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Flying Swords of Dragon Gate (2011) (Blu-ray) (2D + 3D) (Hong Kong Version) Blu-ray Region A

Jet Li (Actor) | Zhou Xun (Actor) | Mavis Fan (Actor) | Fan Siu Wong (Actor)
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YesAsia Editorial Description

Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame proved that Tsui Hark has come back on sparkling form, and now the visionary Hong Kong filmmaker endeavors to create the first Chinese martial arts film in stunning IMAX 3D! He revisits the film Dragon Inn he produced two decades earlier (itself a remake of the 1967 King Hu wuxia classic), and co-writes, directs, and produces the epic follow-up Flying Swords of Dragon Gate with a revamped story and much more sophisticated production values. Supported by a top-caliber crew including acclaimed director Jacob Cheung (A Battle of Wits), action choreographer Yuen Bun (The Blade), and 3D effects guru Chuck Comisky (Avatar), Tsui manages to advance the genre and bring it to a whole new dimension.

Leading the all-star cast is kung fu icon Jet Li, who joins forces with Tsui for the first time since they collaborated on the legendary Once Upon a Time in China series. His co-stars include Zhou Xun (The Banquet) playing a martial arts heroine, Aloys Chen (Painted Skin) in dual roles, Guey Lun Mei (The Stool Pigeon), Chris Lee (Bodyguards and Assassins), singer Mavis Fan, plus action stars Louis Fan and Gordon Liu. A huge critical and commercial success, Flying Swords of Dragon Gate has swiftly grossed over RMB500 million at the China box office to reach mega-blockbuster status, and garnered heaps of praises at various international film festivals and a whopping 13 nominations at the 31st Hong Kong Film Awards.

During the Ming Dynasty, China was practically ruled by evil eunuchs. In a mission to rescue persecuted officials, righteous swordsman Zhao Huai'an (Jet Li) assassinates the vicious East Chamber commander Wan Yulou (Gordon Liu), thus making himself the prime target of the West Chamber overlord Yu Huatian (Aloys Chen). Zhao and company flee to the vast, sprawling desert on the frontier, and seek refuge at the infamous Dragon Gate Inn, which was rebuilt after being burned down in a blaze three years ago. There, the fugitives come head-to-head with a variety of mysterious figures - swordswoman Ling Yanqiu (Zhou Xun), hunted palace maid Su Huirong (Mavis Fan), a deadly tribal princess (Guey Lun Mei), a pair of bandits (Chris Lee and Aloys Chen), and secret agents from the West Chamber. When Yu Huatian and his henchmen track them down to the inn, everyone's fate will be decided in an earth-shattering showdown amidst the all-devouring sandstorm...

