RogerEbert.com by Simon Abrams
The corridors of power are narrow and spider-vein-thin in Full River Red but still well-traveled and precisely navigated by Zhang and his well-synchronized collaborators.
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Director
Zhang Yimou
Cast
Shen Teng,
Jackson Yee,
Zhang Yi,
Lei Jiayin,
Yunpeng Yue,
Guo Jingfei
Genre
Comedy,
Drama,
Mystery
During the Shaoxing period of the Song Dynasty, traitorous minister Qin Hui leads an army to the border for talks with a Jurchen mission. On the eve of the meeting, the envoy dies, and, by chance, a small soldier becomes involved with the conspiracy and must discover the truth.
RogerEbert.com by Simon Abrams
The corridors of power are narrow and spider-vein-thin in Full River Red but still well-traveled and precisely navigated by Zhang and his well-synchronized collaborators.
Screen Daily by John Berra
Its blend of styles and sensibilities may be occasionally confounding, but Full River Red is certainly never less than entertaining in its richly inventive mining of history.
The Film Stage by Jared Mobarak
For every person who finds the tone a welcome inclusion that helps make this two-and-a-half-hour mystery feel a whole lot breezier than you expect, there’s bound to be another who cannot separate what appears to be surface distraction from a highly convoluted tapestry of convenient twists and turns. Most will surely fall in the middle––like me.
Movie Nation by Roger Moore
Longtime fans of one of China’s greatest living filmmakers won’t want to miss this one. It isn’t every day that Zhang Yimou jokes around. You’ll want to be there for every bloody punchline.
Variety by Richard Kuipers
With a twist-packed plot to match its labyrinthine location, Zhang’s fast-paced film motors along nicely as an engaging “Knives Out”-style whodunnit before stumbling a little in the protracted final act.
Los Angeles Times by Justin Chang
Zhang’s own authorial touch is unmistakable in the mazelike palace intrigues, the phalanxes of armed soldiers and the ferocious bursts of action, plus the climactic nationalist overtones of a story that pits the will of several individuals against the fate of an empire.
The New York Times by Brandon Yu
At times, particularly in its overwrought closing act, the film feels as if it’s going to collapse under the weight of its relentless, convoluted twists. But the lighthearted tone poking through keeps it afloat, and suspends the viewer in mostly carefree entertainment for its two-and-a-half-hour running time.
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