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23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars 3 ½ Stars: Entertaining and Beautifully Shot, A Little Cold but Action-Packed
Review of the Uncut HK version.

Amid the beloved historical epic tales of the "Battle or Romance of the Three Kingdoms", arose three movies in 2008. The very mediocre "Empress and the Warriors" with Donnie Yen, and late last year came the first chapter of John Woo's "Red Cliff". Daniel Lee's (Dragon Squad) "Three Kingdoms: Resurrection of the Dragon" was...
Published on January 19, 2009 by Woopak

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25 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointingly cookie-cutter, but a good attempt with nice combat scenes
For those unfamiliar, 'Romance of the Three Kingdoms' is one of the four pillars of Chinese literature. It's a massive and rich piece of work spanning over a hundred years of turbulent history, and making a single movie out of it is no easy task.

The directors of Resurrection of the Dragon choose to center the story around one of the greatest generals of the...
Published on January 18, 2009 by afz81


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23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars 3 ½ Stars: Entertaining and Beautifully Shot, A Little Cold but Action-Packed, January 19, 2009
By 
Woopak "The THRILL" (Where Dark Asian Knights Dwell) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Three Kingdoms: Resurrection of the Dragon (DVD)
Review of the Uncut HK version.

Amid the beloved historical epic tales of the "Battle or Romance of the Three Kingdoms", arose three movies in 2008. The very mediocre "Empress and the Warriors" with Donnie Yen, and late last year came the first chapter of John Woo's "Red Cliff". Daniel Lee's (Dragon Squad) "Three Kingdoms: Resurrection of the Dragon" was released a few months earlier in Asia than Woo's star-studded film (which I will review later), and has Hong Kong's Andy Lau (Running on Karma) in the lead as the famous General Zhao Zhilong--yes the same guy in the video game named Zhao Yun in "Dynasty Warriors". The film has massive commercial appeal, and the film is beautifully shot. However, purists of the tales of the Three Kingdoms will be annoyed and repulsed, as the film does feel a little empty in regards to an intricate storyline and full of historical inaccuracies. (Hint: John Woo's overly exaggerated film about the three kingdoms isn't much better)

228 A.D, before the rise of the Jin Dynasty. The kingdoms of Shu, Wei and Wu are divided. Zhilong (Andy Lau) is a simple soldier from Changsan who becomes a legendary warrior under the employ of Liu (Yueh Huah) who rises from the ranks of the Shu forces to become one of the "Five Tiger Generals". Zhilong becomes famous for his many campaigns against Cao and the last surviving general of the "Five Tigers". Now, after many years of war, Zhilong is set to make his last stand against Cho's granddaughter--who has become a beautiful, cold and stoic warrior woman; Cao Ling (Maggie Q, Live Free and Die Hard).

The film is narrated by Pingan (Sammo Hung), Zhilong's oldest friend who joined the Liu army with him many years ago. The film is supposed to cover thirty years, Zhilong was a simple soldier who ascends to become a simple general and so the film feels a little too short. There are a lot of plot holes and several important parts missing, but then as a tale being narrated by Pingan who remained a simple soldier in the ranks, I can accept its shortcomings. Pingan never became a part of Zhilong's military unit until his final campaign. The viewer is privy to Zhilong's achievements through the musings of humble Pingan and it is rather hard for Sammo Hung to carry this burden, and purists will undoubtedly become disconnected. Zhilong is a renowned general in the Shu kingdom, he may be remembered as the "Spartan" of the Liu army--truly legendary and whose name struck fear in the hearts of his enemies.

Thankfully, Andy Lau does turn in a great performance and I am happy to say he isn't miscast. This may well be his best performance since his role in "The Warlords" with Jet Li. The plot may be a little too simple and doesn't reach Zhilong's epic grandeur, but Lau does the best of what he's got; Lau is playing a larger-than-life character and despite the simple plot, he manages to project the character competently. Maggie Q. is alluring as Cao Ling, and despite her limited screen time, she was exciting and enchanting to watch. The rest of the supporting cast isn't so bad, but we all have to remember that this is a film with Zhilong as its central focus.

Aside from the Pingan narrations, the real problems begin when the film has some "add-on" characters played by two lesser known performers in the persona of Vanness Wu, and Andy On; they seem to be mere attempts to give the young stars some exposure. (Maggie Q. is just so hot, I don`t mind her at all) A lot of folks would be interested to see this film because of truly iconic characters played by accomplished actors such as Sammo Hung, Yueh Hua, Ti Lung, Chen Zhihui; but sadly the film does nothing with them. Zhilong may be the center of the film but all others, disappear after the first half. This film definitely needed to be longer and the significance of the other four "Tiger Generals" to Zhilong a little more fleshed out.

