Laughing in the Wind
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7 new or used available from CDN$ 38.99
Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #45518 in DVD
- Released on: 2005-10-25
- Rating: Unrated
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Formats: Full Screen, Subtitled, NTSC
- Original language: Cantonese Chinese
- Subtitled in: English
- Dimensions: .35 pounds
- Running time: 120 minutes
Editorial Reviews
From Amazon.com
Every 15 minutes there's a flabbergasting sword fight. All the warriors can fly over, or dismember, their opponents with a flick of the wrist. (The action was staged by Ching Siu-tung, the director of A Chinese Ghost Story.) Eyeballs are extracted, wrists snap, heads explode. The caffeine-rush editing style and its tendency to scream and throw things (usually right at our heads) is almost alienating; it distracts us from a story line that would be difficult to parse even at normal speeds. A scroll known as the Sacred Volume, offering the secret to a powerful martial arts technique, has been filched from the imperial library in Beijing, and the snippy eunuchs assigned to guard it are waxing wroth. An amiable wandering swashbuckler known as Fox, Ling Hu-ching (Sam Hui), from the Wah Mountain School of Swordsmen, gets tagged with the hopeless assignment of retrieving the lost scroll. Wu Ma and Lin Zheng-ying, as noble old martial artists, sing a song together and then die staunchly. Various other factions of fighters, including the glorious women of the rebel Sun and Moon Society of broad-hatted "Highlanders" (who make their living smuggling salt) also express an interest in the scroll--and their principle modes of expression are all fiercely martial. Adapted from the novel The Laughing Swordsman, by Louis Cha (a.k.a. Jin Yong), the H. Rider Haggard of Asia. Cha's story about the character's youth, Fox Volant of the Snowy Mountain, is available in English. --David Chute
On the DVD
10 Episode dual DVD collector's edition set: volume 1 of four volumes
Feature film trailer
Color collectible photo booklet insert
All about Wuxia
About the author: Jin Yong
DVD Menu
- Disc #1 -- Laughing in the Wind
- Episode 1
- Play
- Scene Selection
- Episode 2
- Play
- Scene Selection
- Episode 3
- Play
- Scene Selection
- Episode 4
- Play
- Scene Selection
- Episode 5
- Play
- Scene Selection
- Special Features
- Plot Synopsis
- Release Notes
- Trailer
- About the Author
- About the Director
- Actors Information
- About "Wuxia"
- Closing Credits
- Episode 1
- Disc #2 -- Laughing in the Wind
- Episode 6
- Play
- Scene Selection
- Episode 7
- Play
- Scene Selection
- Episode 8
- Play
- Scene Selection
- Episode 9
- Play
- Scene Selection
- Episode 10
- Play
- Scene Selection
- Episode 6
Customer Reviews
Disapointed...
I had very high expectations from this movie. First its the reason why I signed up to amazon, couldnt find Swordsman I anywhere after falling in love with Swordsman II. Plus Iv'read all the feedback in here and people are saying things like "action every 15 minutes" hmmm... maybe quantity is good, but quality is much better. Anyway, not enough swordsfight, and when one happens its too short.
Like another viewer says, this movie helps u understand SwordsmanII better, might be the only valuable reason to see it.. and i miss jet Li :(
Why all the negative opinions?
For some reason, this movie has always seemed to polarize opinion (when people could actually find a copy-- it's been notoriously hard to find until now). People either love it or hate it. After recently viewing the DVD, I'm leaning toward the former camp.
The plot revolves around various parties attempting to recover a scroll that contains a powerful martial arts technique. It's as simple as that, really, and the complexity of the plot stems from the fact that there isn't always a clear line between the good guys and the bad guys-- with the exception of the aptly-named "Laughing Swordsman," the central character of a series of novels upon which this film was based. And I always considered depth of character to be a GOOD thing in a movie.
All told, there really isn't a lot to distinguish this from a typical (typically solid, that is) Hong Kong actioner. However, the notable feature is that it involved no fewer than four directors. Getting top billing is the legendary King Hu, although the better-known Tsui Hark has made an obvious mark. While too many cooks usually spell disaster for a movie, this feels like a genuinely cooperative effort. Hu's eye for atmosphere, color and photography is apparent, while Hark keeps the action sequences looking dynamic and tense. It adds up, amazingly, to an admirable directorial job.
Another asset of the film is its willingness to be dark. Some of the most memorable Hong Kong films feature villains that are really worthy of the viewer's hatred (The Heroic Trio, for one), and there are some vicious scenes in this film. To me, that added to the overall effect.
No, it's not a slapdash story. No, it isn't the mess it could have been, and no, it isn't non-stop wirework and fake action. Swordsman might not earn itself a place as a genuine classic of Hong Kong cinema, but it's a strong effort that's well worth a look-- not only for its historical pairing of several famous directors (let's not forget Ching Siu Tung), but because it's genuinely entertaining.
One of the best adventure/fantasy films ever made.
Swordsman has to be the most under-rated film in the history of modern-day cinema. It is arguably superior to Swordsman 2 and it's beyond me why this film isn't hyped up more than it is.
