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The Warlords (DVD) (2-Disc Special Edition) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3

Andy Lau (Actor) | Takeshi Kaneshiro (Actor) | Jet Li (Actor) | Xu Jing Lei (Actor)
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Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8.2 out of 10 (4)
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YesAsia Editorial Description

From He's a Woman, She's a Man to Comrades, Almost a Love Story to Perhaps Love, Peter Chan seems to have perfected the formula for commercial filmmaking. Chan is the rare director who connects with both mainstream audiences and arthouse critics, so it's no surprise that his first stab at the big-budget war epic, The Warlords, has become one of Hong Kong's biggest blockbusters of 2007. Superstars Jet Li, Andy Lau, and Takeshi Kaneshiro star in this grand and gritty tale of war, romance, and brotherhood in 19th-century China. Based on Chang Cheh's Blood Brothers, the film features action choreography from Ching Siu Tung (Hero) and impressive, large-scale battle scenes befitting of the big screen. Jet Li gives the most compelling dramatic performance of his career, departing from his previous image to embody a complex, morally torn character. Also starring acclaimed Mainland actress Xu Jinglei (Confession of Pain), The Warlords is one of the greatest cinematic events of 2007, and Hong Kong has answered its call with record box office numbers.

The Warlords is set during the Taiping Rebellion when the Qing Dynasty was brought to its knees by a militant demagogue who attracted hundreds of thousands of disgruntled insurgents to his cause, thrusting the nation into chaotic infighting and warlordism. Emerging from a field of corpses, Qing General Pang (Jet Li) is the only member of his troop to survive a fatal battle with enemy forces. Wandering through the impoverished land, he encounters young outlaw Jiang (Takeshi Kaneshiro) and ends up joining a gang of bandits led by the brash and brazen Zhao (Andy Lau). Realizing that the only way to survive during such times is to join the fight, Pang, Zhao, and Jiang form their own army and offer their services to the Qing. Bounded by their blood oath, the sworn brothers lay down their lives for victory on the battlefield, but their brotherhood is tested by politics, personal ambition, and rivalry for the hand of Zhao's wife (Xu Jinglei).

The First Press Special Edition comes with a 32-page photo booklet and over one hour of special features (making of, The Warlords blog, TV spot). The DVD release also includes the film's Cantonese audio track which never played in theaters.

© 2008 YesAsia.com Ltd. All rights reserved. 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.

Technical Information

Product Title: The Warlords (DVD) (2-Disc Special Edition) (Hong Kong Version) 投名狀 (DVD) (雙碟特別版) (香港版) 投名状 (DVD) (双碟特别版) (香港版) 投名状 (2枚組特別版) (香港版) The Warlords (DVD) (2-Disc Special Edition) (Hong Kong Version)
Artist Name(s): Andy Lau (Actor) | Takeshi Kaneshiro (Actor) | Jet Li (Actor) | Xu Jing Lei (Actor) 劉 德華 (Actor) | 金城武 (Actor) | 李連杰 (Actor) | 徐靜蕾 (Actor) 刘 德华 (Actor) | 金城武 (Actor) | 李连杰 (Actor) | 徐静蕾 (Actor) 劉徳華 (アンディ・ラウ) (Actor) | 金城武 (Actor) | 李連杰(ジェット・リー) (Actor) | 徐静蕾 (シュー・ジンレイ) (Actor) 유덕화 (Actor) | 금성무 (Actor) | 이연걸 (Actor) | Xu Jing Lei (Actor)
Director: Peter Chan 陳可辛 陈可辛 ピーター・チャン Peter Chan
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Release Date: 2008-02-04
Language: Mandarin, Cantonese
Subtitles: Traditional Chinese, English, Simplified Chinese
Country of Origin: Hong Kong
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Aspect Ratio: 1.78 : 1
Widescreen Anamorphic: Yes
Sound Information: DTS-ES 6.1, Dolby Digital EX(TM) / THX Surround EX(TM)
Disc Format(s): DVD-9, DVD
Region Code: 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it?
Rating: IIB
Duration: 127 (mins)
Publisher: Mega Star (HK)
Other Information: 2DVDs
Package Weight: 270 (g)
Shipment Unit: 2 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1005170692

Product Information

* Screen Format: 16:9 Anamorphic Widescreen
* Sound Mix:
- Mandarin: DTS ES 6.1, Dolby Digital EX 5.1
- Cantonese: Dolby Digital EX 5.1
* DVD Type: DVD-9
* Special Features:
- Making Of 製作特輯
- The Warlords' Blog 投名狀部落
- TV Spot 電視廣告
- 117Days: A Production Journal 17天電影筆記

** 獨家收錄從未公映 【粵語版本】
** 32頁豪華橫度相冊

導演︰陳可辛
Director: Chan Ho Sun

1870年秋,大哥 (李連杰 飾演) 一身官服,在城牆頂俯瞰自己的就職典禮舞臺;充滿理想、胸懷壯志的他,如果沒有走上這條不歸路,極可能是推翻腐敗清庭的新中國革命者之一,創大事業名留青史,可惜...

