The
Emperor and the Assassin Movie Review:
This
is a really big film. It sprawls across the movie screen
as only a big historical epic can, a bit like a luscious
Reuben-esque woman on a couch. To start with, it deals with
story of the first Emperor of China, Ying Zheng (Li Xuejian),
and his obsessive ambition to unite the seven kingdoms under
his rule. Gong Li plays his lover, Lady Zhao, who goes to
rather extreme lengths to put into motion a convoluted plot
to subjugate the Kingdom of Yan. However, Ying Zheng's ruthlessness
shocks even Lady Zhao, and she falls in love with a reluctant
assassin, played by Zhang Fengyi. In the end, Ying Zheng
achieves his ambition, but at high personal cost.
The
vastness of this film almost covers up its flaws - not that
there are many, but the motivation for the characters' actions
are rather obscure and the story is a bit confusing. There
is much here that is alien to a western audience - not necessarily
bad, but it does serve to muddle the story a bit when you
have these other flaws together. But - this is a really
big film. Physically, it is sumptuous - the battle scenes
are spectacular, creating a sense of movement and emotion
that only hundreds of real people in ancient armour (recruits
from the Chinese army) bashing each other, can really create.
The research gone into the costumes, buildings, customs,
etc serves to create a world as unfamiliar and strange as
any sci-fi or fantasy world ever seen on screen.
The
First Emperor looms large over subsequent generations because
of his profound influence on China. He standardised the
Chinese written script, weights, measurements and created
a powerful government over a vast land filled with a myriad
of different cultures, and also built China's most identifiable
monument, the Great Wall. However, he was one of the most
hated rulers in China's history as his neuroticism, paranoia
and ruthlessness, at the very least, put off some people.
Li Xuejian's Ying Zheng here is portrayed as a very human
man who seems inadequate on the surface, but hides the kind
of steel which can order the slaughter of hundreds of children
to force an enemy state to capitulate. Unlike the First
Emperor portrayed in "The Emperor's Shadow", this First
Emperor is perhaps not quite right in the head. Gong Li's
Lady Zhao gives the melodrama
needed
for her role, and though generally excellent, it seems that
sometimes even she wonders what she's doing. Zang Fengyi's
transformation of his character is perhaps one of the more
better performances in this film in terms of character development.
Overall, this is an epic film, hardly disappointing, but
its flaws make it a less than perfect film.
Eden
Law
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