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42 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Over-the-Top and Insane Family Soap Opera: Some May Claim "Flower" Is Art, I Say It's All Entertainment
Recalling the critical reviews of "Curse of the Golden Flower" upon its release, I seem to remember a pretty split decision. There were those that proclaimed the film a tawdry and violent melodrama while others declared it a beautiful epic. Well, in all fairness, it is a beautiful, yet tawdry, excessively violent melodramatic epic. And I mean that in all the best ways...
Published on November 11, 2007 by K. Harris

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Much that glitters, little that's gold
Curse of the Golden Flower is a step up in budget from Zhang Yimou's Hero and House of Flying Daggers, but it's a step back in terms of drama: much that glitters, little that's gold. Set in a palace where everything is a spectacular and highly regimented ritual done on an epic scale, whether it is servants dressing by the hundreds or preparing food and medicine, it...
Published on December 15, 2008 by Trevor Willsmer


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42 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Over-the-Top and Insane Family Soap Opera: Some May Claim "Flower" Is Art, I Say It's All Entertainment, November 11, 2007
This review is from: Curse of the Golden Flower (DVD)
Recalling the critical reviews of "Curse of the Golden Flower" upon its release, I seem to remember a pretty split decision. There were those that proclaimed the film a tawdry and violent melodrama while others declared it a beautiful epic. Well, in all fairness, it is a beautiful, yet tawdry, excessively violent melodramatic epic. And I mean that in all the best ways! Chinese director Zhang Yimou has put together an eye-popping spectacle of sets, costumes, and effects--complete with his customary flair for dreamlike action sequences and an astonishing color palette.

Telling a soapy tale of dysfunction within Emperor Ping's clan circa The Tang Dynasty (928 A.D.), "Curse" has all the lurid ingredients of a modern-day potboiler. There are illicit affairs, murderous schemes, generational secrets, and gruesome acts of violence. Similar to the setup of "The Lion in Winter," "Curse" brings the Ping family together and lets them attack each other with a refreshingly unhinged viciousness. But while "Lion's" carnage was largely verbal, no such claim can be made with this film. With elements of "King Lear" firmly in place, the pace of "Curse" accelerates so rapidly--you know the characters are headed for disaster.

Central to the remarkable cast is the gorgeous Gong Li as the Empress. As the catalyst of most of the film's action, Li is the film's most pivotal performer. The female center of this "Flower" (which includes Chow Yun Fat as her husband and their three sons/heirs), Li practically devours the role. Full of passion, rage, lust, and plenty of secrets--she has never been given a showier role and definitely rises to the occasion. The performances are so good, so alive, you want to stick with the tale to the bitter end. And no matter how outrageous this film can get (and the madcap finale certainly pushes conventional sensibilities), it is always grounded with the actors.

Forget Shakespeare's most violent tragedies, "Curse" sports a body count that even the Bard would surely envy. Not since the wickedly over-the-top killing spree during the finale of DiPalma's "Scarface" has a movie devolved into such an unabashed show of bloody lunacy. Ridiculous at every turn, the film succeeds by embracing its excesses. The final showdown left me marveling at the staged choreography and laughing at the inspired, yet insane, debauchery. I won't contend that "Curse" is an artistic masterwork that rivals Yimou's previous films "House of Flying Daggers" and "Hero"--but I will say that it is massive entertainment. A frantic, blood-soaked opera of lust and vengeance (with no apologies), I loved "Curse of the Golden Flower." KGHarris, 11/07.
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32 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "A SQUARE WITHIN A CIRCLE, GOLD AND JADE ON THE OUTSIDE, ROT AND DECAY ON THE INSIDE", March 29, 2007
By 
Roy Clark "rclarknv" (Edge of Toiyabe Nat'l Forest, NV) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Curse of the Golden Flower (DVD)
I note that an earlier reviewer saw the 'making-of' featurette. and it's
a good intro into peeling away the layers of this quasi-Shakespearean melodrama. There's something dramatists like, the theme of the darkness beneath the beauty.

Slow starting, Director Zhang moves faster and faster telling the tale of unfolding faces (in an asian sense) and the complexities of relationships,
veering every so-often in to soap-operatics. Yet with extravagant graphics/ production qualities and a nice pattern of on-and-off action with teary or sneer-y confrontations and trysts, even the maybe too-dramatic elements work well.

One measure might be that in re-seeing, the layers get more intense and understandable, adding weight to the conflicts; a plus for buyers versus renters.