兩個強盜和一個女人改變了他的一生,造就了他的成功,亦導致他最後的毀滅。這兩個強盜是曾跟他矢誓生死與共的結拜兄弟:二哥 (劉德華 飾演) 和三弟 (金城武 飾演),而那個女人正是二哥的妻子蓮生 (徐靜蕾 飾演)。

China in the mid-19th century: the suffering of 430 million Chinese under the corrupt rule of the Qing dynasty set the stage for the Taiping Rebellion. During the chaos of the decade long civil war, 50 million people died in battle or from starvation...

In the autumn of 1870, General Pang (played by Jet Li) stands high atop the city walls attired in official governor's robes. Peering down upon the site of his inauguration, he is filled with ambition and dreams. Pang has taken a path of no return; had he chosen differently, he might have been one of the heroes to later overthrow the corrupt Qing imperial regime and establish a new China. He could have changed the course of history....

But two bandits and a woman are responsible for changing the course of his life - they help him achieven his goals, but will ultimately be the cause of his demise. The two bandits are his sworn blood brothers: Zhao Er-Hu (played by Andy Lau) and Jiang Wu-Yang (played by Takeshi Kaneshiro). The woman who comes between them is Zhao's wife Lian (played by Xu Jingle). A born leader, Zhao Er-Hu is a man of honor. To ensure the survival of his village during the war, he leads a band of marauding bandits. They raid other impoverished villages, but leave theri victims with enough to sustain themselves. Zhao maintains a code of honor, displaying compassion for the poor. Sharing the spoils with his villagers, he has earned their loyalty and respect. The two loves of his life are his wife Lian, and his little brother Jiang Wu-Yang who he adopted when Jiang was orphaned at the age 13.

Jiang Wu-Yang is a charismatic outlaw, a cold-blooded killer filled with romantic idealism. He possesses both the callousness and the innocence of youth. He is like an animal operating on instinct but also values the ties of brotherhood. When Pang risks his life to save him, taking an arrow for him in a battle against the Taiping rebels, Jiang is indebted to Pang and develops an intense attachment. He worships Pang, putting him above all others - even Zhao the brother who adopted him.

After Qing troops pillage Zhao's village, Pang convinces Zhao and his bandits to join the Qing army. Jiang agrees to the proposal under the condition that Pang joins their brotherhood. With the future interests of the village in mind, Zhao also agrees to make Pang his blood brother, and relinquishes his role as leader and "big brother." Pang's initial motive is to end war and restore peace to the land - to do so he must first rise to power. With the help of Zhao, Jiang and their bandits, Pang establishes the Shan Regiment under the Qing army to counter the Taiping Rebels.

As his forces grow more powreful over the years so does his ambition. Corrupted by his hunger for power, Pang soon stops at nothing to eliminate his enemies and achieve his goal, including the massacre of 4,000 prisoners of war who Zhao vowed to protect. As a result, the brotherhood collapses. Zhao severs his ties with Pang while Jiang remains devoted to Pang, and his promise of a better future. But Pang's ruthlessness and his desire for Lian, Inevitably leads him to murder Zhao. Poised to become governor, Pang is about to ascend the platform for his inauguratin, literally just a step away from the seat of power. But his past betrayals, including the murder of his brother Zhao Er-Hu, catch up with him. At his moment of glory, his life ends at the hands of an assassin - his beloved brother Jiang.
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 9 award(s) and received 23 award nomination(s). All Award-Winning Asian Films

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "The Warlords (DVD) (2-Disc Special Edition) (Hong Kong Version)"

May 8, 2008

Hong Kong movies don't get much bigger than The Warlords, and Peter Chan seems to know it. Hong Kong's canniest filmmaker, Chan brings together an impressive cast in Jet Li, Andy Lau, Takeshi Kaneshiro and Xu Jinglei for this period war epic partly based on Chang Cheh's classic Blood Brothers. The three male superstars play Qing-era warriors drawn into the turbulent history of nineteenth-century China. The Taiping Rebellion has plunged the country into chaos, with General Pang Qing-Yun (Jet Li, in a career-changing dramatic performance) emerging as the lone survivor of a particularly nasty conflict between the Jesus-worshipping Taiping and a Qing company under his command. Pang survived in a surprising and decidedly un-Jet Li-like way: he pretended to be dead and hid beneath the bodies of his slain men. His shame and cowardice haunt him, but that evening he finds solace in a chance encounter with the comely Lian (Xu Jinglei). She comforts him through the night, but disappears the following morning, leaving him alone and without direction.

