Ashes of Time

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Ashes of Time
Directed by Wong Kar-wai
Produced by Tsai Sung-lin
Written by Wong Kar-wai
Starring Leslie Cheung
Brigitte Lin
Maggie Cheung
Tony Leung Chiu Wai
Tony Leung Ka Fai
Jacky Cheung
Distributed by HKFM
Release date(s) 1994
Running time 100 min
Language Mandarin
Budget HKD 40,000,000 (estimated)
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Ashes of Time (Traditional Chinese: 東邪西毒; Simplified Chinese: 东邪西毒; pinyin: Dōngxié Xīdú, literally "The Heretic East and the Venomous West") is a 1994 wuxia film directed by Wong Kar-wai, based very loosely on four characters from the Louis Cha novel The Legend of the Condor Heroes.

Wong completely eschews any plot adaptation from Cha's novel, using only the names to create his own vision of an arguably unrelated movie.

Although it received limited box office success, the parallels Ashes of Time draws between modern ideas of dystopia imposed on a wuxia film has led many critics to cite it as one of Wong Kar-wai's most underappreciated works.

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

In this film, set in ancient times in China, Leslie Cheung plays an agent, Ouyang Feng, hiring famous bounty-hunters. His character is portrayed as a fallen swordsman driven by greed and heartless to both friend and foe. He was perpetually being spiteful of love as his own love history was not nearly so beautiful. His bounty-hunters came and went as was narrated by Ouyang Feng himself as based on the Tung Shu predictions.

In essence, he was a loner with little love, but the bounty hunters that worked for Ouyang Feng, like 'Blind Swordsman' (Tony Leung Chiu Wai) and another of his best fighters, Hung Chi (Jacky Cheung), discovered the intangible secret of true love while Ouyang retained his attitude towards his fighters and the precious lessons that they have taught. However, the thread that runs through the entire narrative has clearly the spirit of refusal in the sense that one should reject another before he gets to be rejected in the future. To illustrate, nearly every character in this story has resorted to being selfish and malignant in order to prevent being rejected by others, be it in love or in comradeship as their individual hardships have moulded their attitude turning them into heartless and cold individuals in order to survive in the uncompromising desert where the story is set.

It has many moral implications but is less evident since the main character is Ouyang himself and most of the narration would unquestionably be centred on him.

When the film opened in Hong Kong it received a mixed review. Critics found it so elliptical it was almost impossible to make out semblance of a plot, something very unlikely in a wuxia movie.

In the New York Times, Lawrence van Gelder gave Ashes of Time a somewhat mixed review:

"For those who seek metaphors, Ashes of Time... presents the eye as well as the illusions of vision. One character is nearly blind. Another, a swordsman, goes blind in the middle of a horrendous battle. Two characters, Yin and Yang -- one presented as a man, the other as his sister -- are identical. And there is a brief appearance by a legendary sword fighter who hones his skills against his own reflection. For those who seek battle, Ashes of Time offers intermittent blurs of action, streaks of flying figures, flashing steel, and rare spatters and gouts of moist crimson, all washing across the screen like hurried brush paintings. Like the attainment of wisdom, Ashes of Time requires a long journey through testing terrain."[1]

  • 1995 Hong Kong Film Awards
    • Won: Best Art Direction (William Chang)
    • Won: Best Cinematography (Christopher Doyle)
    • Won: Best Costume and Make-up Design (William Chang)
    • Nominated: Best Picture
    • Nominated: Best Director (Wong Kar-wai)
    • Nominated: Best Action Choreography (Sammo Hung)
    • Nominated: Best Film Editing (Patrick Tam, Kai Kit-Wai)
    • Nominated: Best Original Score (Frankie Chan)
    • Nominated: Best Screenplay (Wong Kar-wai)
  • 1997 Fant-Asia Film Festival
    • Won: Best Asian Film - Third Place

Ashes of Time grossed HK $9,023,583 during its Hong Kong run. The tally was a huge disappointment considering the film's big budget (roughly HK $40 million).

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