Your Company
 

Dragon(武俠)

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Hong Kong, China · 2011
Rated R · 1h 55m
Director Peter Chan
Starring Donnie Yen, Takeshi Kaneshiro, Tang Wei, Jimmy Wang Yu
Genre Action, Drama, Thriller

A martial arts expert has left his dark past behind him to start over in a small village with his wife and kids. But his tranquil new life is interrupted when he saves a shopkeeper from violent robbers, catching the attention of his former master and a local detective.

Stream Dragon

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

67

The A.V. Club by

Yen's strengths have never been in his expressiveness, and Dragon plods when it centers on dramatic struggles, then leaps exhilaratingly to life whenever the fighting begins.

50

The New York Times by A.O. Scott

As a whole, it does not quite work, especially at the end, when Mr. Chan tries for a Shakespearean climax of filial rebellion and paternal rage. But at its less grandiose moments, the combination of expressive acting and kinetic action pays off in ways that are likely to satisfy both novices and adepts in martial-arts fandom.

75

New York Post by Farran Smith Nehme

It's never dull though, and the familiar characters and stock motivations are convincingly put across. And there's always Xu, who's turned to acupuncture to suppress his empathy, as you wait for the inevitable moment when suppressing it won't be enough.

40

New York Daily News by Joe Neumaier

Yen, who also choreographed the fights, is a natural hero, and the large canvas and pseudo-superhero tactics work for a bit, but then the action gets sidetracked in place of myth-building.

70

NPR by Mark Jenkins

Dragon is partly an homage to "One Armed Swordsman," a 1967 kung fu classic whose star, Jimmy Wang Yu, plays the new movie's arch-villain. But there's much Western influence: Jinxi's plight recalls David Cronenberg's "A History of Violence," and Baijiu's cerebral and flashy style of detection - complete with animated glimpses of victims' innards - suggests Guy Ritchie's Sherlock Holmes series. Dragon is also one of several recent Chinese crime movies that borrow from CSI-style TV dramas.

80

Time by Mary Pols

When a mild-mannered peasant unsheathes the powers he has long kept hidden, the results can be spectacular. The same can be said for Peter Chan Ho-sun's Dragon, a martial-arts morality play as lithe as it is forceful.

80

Village Voice by Nick Pinkerton

The roaring popular success of Peter Chan's Wu xia in China - renamed Dragon for export - is no mystery: It's an adept genre exercise with rare primal depths.

Users who liked this film also liked