Pang soon meets Jiang Wu-Yang (Takeshi Kaneshiro), a boyish bandit who works for charismatic bandit leader Zhao Er-Hu (Andy Lau). The gang earns their daily keep by stealing from and sometimes murdering soldiers. It's during such a raid that Jiang discovers that Pang can kick ass, making him a welcome addition to the bandit ranks. Pang makes his own discovery: that Lian is actually Zhao's wife, though there is a discontent with that arrangement that gives him hope. Things change when Qing soldiers confront the bandits, shaming them and taking all their spoils. The bandits are now bitter and destitute, but Pang comes up with a nifty idea: why don't the bandits join the army themselves to earn money, food, and maybe even fame? Zhao and Jiang agree, but since Pang is a newcomer to the bandit group, they ask him to take a "blood oath" to insure that he won't betray his new pals. Pang, Jiang, and Zhao each kill a nameless outsider, and swear to each other to defend their brotherhood until death. Soon, the three begin a quick rise to military glory, highlighted by epic battle sequences and some obligatory male bonding. However, given the moral compromises of war, the treachery of politics, and the thorny issue of women, that brotherhood is soon challenged, with a very high price to pay.

Peter Chan normally creates love stories, and The Warlords is basically a love story, too - it's just about the platonic affection between manly men instead of gooshy heterosexual romance. Chan is pretty damn good at handling the latter, as can be seen in his classics Comrades, Almost a Love Story and He's a Woman, She's a Man, but he doesn't bring any of that expert handling to The Warlords. The love triangle between Zhao, Lian, and Pang is treated in a largely perfunctory manner, serving as a primary reason for the ultimate dissolution of the film's central brotherhood between Zhao, Jiang, and Pang. However, the brotherhood seems very perfunctory too. Even though it's the primary theme of the film, the brotherhood seems to exist solely to push the plot along. Sure, they go through the onscreen brotherhood ritual, and there's some horsing around that implies that they like one another, but the characters aren't felt enough to make their ultimate fall more potent. Both Pang and Zhao seem to be loyal primarily to their own personal codes, and Jiang's adherence to the brotherhood plays like zealotry more than anything else. Despite an abundance of meaty war-related drama to chew on, the characters never resonate enough to make the brotherhood work.

The film also doesn't take advantage of its historical context. Chinese audiences won't need a primer on the film's historical and political background, and may find The Warlords to be richer than it overtly seems, but international audiences could probably use a few hints as to what all these conflicts mean. The Taiping Rebellion has much to do with religion and cultural ideology, but those issues are downplayed for themes of brotherhood and war - a disappointing choice considering some of the symbols and motifs that get employed by the screenwriters. Presumably, the concentration on anti-war sentiments and brotherly betrayal makes the film more universal, and there is some effective drama mired in the brothers' opposing ideologies on war and righteousness. However, the missing cultural details reduce the film's depth, rendering it less effective than it could be. There's plenty to comment on in China's tumultuous past, but the film seems to gloss over its subject matter. Ultimately, the film's historical trappings feel less like history and more like just a setting, meaning it's great for big battle sequences and ornate costumes, but not for anything truly more telling.

In many ways, The Warlords feels like Hollywood-style Hong Kong filmmaking, in that it uses scale, CGI, and strong, but expected drama to create a predictable experience. There's emotional complexity in the characters and their conflicts, but it's all rather rote, and possesses little or no surprise. Intermittent voiceover from Takeshi Kaneshiro is used to force-feed lessons and observations, and there isn't much to be gleamed beyond what's put out there on the screen. A total of eight screenwriters (Aubrey Lam and James Yuen, among them) are credited on The Warlords, making the end credits resemble the written-by-committee crawl you might normally see attached to a Hollywood film. This is a large, impressive production, but The Warlords is dwarfed by its own sense of commercialism. It's got big stars, grand production values, overwrought drama, predictable conflicts, and even a China-safe aversion to tougher themes. This is an easily digestible and very impressive-seeming motion picture, but the ability to impress beyond the expected just isn't there.