Hong Kong Version 2D+3D Blu-ray comes with 126 minutes of special features, including making-of, behind-the-scenes, cast & crew interviews, trailers, and director's commentary.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Flying Swords of Dragon Gate (2011) (Blu-ray) (2D + 3D) (Hong Kong Version) 龍門飛甲 (2011) (Blu-ray) (2D + 3D) (香港版) 龙门飞甲 (2011) (Blu-ray) (2D + 3D) (香港版) 龍門飛甲 (2011) (Blu-ray) (3D) (香港版) Flying Swords of Dragon Gate (2011) (Blu-ray) (2D + 3D) (Hong Kong Version)
Also known as: The Flying Swords of Dragon Gate 3D 新龍門客棧 新龙门客栈 The Flying Swords of Dragon Gate 3D The Flying Swords of Dragon Gate 3D
Artist Name(s): Jet Li (Actor) | Zhou Xun (Actor) | Mavis Fan (Actor) | Fan Siu Wong (Actor) | Gwei Lun Mei (Actor) | Gordon Liu (Actor) | Chen Kun (Actor) | Du Yi Heng (Actor) | Zhang Xin Yu (Actor) | Wang Shuang Bao (Actor) | Wu Di (Actor) | Chris Lee (Actor) | Sun Jian Kui (Actor) | Sheng Jian (Actor) 李 連杰 (Actor) | 周迅 (Actor) | 范曉萱 (Actor) | 樊少皇 (Actor) | 桂綸鎂 (Actor) | 劉家輝 (Actor) | 陳坤 (Actor) | 杜 奕衡 (Actor) | 張 馨予 (Actor) | 王雙寶 (Actor) | 吳迪 (Actor) | 李宇春 (Actor) | 孫 建魁 (Actor) | 盛 鋻 (Actor) 李 连杰 (Actor) | 周迅 (Actor) | 范晓萱 (Actor) | 樊少皇 (Actor) | 桂纶镁 (Actor) | 刘家辉 (Actor) | 陈坤 (Actor) | 杜 奕衡 (Actor) | 张 馨予 (Actor) | 王双宝 (Actor) | 吴迪 (Actor) | 李宇春 (Actor) | 孙 建魁 (Actor) | 盛 鋻 (Actor) 李連杰(ジェット・リー) (Actor) | 周迅 (ジョウ・シュン)  (Actor) | 范暁萱(メイビス・ファン) (Actor) | 樊少皇(ルイス・ファン) (Actor) | 桂綸鎂 (グイ・ルンメイ) (Actor) | 劉家輝(リュー・チャーフィー) (Actor) | 陳坤(チェン・クン) (Actor) | Du Yi Heng (Actor) | 張馨予(チャン・シンユー) (Actor) | Wang Shuang Bao (Actor) | Wu Di (Actor) | 李宇春 (クリス・リー) (Actor) | Sun Jian Kui (Actor) | Sheng Jian (Actor) 이연걸 (Actor) | Zhou Xun (Actor) | Mavis Fan (Actor) | 번소황 (Actor) | Gwei Lun Mei (Actor) | Gordon Liu (Actor) | Chen Kun (Actor) | Du Yi Heng (Actor) | Zhang Xin Yu (Actor) | Wang Shuang Bao (Actor) | Wu Di (Actor) | Chris Lee (Actor) | Sun Jian Kui (Actor) | Sheng Jian (Actor)
Director: Tsui Hark 徐 克 徐 克 徐克(ツイ・ハーク) 서극
Action Director: Yuen Chaam 元彬 元彬 Yuen Chaam Yuen Chaam
Producer: Tsui Hark 徐 克 徐 克 徐克(ツイ・ハーク) 서극
Blu-ray Region Code: A - Americas (North, Central and South except French Guiana), Korea, Japan, South East Asia (including Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan) What is it?
Release Date: 2012-06-22
Language: Cantonese, Mandarin
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese
Place of Origin: China
Picture Format: [HD] High Definition What is it?
Sound Information: Dolby Digital 5.1, DTS-HD Master Audio
Disc Format(s): 50 GB - Double Layer, Blu-ray
Screen Resolution: 1080p (1920 x 1080 progressive scan)
Rating: IIB
Duration: 122 (mins)
Publisher: Panorama (HK)
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1031079146

Product Information

* Special Features (126 mins):
~Cast & Crew Interviews Plus Behind- The- Scenes
~Making-of
~Making- of Short Version
~Trailers 1 & 2
~Director's Commentary (Picture-in-picture)

Director: Tsui Hark

"Flying Sword of Dragon Gate" picks up three years after the infamous Dragon Inn was burnt down in the desert when its innkeeper JADE vanished. A new gang of marauders had taken over: innkeepers by day, and treasure hunters by night. The inn is the rumored location of a lost city buried under the desert and its hidden treasure would only be revealed by a gigantic storm every sixty years. The gang used the inn as a front to locate the lost treasure.

The storm is arriving. but the situation becomes more complicated when a pregnant concubine who escaped from the palace came to the inn. The concubine was saved by a mysterious woman LING, and the two fled to the Dragon Inn in hiding. Hot on their trail were the Imperial Assassins led by the powerful eunuch YU, followed by the righteous general ZHAO who was determined to take down Yu to restore order in the palace.

*** "The Blu-ray disc contains both the 3D version and the 2D version. To play the 3D version, you need a 3D Blu-ray player and a 3DTV that supports compatible 3D glasses. This Blu-ray disc does not come with any 3D glasses."
Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

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Awards

This film has won 6 award(s) and received 16 award nomination(s). All Award-Winning Asian Films

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Flying Swords of Dragon Gate (2011) (Blu-ray) (2D + 3D) (Hong Kong Version)"

April 30, 2012

This professional review refers to Flying Swords of Dragon Gate (2011) (Blu-ray) (3D) (Hong Kong Version)
Everything old is new yet again in Tsui Hark's Flying Swords of Dragon Gate. A 3D remake-reimagining-sequel to King Hu's 1967 Dragon Inn and Raymond Lee's 1992 New Dragon Inn (which Tsui produced), Flying Swords of Dragon Gate follows Tsui's wildly successful Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame in removing the pretension abundant in 21st century wuxia, ditching the serious tone and grand romanticism that characterized the post-Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon genre landscape. Instead of epic tales of love and betrayal we get fab iconography and copious martial arts action, plus fun characters and loads of Tsui Hark's dizzy, infectious energy. And we get 3D. We mustn't forget the 3D.

