2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
This is NOT NTSC, March 17, 2011
This review is from: The Founding of a Republic (Jian guo da ye) (DVD)
As far as the actual movie goes - it's really good, I quite enjoyed it. It was surprisingly accurate for a movie funded by the PRC. I really enjoyed how Chiang Kai-Shek was portrayed as an actual human being who thought he was doing the best thing for his country, not the soulless beast of a cardboard cut out I expected.
But the point of this review is to WARN you all that this is not an NTSC DVD - in other words, it will not play on the vast majority of North American DVD or Blu-Ray players even if it is region free/all regions. Beware of this!
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
A Dirty Marketing Trick!, September 2, 2011
This review is from: The Founding of a Republic (Jian guo da ye) (DVD)
Beware! This film has been misleadingly re-packaged and re-marketed in 2010 with the faces of three big kung fu stars on the cover BUT this is NOT a martial arts film! It is a self-indulgent Chinese propaganda film that is slow, boring and long-winded. Even though the new dvd cover states 'starring Jet Li, Jackie Chan and Donnie Yeung' these actors get bit parts for a matter of a few seconds - Jackie Chan takes some finding as a bespectacled Journalist with a moustache. If you are looking for a 'House of the Flying Daggers' type kung fu movie, then save your money! If you want a Chinese history lesson, then also save your money and buy something that is not so tedious and innacurate historically.
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5 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
What do you expect?, July 29, 2010
This review is from: The Founding of a Republic (Jian guo da ye) (DVD)
This is clearly government propoganda -- but everything produced in China is government-approved. In general, it is moderately accurate history -- but with a sugar coating for Mao. Actually, I think we could rate this the same way most Chinese rate Mao: kind of a 60-40 split between horrific and brilliant. Consider the history of the first half of the twentieth century in China, and you see horrendous chaos -- war, starvation, corruption, you name it. The single thing Mao did was bring stability and an end to chaos. He was a brilliant military commander who managed to lead everything from small guerilla units to a major million man army by 1948. He was a genius at politics, and is said to have been remarkably personable one-on-one. And he was a disaster at leading a country -- had not a clue how to do so. And his notion of permanent revolution was downright criminal.
It is interesting to ask what the inner belief is in each country or culture. In the United States it is that the individual is capable of great things and must stand on his or her own feet to survive -- some version of the rugged indiviualist. In China, I believe that the inner belief is that "without a strong central authority there will be chaos and hell." It is interesting to ask how the Chinese can balance capitalism with that inner belief. The Party keeps getting in the way -- and my observation when traveling in China is that individual initiative -- any thinking outside the box -- is not really encouraged or developed.
It is a fun move for an overview of the history of 1945-1949. Just take it with a grain of salt -- it is specifically for their 60th anniversary in 2009. Maybe something better will come out for the 90th anniversary.
My major complaint is that this issue of the movie is in black and white, and the original is in color. Pity. The subtitles, if you turn them on, are better than those of the original movie which had Chinese and English -- and the English was so small it was hard to see.
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