The action sequences have the usual style of Chinese epics and reminiscent of other films of this kind. The choreography by Yuen Tak is fairly good, although it looked too flashy for my tastes. (as with Woo's "Red Cliff') The shots are cool and well-choreographed, a blend of the usual wire-fu, wild slow-mo and blood and some gore. Highlights include Zhilong rescuing Liu's son, (which was fairly exciting) and the fight between Cao Ling and Zhilong were very cool to watch. The fights provide great eye candy, but that's all they were; pure eye candy. The film does have a lot of action, it feels more like an action drama and abandons the contemplative nature of the horrors of war.(although it does touch on this idea a little in the final act) Writer/director Daniel Lee does an average job in mixing in emotions and action, but it felt that it reduced its visceral effect. The film has colorful, elaborate costumes and some beautiful cinematography that it will no doubt attract mainstream audiences.

"Three Kingdoms: Resurrection of the Dragon" isn't a bad film, and I rather thought that this may be Daniel Lee's best work. It is a lot better than the abysmal "Empress and the Warriors" and I've seen John Woo's "Red Cliff" and believe me, Woo's first take on the "Three Kingdoms" period was better but only by a tad. The lore and legend of the Three Kingdoms isn't fully fleshed out, and the film does resort to flashy camera tricks and choreographed action sequences. While this may not be exactly be a bad thing, and will no doubt give the non-meticulous viewer a good diversion, purists of its historical significance will be very disappointed since it isn`t as intricately compelling as I wished it to be. The film never does delve into wartime strategy that much and falls to the usual epic trappings of honor, betrayal and fate. This film has massive commercial appeal but quite respectable in its quality. "Three Kingdoms" is indeed an entertaining experience, but not outstanding and manages to exude coolness throughout--but isn't war supposed to be "un-cool"?

Another one for the overindulgent International audience for beautiful Chinese epics.

Recommended! [3 ½ Stars]

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25 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointingly cookie-cutter, but a good attempt with nice combat scenes, January 18, 2009
This review is from: Three Kingdoms: Resurrection of the Dragon (DVD)
For those unfamiliar, 'Romance of the Three Kingdoms' is one of the four pillars of Chinese literature. It's a massive and rich piece of work spanning over a hundred years of turbulent history, and making a single movie out of it is no easy task.

The directors of Resurrection of the Dragon choose to center the story around one of the greatest generals of the day: Zhao Yun "Zilong". Unfortunately, they botch his background, don't bother telling his actual story, and decide to fit everything in a measly 100 minutes. A note here: you may want to check out Red Cliff , which is another Three Kingdoms movie but actually has a sense of scope.

What 'Dragon' does is rush at breakneck pace through a couple (well, one, really) of the important military accomplishments in Zilong's career, before spinning headfirst into pure fantasy and making an embarrassingly half-hearted attempt at being "deep". Ouch! This is a richer and more complex legend than to have to rely on hackneyed Hollywood formulas.

Exhibit A: Cao Ying. I'm positively baffled that with as many well-known heroes and villains as 'Romance' provides, the scriptwriters felt a need to create one of their own. Ying is the daughter of the enemy king Cao Cao, who looks like a delicate princess but packs a lethal punch. (What a novel character concept?...) Additionally, I can not accept that a cheaply fabricated character such as Ying manages to outsmart Zhuge Liang, the most brilliant military strategist of his time, as easily as she does. A cookie-cutter role with no depth and ridiculous powers? You've got to make the villains compelling!

Exhibit B: the pudgy Luo Pingan, the story's narrator. A foot soldier who gets to know Zilong from the start of his career who plays a big role in the beginning, drops out completely, and makes a big comeback at the end, with a suddenly acquired complexity because he's bitter for not having achieved success through all these years. Sorry - it doesn't work. Tip to the directors: no shortcuts. You cannot just write in a scene where a character cries and decide, "well, that's really deep right there."

The end result is a movie that has zero depth to it. None of the great personas around Zilong - Liu Bei, Zhuge Liang, Guan Yu, Zhang Fei, Cao Cao - are given more than a passing introduction. Sure, Zilong is great, but the story is not without a compelling surrounding cast.

I don't understand. The directors have some really knock-out material to work with, but choose to ignore it. Zhao Yun was but one player in a centuries-long saga that started before him and ended (much) after him. The directors need to realize it's OK to accept that they can't tell the whole story in one movie. But they insist on trying. You can chronicle an entire history, or you can paint a single picture in beautiful detail, but you can't do both.

I will give credit where credit is due: visually, it's stunning. I'll even forgive them for deciding to use World War 1-era helmets for AD200. The cinematography is excellent, and the combat scenes are definitely well done.

Unfortunately, a real telling of Zilong's remarkable legend needed to be 3 solid hours of epic story-weaving. Instead, what we have is a poorly scraped-together highlight reel that tries more to send a message ("war is harsh") than portray this legendary man. But hey, neat swordplay.
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16 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Bad DVD Quality - Looks like pirating from Theater, September 6, 2008
By 
Y. Ho "Yifong" (Budd Lake, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
I ordered this DVD from Amazon. Paid over $20 more dollar. The quality of the DVD BOX and DVD Disk print are blurt that it actually looks like pirate DVD. When I look at the DVD movie, there are frame that has some strange object on the screen. It made me think that this DVD was duplicated by filming the movie in the theater.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too far away from facts + The acting and directing are not engaging as other movies of the same genre., June 10, 2008
There are two things I don't like about this movie.

