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Shanghai Triad
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Directed by Zhang Yimou
Country boy Shuisheng (Wang Xiaoxiao) is brought to 1930s Shanghai by his uncle who wants the boy to become a member of the powerful gang ruled by manipulative Tang (Li Baotian). In fact, Shuisheng will serve Tang's capricious mistress Bijou (Gong Li), a nightclub singer whom the boss proclaimed "the Queen of Shanghai." When the boy's uncle and the gang's several other members die during a rival gang's unsuccessful attempt on Tang's life, the latter retreats to a remote small island, taking both Bijou and Shuisheng with him and thinking of revenge. The film's English-language title is a little bit deceiving (the original Chinese title translates to "Row, Row, Row to Grandmother's Bridge," a line in Tang's favorite song performed by Bijou), as this drama centers more on the boy's coming of age and Bijou's disillusionment than on Shanghai gang wars. The film is slow-paced and sometimes lacks a narrative drive, but Zhang Yimou's images are striking as ever and Gong Li's beauty shines throughout. ~ Yuri German, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Zhang Yimou's final film with actress Gong Li is a lushly photographed evocation of the wide-open Shanghai of the 1930s, but remains gauzily incoherent. Narrated by a rustic 14-year old boy (Wang Xiao Xiao) who has been hired as a servant for the beautiful, vixenish chanteuse/gangster's moll played by Li, the film follows her glittering underworld life as she comes to realize the limits of her freedom. Unfortunately, neither her story nor the film's other thread about the gang wars of the time are very clear since we see everything from the boy's rather fragmentary perspective. Yimou seems to intend Li's seeming embrace of a more rural life at the film's conclusion as a kind of spiritual reawakening, but after knowing the cruelty of which she's capable, this sudden transformation is less than persuasive. As usual, Zhang Yimou's gorgeous camerawork has made this seedy milieu more hypnotically beautiful that it ever could have been, and the presence of the stunning Li doesn't hurt. ~ Michael Costello, All Movie Guide
 

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