The Bride with White Hair (1993)

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(Bai fa mo nu zhuan)


Country: HK
Technical: col/scope
Director: Ronny Yu
Cast: Brigitte Lin (Lin Chin-hsia), Leslie Cheung (Kwok-wing), Elaine Lui (Siu-ling), Francis Ng (Chun-yu)

Synopsis:

The heir to the eight tribes of Chung Yuan falls in love with a witch, and her enslavement to a pair of necromantic siamese twins leads to disaster for everyone.

Review:

Highly kinetic blend of fantasy and martial arts, all blues and oranges and making a badge of having been shot in the studio. It has a flashback structure, delivers a dozen confusingly named (for the western viewer) characters at lightning speed and displays a characteristic taste for impossibly elaborate physical feats and corporal dismemberment. Its impressive visual effects of combatants flying through the air entered world cinema only with Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon.

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(Bai fa mo nu zhuan)


Country: HK
Technical: col/scope
Director: Ronny Yu
Cast: Brigitte Lin (Lin Chin-hsia), Leslie Cheung (Kwok-wing), Elaine Lui (Siu-ling), Francis Ng (Chun-yu)

Synopsis:

The heir to the eight tribes of Chung Yuan falls in love with a witch, and her enslavement to a pair of necromantic siamese twins leads to disaster for everyone.

Review:

Highly kinetic blend of fantasy and martial arts, all blues and oranges and making a badge of having been shot in the studio. It has a flashback structure, delivers a dozen confusingly named (for the western viewer) characters at lightning speed and displays a characteristic taste for impossibly elaborate physical feats and corporal dismemberment. Its impressive visual effects of combatants flying through the air entered world cinema only with Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon.

(Bai fa mo nu zhuan)


Country: HK
Technical: col/scope
Director: Ronny Yu
Cast: Brigitte Lin (Lin Chin-hsia), Leslie Cheung (Kwok-wing), Elaine Lui (Siu-ling), Francis Ng (Chun-yu)

Synopsis:

The heir to the eight tribes of Chung Yuan falls in love with a witch, and her enslavement to a pair of necromantic siamese twins leads to disaster for everyone.

Review:

Highly kinetic blend of fantasy and martial arts, all blues and oranges and making a badge of having been shot in the studio. It has a flashback structure, delivers a dozen confusingly named (for the western viewer) characters at lightning speed and displays a characteristic taste for impossibly elaborate physical feats and corporal dismemberment. Its impressive visual effects of combatants flying through the air entered world cinema only with Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon.