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East Is Red: Swordsman 3 [DVD] [1992] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC]


Region 1 encoding. (This DVD will not play on most DVD players sold in the UK [Region 2]. This item requires a region specific or multi-region DVD player and compatible TV. More about DVD formats)
Note: you may purchase only one copy of this product. New Region 1 DVDs are dispatched from the USA or Canada and you may be required to pay import duties and taxes on them (click here for details) Please expect a delivery time of 5-7 days.
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Amazon.com: HASH(0x92de9870) out of 5 stars 12 reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x92be88d0) out of 5 stars Brigitte Lin shines in delirious Hong Kong wire fu classic 28 Jan. 2005
By Brian Camp - Published on Amazon.com
Format: DVD
THE EAST IS RED (1993), a sequel to SWORDSMAN II (1992), is the crowning achievement in the long career of Taiwan-born Hong Kong cinema diva Brigitte Lin (who retired a year later). She is at her highest-flying, gravity-defying best here as Asia the Invincible, a kung fu master who'd obtained the powers of the Sacred Scroll and changed from a man into a woman as a result. Here, four months after her "death" in Part II, she comes back on the scene with the help of a Chinese court officer monitoring transgressions by Spanish and Japanese warships, and seeks to root out the cults that have sprouted in her name and destroy the fake Asia the Invincibles who have emerged to run these cults. One of the fakes is Snow (Joey Wang), who'd been Asia's lover when she'd been a man and who, we find, still loves the transformed Asia. Officer Koo (Yu Rongguang), watching these two beautiful women from the sidelines, gets mighty frustrated.

The film is shot through with the kind of grace and beauty that we only got in Hong Kong costume adventures. Every shot is gorgeous, every cut is perfect, every effect is breathtaking. The more fantastic the action, the more we suspend our disbelief, thanks to the ingenious staging and precision cutting. Characters never walk or take a boat when they can fly or run at high speed along the surface of the water. Characters rip the sails off ships and use them to fly through the air. Cannons are lifted as if they were rifles and ships are pushed back and forth by hand. Underneath it all is a deeply bitter romantic undercurrent. Never have I seen love, despair and rage so intertwined. Raw emotions propel the action and give a dreamy, delirious quality to the proceedings. Never has there been a Hong Kong film quite like this one and never will there be another one.

It wouldn't hurt to see SWORDSMAN II first, although it's not absolutely necessary. (SWORDSMAN I, from 1990, has very little, if any, connection, to the two sequels.) This upgraded DVD release offers 16:9 anamorphic enhancement and is far superior in quality to the earlier edition.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x92be3828) out of 5 stars A must have for Brigitte Lin fans 4 Sept. 2001
By Dwayne Hicks - Published on Amazon.com
Format: DVD
This film is great simply for the fact that is alomst centers completely on Brigitte Lin's character. She lights up the screen as Asia, the Invincible. This film is interesting because there is no clear good guy/bad guy. The three main characters are really neither good or bad. Like so many people in real life. The plot starts out wonderfully with Asia in hiding, then setting out to rid the world of her imposters, then about three quarters into the movie the storyline heads downhill. The ending is a disapointing way to end a great trilogy. There are two elements that subtract from the overall movie. One element is the terrible subtitles. The other element is the weak ending which I mentioned earlier. This film is a must have for any Brigitte Lin fans (and everyone should be). The cinematography is excelent, some of the scenes in this movie will be embeded in my mind forever. In regards to the Swordsman trilogy, I liked the first the least simply because of the lack of star power. Jet Li an Brigitte Lin led Swordsman 2. The East is Red is led by Brigitte Lin and there is no question whose movie it is.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x934b9d08) out of 5 stars Dripping with politics... 17 May 2001
By M. Armstrong - Published on Amazon.com
Format: DVD
Dragon Inn is soaked with political subtext, but manages to wind up a fantastic Kung-Fu epic... The East Is Red is much the same thing with regard to the politics, but the movie suffers for it. Unless you really want to watch a bad kung-fu epic that serves as a metaphor for the handover of China, then I'd suggest staying away from this pitiful film. Swordsman 1 and 2 are far superior and this film is barely a sequel. Just pretend that only 2 Swordsman films were made and that this one was just a bad dream.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x92b8c768) out of 5 stars Nowhere near as good as Swordsman 2 15 Nov. 2000
By Amazon Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format: DVD
In this movie, Yu Rong Gang takes over for Jet Li, and a trained monkey seems to have taken control of script writing. (Or perhaps it was just a wild monkey; the writing is really that bad.)

What plot there is centers on how Invincible Asia/East Shall Not Fail is trying to return to power, which is quite a trick given the ending of Swordsman 2. Not having read Jin Yong's work, I can't be certain, but I believe that Swordsman 2 completed the plot of the original novel the series is based on, and that this movie is simply an ill-conceived attempt to milk a successful franchise.

Swordsman 2 had a slightly weak plot with amazing visuals. This film probably had a script, but saying it had a plot might be a bit too charitable. The visuals are very derivative, and certainly not enough to hold anyone's interest by themselves.

I give it two stars because it might be worth cutting some scenes out to make a night club music video, and I admire Brigitte Lin's ability to play her part with a straight face. Well, to be honest, I just admire Brigitte Lin in general, and have trouble rating anything she starred in less than 2 stars.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x93c688d0) out of 5 stars good action, fun flick 12 Feb. 2001
By SL - Published on Amazon.com
Format: DVD
Kung fu master Ku misguidedly leads Spanish soldiers to the grave of Asia the Invincible (brilliantly overplayed by Brigitte Lin) to seize some Secret Scrolls -- a source of untold power. Well, apparently she's alive, and easily dispatches both the Spanish and a small army of ninjas (whose galleon converts into a submarine), before escaping on the back of a marlin. She now embarks upon a mission to destroy the numerous false pretenders to her title, ripping hearts and bodies asunder with her flying kung fu needles! With insane action sequences and hopelessly botched subtitles, it's hard to tell whether this was intended as a camp masterpiece, a genre parody, or what. - SP
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