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Xie Tian Movies

1996  
R  
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Chen Kaige, the director of the international smash Farewell My Concubine, reunited that film's stars, Gong Li and Leslie Cheung, for this complexly layered, visually spectacular historical epic. Opening in 1911, shortly before the collapse of the Imperial government, Temptress Moon follows the wealthy and powerful Pang Family, whose patriarch is hopelessly addicted to opium, which he calls "the source of all inspiration." Zhengda (Zhou Yemang), Old Master Pang's oldest son, has married a woman named Xiuyi (He Saifei), and her younger brother Zhongliang is brought to live with the Pangs, where he earns his keep as a servant. Zhengda shares his father's dependence on opium, and Zhongliang's responsibilities include minding their pipes; Zhengda also forces Zhongliang to kiss Xiuyi in a shadowy incident that suggests an incestuous relationship. In time, Zhongliang grows to adulthood (now played by Leslie Cheung) and flees the Pang estate; he travels to Shanghai, where he becomes a gigolo, seducing women and stealing their valuables. After Old Master Pang dies and Zhengda's addiction to drugs renders him brain damaged, his sister Ruyi (Gong Li), who had been Zhongliang's playmate in childhood, is proclaimed the head of the household. Knowing of his connection to the Pang Family and long-ago friendship with Ruyi, Zhongliang is ordered by his bosses in the Shanghai underworld to return to the Pang estate, where he is to seduce her, gain control of the family's fortune, and then steal it from her. Like Farewell My Concubine, Temptress Moon proved to be controversial in its native China, due to its frank but unsensational depiction of sex and drug use. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Leslie CheungGong Li, (more)
 
1984  
 
Just before the Japanese began bombing Shanghai in 1932 in their war with China, the city was already disintegrating. This story is about a struggling shopkeeper trying to survive as the war and corruption rapidly increase. The Lin family runs a general store in the city, but because they have to pay off city bosses and bear the brunt of high interest rates on bank loans, the once well-off family is constantly teetering on the verge of bankruptcy. Neighborhood merchants are anything but supportive, and the final blow comes when a morally defunct military officer demands Lin's teenage daughter in exchange for "protection" of his shop. The growing family tensions are mirrored by tensions in the city, until it is inevitable that something is going to happen. In the revised Chinese critics' version of this film, Lin uses extortion and intimidation to obtain banned Japanese goods to sell, and to force his competitors out of business. When Lin must eventually leave his store, he takes all his customers' money that was left on deposit with him. Why two different viewpoints on the moral qualities of Mr. Lin? Because this movie was banned in China until 1984 and the Chinese critics had to tow the party line when they reviewed the film. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
Xie Tian