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郁達夫傳奇 (1988)
Cherry Blossoms


Reviewed by: STSH
Date: 10/30/2010
Summary: More muddled waffle from Eddie Fong


Reviewer Score: 3

Reviewed by: mrblue
Date: 03/18/2007

Cherry Blossoms is one of Chow Yun-Fat's lesser-known works, and for good reason. The movie was actually shot in 1985, but wasn't released until 1988 - most likely to capitalize on Chow's mega-stardom after A Better Tomorrow. But not only is he barely in the movie (despite his top billing and dominance of the cover art), the end result simply isn't up to par with most of his other films.

The movie tells the story of Yu Ta Fu, a famous Chinese author who recieved his education in Japan. The film center on these years, as Yu deals with racism from his Japanese classmates, finds himself increasingly alienated from his Chinese "friends", and goes through the pangs of his first love.

Cherry Blossoms certainly has a lot of interesting themes to work with - but it never goes into great detail about any of them, or for the characters themselves. For a film that is supposed to be a biogrpahy, we learn very little about Yu, other than he's a good writer that has issues about masturbation.

Things wouldn't be quite so bad if the movie didn't move at such a glacial pace. The producers tried to liven things up a bit by splicing in some nude scenes (which caused the director, Eddie Fong, to disavow the finished product) but even the inclusion of naughty bits can't save Cherry Blossoms from becoming a yawn-fest long before its' end.

Major Chow Yun-Fat fans might (and I strongly emphasize "might") want to check this out to see one of his earlier roles. But keep in mind that there's a reason most people don't know any Chow films from the period before A Better Tomorrow.

[review from www.hkfilm.net]

Reviewer Score: 4

Reviewed by: mpongpun
Date: 03/09/2003

This film was originally done by Shaw Brothers in 1984, but they later sold it to Golden Harvest in a package deal.