part well.), carrying the weapons
of the fallen warriors, prepared to retell his exploits to the king.
But all is not what it seems: through the course of the retelling,
things don’t seem to sit right in this warrior’s story.
Gradually more layers of truth are revealed until we discover that
Nameless is actually there to finish the job the other assassins
could not.
This movie is so much
fun to look at, its no wonder that other elements of the film seem to
fall apart at times. For example, the telling and retelling of the
different story possibilities of exactly what Nameless did happen
with so little evidence of time and place change that if director
Zhang Yimou did not have a strong visual style, you would probably be
dumbfounded as to exactly what you were watching and when it all took
place. Fortunately, the director uses some beautiful and vibrant
colors in each story element to help the mind delineate and clarify
the parts of the story (green/red/blue/white/etc.) Following in the
same cinematic style as Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Hero
also features some beautifully crafted and executed fight sequences,
where the warriors hurl themselves like projectiles, sprint across
the surface of lakes and fight about each other like dancers in some
lethal tango. Of course, most of the fight sequences are of little
to no consequence for the story, but when did that ever stop anyone?
But a movie cannot be
built on beautiful cinematography alone, as Hero undoubtedly
proves. While the individual fight scenes are thrilling and
exciting, the film fails to transfer the thrills from the individual
stories to the overall movie, and Hero suffers as a result.
Additionally, the film just barely manages to have even a modicum of
substance, which only shows up in the last fifteen minutes, making it
appear as though the “theme” was tossed in at the last minute
(Not surprisingly, the American version has lost ten minutes to the
Chinese version, presumably to put the fight sequences closer
together). The only worthwhile theme actually shows up indirectly,
when we discover that on top of being a master swordsman, Broken
Sword is also a master calligrapher: the marriage of violence and
art. Violence may be a wicked thing, but it can also be work of art
in itself.
Hero is
without a doubt the most beautiful and fun to look at film I have
seen in ages. It’s just a shame the director couldn’t put the
same energy into the story direction as he did into the visual style.