1. There are many major details that are not true to history. Fitstly, Zi Long or Zhao Yun did not die in the battle. He died of old age (1). Secondly, at the battle of Chanban, Liu Bei's wife, Lady Gan was not killed. She's rescued by Zhao Yun. Thirdly, Zhao Yun never fought with Cao Cao's niece according to history!

You can verify all the details by visiting wikipedia dot org. Sorry, I can't embed the link here. It seems Amazon is blocking that feature. If you find any other reliable website talking about the 3 kingdoms period in China, please put that information here. I'd appreciate that.

2. The acting and directing are not engaging as in other movies of the same genes such as the Warlords. The fighting scenes are so so but they're not good as the ones in the Warlords either.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Surface scratcher, July 20, 2008
By 
Plot seems fractured and it just doesn't flow, probably as it jumps through time too quickly and because of this you cannot get indepth with the characters and story. Mainly I think this is because the film is too short, it almost needs to be a trilogy! There is not enough time in the film to get to know all the different characters and feel for them through their struggles. Even the relationships between the characters during the film are so short it makes their own emotions seem fake. I really thought it had potential and I got right into it at the start...but once he becomes 'old' it rushes through too much to feel as though you can get indepth in the film on all levels...I felt it just scratches the surface of what seems a wonderful story. Awesome fight scenes make up for it though and I still enjoyed it, but left wanted more. Subtitles move to quickly unfortunately.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A movie worth watching, December 30, 2009
By 
This review is from: Three Kingdoms: Resurrection of the Dragon (DVD)
Three Kingdoms: Resurrection of the Dragon brings to the screen the story of a Chinese warrior who enlists in his kingdom's army in order to help bring about peace to his homeland.
It's 228 AD and China is divided into three kingdoms warring with one another for total control. The warrior Zhilong, through his superior fighting skills and strategic abilities will rise through the ranks of the army of the Kingdom of Shu and become General in hopes of ending the years of war and division that have decimated the realm.
The film combines drama, action, and adventure following in the footsteps of other great Chinese films of recent years.
Moreover, the fascinating culture and traditions of China are presented very well in the film, which in turn opens a window into the mysterious Orient.
The cast have carried out their performances very well, with their great talent and chemistry clearly showing, thus providing for an entertaining film
The plot, the setting, the dialogues, the music, the battle sequences, and the costumes are all very good.
In conclusion, Three Kingdoms: Resurrection of the Dragon is definitely worth watching, while for some truly amazing Chinese films try the following: A Battle of Wits, Seven Swords, Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon, The House of Flying Daggers, The Promise, and Hero.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Don't miss this movie!, January 30, 2009
This review is from: Three Kingdoms: Resurrection of the Dragon (DVD)
This is the best movie I've seen in years! This is definitely a must have for fans of Dynasty Warriors and those who love movies based on Romance of the Three Kingdoms (Red Cliff). The battles are extremely violent, with a great cinematic flare. Also, there's no flying or dancing on heads in this film. That's something I don't mind in other films, but it credits this movie's excitement without going overboard on the effects. Andy Lau plays the role of Zhao Zilong perfectly, and you'll quickly find yourself in his corner cheering for this Tiger General and his lieutenants. The plot moves at a steady pace, with very little filler material. At the end of the movie, you'll be begging for there to be more!

This DVD is great quality. The subtitles are well done and easy to keep up with. The menus can be a little difficult to navigate (unless you can read traditional Chinese). This feature has everything you'd expect of a big-budget film. Do not pass this up!
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars not as good as Red Cliff, May 20, 2009
This review is from: Three Kingdoms: Resurrection of the Dragon (DVD)
It is a nice to have movie for a kung fu movie fan but it is not up to the level of Red Cliff. And it does not stick to the real story. In the reality, the general just died form old age and Cao Cao never had a daughter that was a martial art expert.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Bad repersentation of a great story., April 30, 2010
This is a poorly written, and directed take on "Romance of the Three Kingdoms", which is a historical novel that is considered one of China's most important novel. The story follows a warrior named Zhao "Zilong" Yun. The fist half of the movie is decent at best, the action scenes are poorly directed because it's difficult to tell what is going on. The second half of the movie, which completely abandons its historical source and follows some completely made up story where Zhao Zilong fights a fictional female general. The story jumps around from year to years and lacks any real emotional impact. Overall this movie was a horrible experience and a shame to the Three Kingdoms story itself.

You should get "Red Cliffs" which is a movie that is also based on the Three Kingdoms, that came out around the same time as this one, is much, much better, and actually historical.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars AWESOME, January 19, 2009
By 
Kenneth "KMarcotte" (Lancaster, US, Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Anybody who is a fan of the Dynasty Warriors video game would love this movie. it is based off of the characters of the Shu and Wei kingdoms but the storyline is that of Shu officer Zhao Zilong but the fans of the D.W. game would know him as Zhao Yun the most honorable warrior in Liu Bei's army.
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