The Assassin

Shu Qi? Chang Chen? I’m in.

Shu Qi, Chang Chen Join Hou Hsiao-hsien’s Movie ‘Assassin’

Cannes-winning director Hou Hsiao-hsien’s new kung fu movie will be a US$12 million (€8.5 million) production about an ancient Tang dynasty woman who’s adopted and trained by nuns as a political assassin, an investor in the film said Tuesday.

Taiwanese actress Shu Qi will play the female assassin, Huang Hsin-yi, a publicist at SinoMovie, one of the investors in the film “Assassin,” told The Associated Press on Tuesday. Hou has also cast Taiwanese actor Chang Chen, who starred in the Oscar-winning “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,” in an undetermined role and is considering approaching Japanese actor Tadanobu Asano, Huang said.
Shu Qi Chang Chen

Shu Qi, Chang Chen (in black), and director Hou Hsiao-hsien at Cannes

Huang said it wasn’t clear when and where the movie will start shooting. No other details about the film have been released.

The US$12 million budget makes “Assassin” a big production by Chinese standards and marks a departure from the art-house movies set in his native Taiwan that Hou’s known for.

Besides Taiwan’s SinoMovie, Huang said the Taiwan branch of Hollywood studio Fox is also investing in the movie and the Chinese news Web site Sina.com reported Tuesday that Hou is also raising funds at the ongoing Pusan International Film Festival in South Korea.

Hou’s past productions have been explorations of Taiwanese culture. The director has shot movies about a local puppeteer (“The Puppetmaster”), southern Taiwan’s gang culture (“Goodbye South, Goodbye”) and government oppression (“City of Sadness”).

“The Puppetmaster” won the jury prize at the Cannes Film Festival in 1993 and “City of Sadness” won the top Golden Lion prize at the Venice Film Festival in 1989.

Hou’s most recent movie is the French-Taiwanese co-production “The Flight of the Red Balloon,” starring Juliette Binoche. The movie is about a single mother who hires a Taiwanese student to take care of her son.

Hou and Shu are frequent collaborators, working together on “Millennium Mambo” and “Three Times,” which won Shu best actress honors at Taiwan’s Golden Horse Awards, the Chinese-language equivalent of Oscars, in 2005.

“Three Times,” about three love affairs in three different eras, also co-stars Chang Chen.

Director: Hou Hsiao-hsien
Genre: Kung fu
Cast: Shu Qi, Chang Chen
Chinese Title:

sounds like good **** to me

You’re kidding me?

You don’t have some inside scoop on this one, Doug? You always have some inside scoop. Whazzup?! :wink:

I don’t think I’ve seen Hou’s work before. I’m a big fan of Binoche so I’ll keep my eye out for that one. Any picks for this?

gotta go to my sources. but hou is a pretty good director. it’ll be cool if they had szeto kam yuen(exiled,spl,city with no mercy) write it(just thinking out loud.) the story sounds like this anime called hellsing and another old story about assisans trained by preist. if its done right then itll be good i’ll find out more later.

Hmm when I saw Hou’s name in the title along with Shu Qi and Chang Chen, I immediately thought “Hey wait a minute, I just watched a movie by Hou with those 2 in it!” It was the “Three Times” movie that’s listed at the end of the article. I liked the 1st and 3rd part of the story, but the 2nd part, which was set in an ancient era, was a little annoying to sit through as there was no spoken dialogue – the dialogue was all done in frames in between the camera shots on a black background similiar to old silent movies. I suppose it was creative/unique but it seemed too gimicky and was distracting for some reason. Still, it has shades of Wong Kar Wai (I suppose I compare all mellowdramas to him since he’s my favorite director) – all in all, the acting was rather subdued, especially in the 1st sequence and just didn’t resonate with me like a good Wong Kar Wai film. So it was nice to see Shu and Chang on the screen together again, but the film didn’t really win me over and I can’t see ever watching it again. Still, I’m definitely willing to give Hou another chance and this one could be a winner. Definitely gonna want to see it.

yea its weird when watching mellow drama’s now i always think of WKW, lust caution made me think of him alot.

Speaking of Shu Qi

There’s an extremely mediocre pic of Shu Qi if you follow the link. In respect to her, I felt obligated to add this.

Shu Qi, Diane Kruger to Join Berlinale Jury

Hollywood actress Diane Kruger, French star Sandrine Bonnaire, and Chinese actress Shu Qi will join the jury at the Berlin Film Festival next month, on a panel led by Greek-French director Costa-Gavras, organizers said Tuesday.

The jury, which will award the festival’s Golden and Silver Bear top prizes, will also include Russian media executive Alexander Rodniansky and Oscar-winning cutter and sound designer Walter Murch.

Rounding out the list are Danish director Susanne Bier (“Things We Lost in the Fire”) and German production designer Uli Hanisch, Berlinale director Dieter Kosslick told a news conference ahead of the February 7-17 event.