Like the previous Dragon Inn films, Flying Swords deals with a fateful meeting at the remote Dragon Gate Inn, a seedy desert location where numerous jiang hu competitors meet for some tense treachery and martial arts mayhem. Previous to the inn action, outlaw warrior Zhao Huai'an (Jet Li) causes problems for the Ming Dynasty by taking out top men in the corrupt West and East Bureaus, two divisions of the government with unchecked power that answer solely to the Emperor. After Zhao takes out West Bureau's Wan Yulou (Gordon Liu), the East Bureau, led by super-powerful eunuch Yu Huatian (Aloys Chen) goes hunting for Zhao, but he nimbly stays out of sight. But there's another Zhao Huai'an out there: a mysterious masked female (Zhou Xun) with formidable martial arts skills using Zhao Huai'an's name to also harass the Ming Dynasty.

The distaff Zhao takes under her wing refugee palace maid Su Huirong (Mavis Fan), who's wanted by Yu Huatian for pissing off Royal Concubine Wan (Zhang Xinyu). Their flight leads them to Dragon Gate Inn, of which the female Zhao has suspicious intimate knowledge. A "Black Inn" that sometimes features human flesh on its menu, the Dragon Gate Inn was rebuilt after being burnt down by its previous owner, who's since disappeared (Note: this means something). Now, the inn plays host to female Zhao and Su Huirong, a group of bandits led by tomboy Gu Shaotang (Li Yuchun) and Yu Huatian-lookalike Wind Blade (Aloys Chen again), the tattooed Princess Buludu (Guey Lun-Mei) and her Mongol warriors, and finally Yu Huatian's men (led by Sheng Chien), who arrive in search of Su Huirong. Lingering nearby is Zhao Huai'an himself, shadowing Yu Huatian in anticipation of whatever jiang hu intrigue is about to go down.

Action buoys Flying Swords greatly, the film relying on wirework, CGI and some well-choreographed sequences of the actors flailing at one another. Like Jet Li and Ching Siu-Tung's CGI orgy Sorcerer and the White Snake, the action here is largely demonstrative, with little full-contact fighting. Instead, fluid posing and some CGI-enhanced weapon battles substitute for the hard stuff. The reliance on visual effects might sound like a turn off, but Tsui handles tech-enhanced action much better than Ching Siu-Tung does; Tsui paces his action with strong beats such that it doesn't get monotonous, and the variety of the weapons used - axes, bows and arrows, swords, throwing daggers, razor-sharp thread - is very entertaining. Fast-cutting and moving camera are toned down from other Tsui efforts, which helps the 3D; Tsui takes care to adjust shot length and composition to make the most of his new 3D toys. The results are terrific. There's plenty to admire in the 3D imagery, and while there are occasional money shots that shove something into your grill, the 3D is used so pervasively and in so many different ways that it seldom seems like a gimmick. Give Tsui Hark a hand - he did his 3D homework.

Production and effects are generally good, though the latter do get video gamey - especially during one sequence where two characters fight while flying around in a sandstorm. The scenes of intrigue in the inn are a bit taxing, requiring audiences to pay attention to faux alliances, real alliances, arch misdirection, double and triple crosses and just plain lying. The scenes are fun as they allow Tsui Hark to stretch his screwball comedy muscles. They're not so fun in that they're largely throwaway. Actually, much of Flying Swords is throwaway, from the generic wuxia plot to the underdeveloped characters to the perfunctory intrigue. The film does offer some interesting moments near the end, where the characters must choose between doing some good or running off with treasure, but there's little emotion in the choices. It's nice that Tsui avoids pretension with Flying Swords, but does the result have to be this disposable? 3D or not, this is a step down from Tsui Hark's best.

But even slightly above-average Tsui Hark is light years better than most other directors' work. Flying Swords has lesser stakes and less imagination than Detective Dee, but it's still good, clean fun. It's got strong visuals, great 3D, smart creativity and that trademark Tsui Hark energy. Despite the lack of gravitas, the story has some effective twists, and the characters are very enjoyable. Jet Li is a bit of a rock, but Zhou Xun is fine as his counterpart, as is Mavis Fan in a surprising turn. Guey Lun-Mei and Aloys Chen are the most fun, however; Guey shows an endearing toughness, while Chen gets to be cute, beautiful and gorgeously cunning in his dual role. He's fabulously evil as bad eunuch Yu Huatian and exceptionally likable as the heroic and somewhat dopey Wind Blade. Some characters have romantic connections, but they're mostly used for minor humor. The main romance between Jet Li and Zhou Xun is unremarkable; unsolicited relationship platitudes plus the actors' lack of chemistry makes it largely forgettable.