Now, if only a quality version of RAISE THE RED LANTERN would be released, Zhang Yimou's stature as a world-class director would be rightly, finally, established. With his successes this millennium, it might just happen for the man...
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20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Intricate and Gorgeous Shakespearean Chinese Dynasty film, December 18, 2007
By 
B. Shaw (Portland, OR USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Curse of the Golden Flower (DVD)
Outstanding! Incredible cinematography, exceptionally ornate sets, very appropriate and well-done music, academy award-level acting, I keep trying to come up with more superlatives to use for the movie! I thoroughly enjoyed every nanosecond of it. It held my interest so well that I simply could not stop watching it, twice! The sets are exquisitely detailed and opulent, the martial arts used were excellent. It is subtitled, so if you are not accustomed to reading English while trying to pick up on the tonal inflections of the actors you may miss much in their performances...unless of course you speak Mandarin. The plot was Shakespearen in both it's quality and its intricacy. The whole movie centers, and stays focused, on the life of the Imperial family and an upcoming coup within it. One of the other reviews noted that the Imperial physician's wife was having an affair with the Crown Prince, but I think they mis-stated. It was her daughter, Chan, having the affair and the mom became insensed with anger when she found out, since she was mother to both...and they didn't know it. There is so much intrigue and a very complex plot, yet somehow so well-written that I did not find it hard to follow at all.
This is an excellent example of the best of Chinese film-making, and I think an outstanding period piece as well.
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36 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Throne of Blood, January 31, 2007
By 
MICHAEL ACUNA (Southern California United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Curse of the Golden Flower (DVD)
As depraved and corrupt as the House of Thebes, as morally bankrupt as the Hubbard/Giddens family in Lillian Hellman's "Little Foxes" or George and Martha in "Who's Afraid of Virginia
Woolf," (all of which this film calls to mind) Zhang Yimou's "The Curse of the Golden Flower," though huge in scale is at it's core an intimate family (albeit a majorly dysfunctional family) drama which unfolds during the Later Tang Dynasty (923-936 AD), a time of corruption, dictatorship and warfare--with a mind-blowing, color-soaked brilliance and an almost insane excess that does over-ripe justice to the passions and intrigues that are raging full throttle inside the palace.
The sinister ensemble cast includes an evil emperor (Chow Yun Fat), his desperate wife (Gong Li), his three wildly contrasting sons and heirs (Liu Ye, Jay Chou and Qin Junjie), the troubled imperial doctor (Ni Dahong) and the doctor's bitter wife (Chen Jin) and naive daughter (Li Man), both of whom have secrets that could destroy an empire.
Though all of the performances are first rate, Gong Li as the pathetic consort to the Emperor and Jay Chou as Prince Jai show us the pain and heartbreak behind all the bravura acting: these are brave performances that not only come from the mind but also from heart and the soul of these performers; a particularly difficult task based on all the grandeur and pomposity surrounding them.
"The Curse of the Golden Flower" is eye-poppingly gorgeous to look at yet Zhang Yimou nonetheless has managed to, in the midst of the thousands of extras, millions of flowers and opulent and decadent costumes, produced a very thoughtful and tragic drama about a family that can't resist its basest impulses and in the process demolishes and destroys itself from within: love exists here but its a love twisted upon itself and dessicated by the bile and vomitus of distrust and depravity.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What I do not give, you must never take by force., November 5, 2007
This review is from: Curse of the Golden Flower (DVD)
Emperor Ping returns to his palace just before the Chong Young Festival. The Empress Phoenix, his wife, is far from happy to see his return. Ping has ordered his imperial doctor to slowly poison the empress. And, in retaliation, the Empress conspires to overthrow her husband. As hatreds fester and secret passions come to light, no one will remain untouched by the Curse of the Golden Flower.

The Director Yimou Zhang follows up House of Flying Daggers and Hero with his most lavish epic yet. Curse of the Golden Flower is an extraordinary film. It is a big-budget extravaganza that is reminiscent of some of the Hollywood epics of the fifties and sixties. As with all Zhang's western exports, his use of colour is incredible. The palace of Emperor Ping is brought to the screen in a blaze of arresting colour. Every costume and set create a world of sumptuous majesty a world that you will be immediately drawn into.

Of course, like all Asian Cinema, this film has the usual martial arts set pieces throughout, but it does not seem to rely on them to keep the audience interested. Instead, the film uses a complex plot involving the power struggle between the two leads. Chow Yun Fat, as Ping, presents a character who is ruthless and dogmatic, and Gong Li's Empress Phoenix is vulnerable and defiant. Both stars' perfomances are beyond reproach, and all of these qualities come together to create a gloriously opulent saga.

