| Index | 6 reviews in total |
3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
One of my favorite films ever, 20 February 2005
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Author:
Peter (fineanimal) from San Diego, California
I saw this film on VHS in the early 1990's, and it made a big
impression on me in three ways: appreciation of cultural differences
between East and West, appreciation of martial arts, and the lingering
sadness that political stupidity could prevent two average people who
loved each other from being together. Although I only saw the film once
back then, I regarded it as one of the best films I'd ever seen because
it made such a lasting impression. It even taught me to say "How are
you?" and "Thank you" in Chinese, which remain the only Chinese
language I know to this day! So I waited with patience of a martial
arts master for it to become available on DVD. Finally, in 2005, I was
rewarded with the DVD release, and it was every bit as good as I'd
remembered.
As others have mentioned, it is not a flashy Hollywood-type film.
Almost the entire movie seems to be filmed through a thin fog that
emphasizes this was filmed on location in China (and that's a good
thing). Only a full-screen version seemed to be available, yet I don't
feel like anything was lost. Even the spectacular martial arts training
scenes fit well withing the frame. Watching those Chinese children
perform with the skill of seasoned veterans is awe-inspiring, and
humbling.
This is one of my favorite movies of all time, and I couldn't be
happier to own it on DVD. It's a shame there are no special features to
tell more about how the film was made, what was real and what was
fiction, etc. Even so, I can't recommend this film strongly enough.
10/10.
simple surface, complex currents, 20 May 2010
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Author:
Edward Reid from Tallahassee, FL, US
Deceptively simple on the surface, Iron and Silk is complex beneath,
with clashes and harmonies between East and West, old and new, open and
closed, never pitting one against the other but exploring the
interlocking elements. The plot isn't much; the joy is in the interplay
of currents. This is a beautiful movie.
It's worth pointing out that IMDb's vote weighting hurts Iron and Silk
badly. With only 310 votes as I write, apparently IMDb doesn't believe
that so many people vote it a ten, or perhaps they discount bimodal
vote distributions. IMDb's 6.4 is about what you get if you throw out
all the tens! If you're into kinds of averages, the mode is 10, the
median is 9, and the mean is 8.1. Those represent the movie better than
IMDb's weighted 6.4.
A True Kung-Fu Story, 2 August 2003
Author:
youneedsome from Houston, TX
This is a film about a young man who finds himself visiting China just after China was opened to the west. Mark Salzman plays himself in this autobiographical film about his cross-cultural adventure overseas. 'Teacher Mark' teaches English and wants to study kung-fu under Master Pan, a kung-fu legend even in America, who was immortalized in movies. Master Pan's reluctance to teach him kung-fu drives him even more and the friendship that develops between them provides substance for this movie. A love interest surfaces and together all of these elements don't really add up to a blockbuster but you will find is a story with a lot of heart. The acting is substandard but any kung-fu fan or film enthusiast will appreciate what the movie offers. Don't expect a slick production or big time special effects and you should have fun with this movie about the fulfillment of a dream and one young man's uncommon achievement.
Unique and fascinating biography, 6 September 2000
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Author:
Kevin Barrett (linkspro1@gmail.com) from Massachusetts
Mark Salzman stars in the movie adaptation of his autobiographical tale
of a young college graduate visiting China for the first time. Although
packaged as fiction based on Salzman's true story, the honesty and
modesty of the film's style give a documentary-like feel. Salzman's
humble charisma prompts one to forgive and perhaps forget the lack of
typical Hollywood gloss. The only professionals in major roles are
Jeannette Lin Tsui as Teacher Hei, and the beautiful Vivian Wu as
love-interest Ming. My sole disappointment with this film was its
brevity.
9/10
insightful, honest, true, 13 October 1999
Author:
Chris Ko (greenvegetable@hotmail.com) from Richmond, Virginia
This movie was one of the best that I have see in a long time. Provides excellent insight into Chinese culture and life. The main character, Mark, provides exceptional acting and teaching Pan is most definetaly a role model to look up to. Chinese accents just make it more believable. Oscar-worthy material. If you have to see one film, see this one, it won't let you down!
1 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Realism and thoughtfulness, 16 February 2001
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Author:
Chris Moran (tsnake) from United States
One of my best friends introduced this book to me around 1988 or so. I
read
it and loved it...
1990 came and I was in NY going to college when this premiered in NYC. I
couldn't make it to the city to see it and I was sorely
saddened.
Eventually I did get a chance to see it in a more "artsy" theater and was
happy to go. It's NOT a flashy high production value movie, but still the
filming was as good as I'd expect, or even demand for this
film.
My original interest in the topic had more to do with the kung fu aspect
of
it, and for that you won't be let down, unless you NEED flash. There
aren't
fight scenes beyond the typical training and sparring, all of which are
impressive and real. Seeing the young boy in the training hall execute
such
awe inspiring techniques and Master Pan being a hard-ass was
excellent.
The love interest theme was a draw too. My memory of the book (sitting on
my
shelf at home unread for a loooong time) is thin, so I don't recall how
deep
it went.
It was short, but I like long movies.
I also bought the VHS of this movie.
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