Flying Swords of Dragon Gate ends on an abrupt, seemingly throwaway gag - a mystifying choice but not one that's out of character. This is a fun movie and not a serious one, with enjoyment strewn around, in minor moments or even in small snippets of dialogue between characters. It's through the little details that we catch the callbacks to the 1992 Dragon Inn - evidence that maybe this movie is a sequel - and minor moments reveal the female characters as strong, forthright and admirable. Strong women are one of Tsui Hark's old trademarks - and maybe that's what this is all about: the old. Flying Swords shows love of an old genre, but it's not about that genre. This is not a postmodern film, and apes old tropes and old styles without trying to sell to us on how great all that old stuff was. This is just an old movie transplanted to today's digital age, with the familiar score, Byzantine plot and finely-executed action sequences brought forward in three dimensions. Movies like this aren't cheap to make anymore, so we won't see a flood of them like back in the early 1990s. But if Tsui Hark is in the director's chair, the money will be well spent.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com

Editor's Pick of "Flying Swords of Dragon Gate (2011) (Blu-ray) (2D + 3D) (Hong Kong Version)"

Picked By Rockman
See all this editor's picks


July 17, 2012

A 3D film worth watching in 3D
We are so flooded by 3D films today that it's hard to differentiate which 3D films are truly worth watching in the format. Ultimately, the best way to decide that is to do some research and see if the 3D effects were created in post-production or if it was shot with 3D in mind. Tsui Hark's Flying Swords of Dragon Gate is one of the latter. To shoot his first 3D period action film, Tsui Hark recruited Avatar's 3D effects man Chuck Comisky and shot another feature film as a test for the making of this film. The resulting product is not just a technical success, but also a thoroughly enjoyable wuxia film that compensates storytelling shortfalls with escapist fun.

Made as a "sister piece" to 1992's New Dragon Gate Inn, Flying Swords once again brings heroes and villains from the wuxia world to an isolated desert inn for a spectacular battle between good and evil. Tsui seems to have learned a valuable lesson from the success of Detective Dee, once again bringing escapism and fun into his films after a decade of works that featured frantic and sometimes incoherent filmmaking that emphasized form over content. With Dee and Flying Swords, Tsui managed to regain a balance of the two, creating entertaining commercial films told with a just-right dose of technical flair.

Tsui also has his star-studded cast to thank for this time. While Jet Li and Zhou Xun play things straight as the story's action heroes, Flying Swords features scene-stealing turns from Aloys Chen (who plays dual roles), Guey Lun Mei (playing a tribal leader), and Chris Lee (as a tough woman warrior). The interactions between the various factions of warriors make up much of the fun in the film.

Though Flying Swords is visually rewarding enough even without the 3D, it is the rare film that is worth watching in the multi-dimensional format. Tsui not only frames many shots to play up the 3D effect (the opening scene tells you immediately that Tsui knows what he's doing), he also slows down the pace of the editing to give the eyes the necessary time to adjust to the effects. As opposed to being a work by a director who is forced to play along with the 3D trend and let his special effects team do the work, Flying Swords is by a filmmaker making a real effort to further his craft by adopting a new technology.

Even though two different editions of Flying Swords have already been released on Blu-ray, this new Blu-ray version is truly the version to get. In addition to including both the 2D and the 3D versions of the film, Tsui has made adjustments to the print in this version, slightly changing the color scheme and opening up the top and bottom of the frame to reflect the aspect ratio of the IMAX 3D version.

Even more rewarding for fans of the film is an English subtitled picture-in-picture audio commentary by Tsui Hark and action choreographer Yuen Bun. In addition to offering amusing anecdotes about the shoot, the two also share their thoughts about the actors in the film and reveal that no amount of money can make working on a Tsui Hark movie set any easier. Even without the ability to watch the 3D version, getting the improved print and the commentary should be enough reason for anyone to double dip on this Blu-ray.

Feature articles that mention "Flying Swords of Dragon Gate (2011) (Blu-ray) (2D + 3D) (Hong Kong Version)"

This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

Customer Review of "Flying Swords of Dragon Gate (2011) (Blu-ray) (2D + 3D) (Hong Kong Version)"

Average Customer Rating for All Editions of this Product: Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10 (1)

Adrian
See all my reviews


April 24, 2012

This customer review refers to Flying Swords of Dragon Gate (2011) (Blu-ray) (Single Disc Edition) (Hong Kong Version)
2 people found this review helpful

Fun Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
This is a fun film thats worth seeing. The plot wanders around a bit and some of the effects are certainly not special but i have seen far worse. Picture quality on this 2d blu ray is very good indeed. Audio was average but i felt they could have made better use of the surrounds with some well placed effects. There were plenty of flying swords so i would have expected a much better 360 degree sound stage. Default soundtrack was the cantonese soundtrack but i suspect it should have been the mandarin one. Not an essential purchase, but a worthwhile one.
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