The Curse of the Golden Flower is an epic filled with intrigue and breathtakingly-bloody battle scenes, all set against a backdrop of radiantly decadent colour. If you liked Flying Daggers and Hero, you will adore the Curse of the Golden Flower.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars great movie and good demo for your blu-ray system, February 8, 2008
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This movie is a major Chinese production with a cast of 1000's. The storyline is absorbing and the hi-def picture and sound is "jaw dropping."
I have shown it to several friends and the universal opinion is that this is a truly great movie! May not be as fabulous on a standard non-Hi-Def system. You don't want to miss this "sleeper."
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21 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Exquisitely Uniform Asian Epic, May 17, 2007
This review is from: Curse of the Golden Flower (DVD)
`Curse of the Flower' is a gorgeous masterpiece. Filled with the uniform pageantry of The Tang Dynasty (A.D. 928), the layers of beauty are unfolded to reveal the household of the Emperor (Yun Fat) whose dramatic crisis is intimately revealed amidst the busy hive of his kingdom. Treason, incest, and treachery against kin are concretely provided for a drama of Shakespearean proportions. The queen (Empress) of the hive is ailing with what the Emperor believes to be anemia. After ten years of ancient herbal medicine, she is no means closer to a cure. More hemorrhaging is the rivalry amongst the two sons who spar for succession like Cain and Abel. Jai (Jay Chou), the elder, appears like the humble, reluctant successor; while his bitter young rival, Wan (Liu Ye) has a sword to grind with his past and a manipulative lover who has no little influence over him. The poor Emperor, revealed with no clothes, is wise to the point of tempering his judgment amongst poisonous ingratitude. Heavy wears the crown for a man who resiliently defies the Shakespearean line, "Death hath murdered sleep." Suspenseful, the plot lines head for a climax during the Chrysanthemum Festival for which the Empress intricately prepares.

Stylish on every score, 'Curse of the Flower' could have been an overwrought melodrama with not enough substance, but story and décor only bring out the best of one another. Never did I feel like this offering was tainted by trivialities. I neglected this cinematic offering on the suspicion I was going to get an ancient and foreign offering of 'Kill Bill, No. 1' with tiresome martial arts scenes. Judiciously, the dramatic and combat scenes are gorgeously choreographed and timed to meticulous precision without draining the attention span of the audience. The battle scenes are innovative in a way reminiscent of , 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' except with more stunning results. If nothing else, it contrasts new horizons of technical achievement that make 'Matrix' borrowing seem stale.

Intense but expert acting and meticulous craftsmanship combine to make a magnificent epic adventure. 'Curse of the Golden Flower' is a singular achievement for director Yimou Zhang and all involved who assembled an excellent Eastern tragedy.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Typical chinese movie..., June 12, 2007
By 
P.K. (BKK, Thailand) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Curse of the Golden Flower (DVD)
Don't misunderstand the title of my review above, as it's not necessarily a bad thing. I rarely write reviews, but having read many of the bad reviews here concerning badly scripted dialogues/actions and confusing plot, I simply must add my 2 cents. This is typical of chinese movies. They don't lay everything out for you from beginning to end. You have to actually THINK in order to fully understand the whole thing. And traditionally, chinese people do speak that way. They don't just say it outright, they tend to use metaphors and such to word their intent. Why?!?! I don't know. They just do. So before you start criticizing the way the characters speak or the way the plot unfolds, you should do a little research beforehand (or just stick to cheesy b-movies).
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Good story, fantastic costumes, December 26, 2007
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This review is from: Curse of the Golden Flower (DVD)
This is a visually pleasing movie on many levels. Costumes are like nothing we have ever seen in asian movies, we see a glace of the Forbidden City (imperial palace) and interior decorating in the palace quarters is breathtaking. Gong Li is as a beautiful as ever in her role of an empress, while we get to see Chow Yun Fat play a bad guy (evil emperor) for a change from his standard roles of heroes and saviors. For any Westerner, the best way to describe a story plot would be to say that this is a cross over between Greek tragedy and Shakesperian storytelling. I have enjoyed every minute of it. I am sure you will too.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Opulent and gorgeous, and interesting, too..., August 26, 2007
By 
R. Gawlitta "Coolmoan" (Milwaukee, Wisconsin USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Curse of the Golden Flower (DVD)
I liked a lot of things about "Curse of the Golden Flower", especially director Yimou Zhang's brilliant use of color. The very complicated plot involves court intrigue 1000 years ago in feudal China, and one must pay attention because nothing is ever as it seems. The reliable Chow Yun Fat & Gong Li provide a solid base from which the situations arise, and the appearance of Chinese pop star, Jay Chou as Prince Jai, is quite good. Handsome devil! Everything about the film is beautful to look at, thanks to brilliant art direction, cinematography and costumes. The editing, too, is to be commended, not only for giving maximum impact to the grandiose battle scenes but also for keeping the complicated plot coherent. It does, however, take a while for the scene to be set, but once in place, you're in for a treat. DVD extras are fine, with interviews with director, cast, etc. I was entertained, and that's what film is all about.
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