Does that make The Warlords a bad film? No, not really, and the commercialism at play isn't very surprising, considering Peter Chan is at the helm. Chan's work in the new millennium has been all about tapping into markets beyond the shrinking Hong Kong one, and he's done it in a variety of ways: international casting, smart co-productions, and above all, the creation of a sellable product. Chan has done just that with The Warlords, delivering a product that both Chinese and international audiences will find palatable, and he's seemingly done all the work for the would-be suits wringing their hands over marketability. The Warlords is exceptionally marketable, possessing commercial qualities that make it sellable all over Asia, and also the apparent prestige and cultural uniqueness that make it attractive to the West. Also, the film has Jet Li, who will sell to audiences beyond your art house cinephiles. Basically, The Warlords has everything it needs to be a desirable event film - except, perhaps, that mega-mega happy ending that will make people in Nebraska like this movie too. If they really wanted to sell this thing, couldn't they have put a kid, a dog, and a wacky sidekick in it too?

Well, that would be pushing the commercialism too far, and obviously Peter Chan knows where to draw the line, choosing to deliver a powerful film that still plays it safe. The Warlords is both a victim and a beneficiary of commercialism; it delivers a predictable experience, but also a peerless spectacle that should please mass audiences. Aside from the excellent art direction and cinematography, the film features terrific battle sequences that feature both heady strategy and spectacular, but not too bloody violence. The action from Ching Siu-Tung isn't the high-flying variety, and stays earthbound in a comparatively realistic, but still very exciting manner. There's plenty of solid impact, hacked-off limbs, and melodramatic battlefield drama to excite mass audiences, and the actors hunker down and deliver as much manly weeping and overwrought emoting as they can possibly muster. The Warlords is not subtle, but it's not embarrassing either, and possesses an air of quality and an obvious commercialism that make it a must-see. Peter Chan made The Warlords for as big an audience as possible, and judging by the film's programmed sense of power and initial box-office receipts, he knew what he was doing. Inclined audiences will choose to see The Warlords, regardless of any naysaying. The majority of those people shouldn't be disappointed.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com

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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 "The Warlords (DVD) (2-Disc Special Edition) (Hong Kong Version)"

Average Customer Rating for this Edition: Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7.2 out of 10 (4)

KingX
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April 15, 2008

Almost all the way Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7 out of 10
I guess many fans of Jet Li was a bit afraid that he was going to go all bad on screen when he was ending wushu style onscreen. Well after seeing this movie we all know this is not the case.
So instead of using wushu in the film what does he do? he kicks ass with weapons and regular kicks and fists of course!

This movie feels abit like the answer to saving private ryan, band of brothers and simualr films, only that this is dealing with China and the wars between the provinces back in the days. Instead of massive shootings and bombings this movie has alot of swords, cannons and other stuff to make the battle fields turn red.

All in all this movie is really good. Well scripted and well acted from all actors in the movie.
The only thing that bothers me is that it drops in tempo in the middle of the film and becomes a bit dull and then goes up in tempo again.

Anyhow if you are a fan of big battles with swords, kicks, fists and cannons and an angry jet li in general position look no further, this movie is for you.

I shall also add that this movie is semi graphic and shows a few nasty things here and there, which to me is a good thing as Ive become very tired of Hollywoods "no blood, no swearing, no graphic violence" in films, show some realism or don't bother to show it at all.


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MovieCollector
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February 26, 2008

2 people found the following helpful

Excellent movie Customer Review Rated Bad 10 - 10 out of 10
If you like action and fighting scenes, then this movie is recommended. I thought the fight scene was incredible. Jet Li, Takeshi, and Andy did a great job in this movie. The romance part was not necessary, but I can understand why director wants to put some in every movie. Overall, I highly recommend this movie as it was entertaining.
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fantasy isabelle
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February 4, 2008

1 people found the following helpful

it a great movie Customer Review Rated Bad 7 - 7 out of 10
this is a great movie. anyone who want to watch war movie should get this movie. the story line was great. one thing that i dislike about this movie is the lady, they could have had a better looking lady then the one they had.
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JimJams
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January 17, 2008

2 people found the following helpful

Not as what I had expected! Customer Review Rated Bad 5 - 5 out of 10
This movie was a disappointment. I didn't find the story intriguing I must say. Nothing in the movie had caught my eye. It was sure a let down and it could have been longer and more dynasty set but it didn't even reach that point. Very disappointing I must say and it had left me confused on the story plot because it didn't make any sense at all. Peter Chan should not have been a Director for this because he does not make out that he can create the movie well.
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