The German-born Kruger (“Troy”) is currently appearing in “National Treasure: Book of Secrets” with Nicolas Cage. She starred as the wife of a South African prison guard in “Goodbye Bafana,” which was in competition at the Berlinale last year.

Cesar award-winner Bonnaire has appeared in films by the biggest names in French cinema including Claude Chabrol, Jacques Rivette and Agnes Varda.

Shu Qi is a veteran of more than 50 Asian films including the 2002 international thriller “The Transporter” and Stanley Kwan’s “Island Tales” in 2000.

Ukrainian-born Rodniansky is a major film and television producer as well as a documentary director in Russia and president of the Moscow media holding CTC.

Murch has worked closely with Hollywood director Francis Ford Coppola for 30 years on films including “Apocalypse Now” and “The Godfather.”

A star of the dynamic Danish cinema scene, Bier got her start in Lars Von Trier’s Dogma school of filmmaking and made a splash worldwide with her 2007 Oscar-nominated drama “After the Wedding.”

Hanisch has picked up German and European accolades for the sets of “Perfume” and “Run Lola Run.”

The festival announced in November that Costa-Gavras would serve as jury president. He made his international breakthrough in 1969 when he won two Oscars, including for best director, for the political thriller “Z.”

He won the Golden Bear prize for best film at the Berlin festival in 1990 for “Music Box,” starring Jessica Lange.

The Berlinale is ranked alongside Venice and just behind Cannes in the ranking of Europe’s top film festivals.

It will kick off with the gala premiere of a Rolling Stones concert film by Martin Scorsese, “Shine A Light.”

rumours that it has run out of money

Hou’s Assassin stops production (again)
By Stephen Cremin
Wed, 31 July 2013, 10:00 AM (HKT)

HOU Hsiao-hsien stopped production mid-shoot on his martial arts film The Assassin last week. The film, which was originally set to finish shooting in April, has been plagued with rumours that it has run out of money.

The film — which has locations in China, Taiwan and Japan — previously stopped on 24 Apr after shooting in studio locations in Taipei City. At the time, Taiwan’s Next Magazine claimed that the budget had run out.

The film’s cinematographer Mark LEE told Mainland media, “There is some pressure in terms of the budget. However, the so-called production halt from before was due to the time it takes to change sets, not because we ran out of money.”

The film most recently stoppage was one week ago, on 24 Jul. Lee told media that no date has been set for production to restart. The cinematographer had canceled work on several forthcoming films to concentrate on Hou’s film to year-end.

Hou’s company originally claimed that actor CHANG Chen had to leave Taiwan to work on Mainland costume drama . The next day, Chang’s publicist denied this, claiming it was Hou who made the decision to halt production.

The film’s main actress, SHU Qi , recently announced on social media platform Weibo that all her scenes have been shot, suggesting that the filming is now in its latter stages of production.

The film project — based on a short story of a female assassin during the Tang Dynasty (618-907 A.D.) who begins to questions her loyalties when she is commanded to kill the man she loves — has a long history.

It was first announced at script-stage 24-years-ago, when it was discussed in an interview with screenwriter CHU Tien-wen within the English-language press book produced for festival screenings of A City of Sadness (1989).

The Taiwan government has announced a series of production subsidies for the film over the past decade, including NT$15 million (US$501,000) in 2005, NT$80 million in 2008 (US$2.67 million) and NT$20m (US$668,000) in 2010.

Hou filmed scenes with Japan’s TSUMABUKI Satoshi in 2010 before its main shoot began in China in Oct 2012. In Sep 2012, at the main press conference (pictured), the budget was announced as RMB90 million (US$14.7 million).
Just show us Shu Qi’s scenes. That might be enough.

Well, now I’m even more interested

A Shu Qi flick at Cannes. Worth it just to see what she wears…:wink:

Hou Hsiao-hsien’s ‘The Assassin’ to compete at Cannes Film Festival
2015/04/16 23:36:27


Cannes Film Festival director Thierry Fremaux and president Pierre Lescure

Paris, April 16 (CNA) Renowned Taiwanese director Hou Hsiao-hsien () will compete at the 68th annual Cannes Film Festival in France with his martial arts film"The Assassin"(), festival officials announced Thursday.

“The Assassin,” a Tang Dynasty martial arts epic starring Taiwan’s Shu Qi () and Chang Chen (), is among the 17 films that will vie for the festival’s highest prize, the Palme d’Or, according to the official selection lineup.

Cannes Film Festival director Thierry Fremaux and president Pierre Lescure unveiled the lineup at a press conference in Paris.

Chinese director Jia Zhangke’s ()“Mountains May Depart”() and Japanese director Hirokazu Kore-eda’s “Our Little Sister” are also among the 17 competition titles.

Hou, 68, is a prominent figure in Taiwan’s “New Wave” cinema movement, which began during the 1980s. The movement is characterized by realistic and sympathetic portrayals of Taiwanese life, in stark contrast with the kung-fu action movies and melodramas of earlier decades.

Hou’s film “A City of Sadness” won the Golden Lion at the 1989 Venice Film Festival, becoming the first Taiwanese film to be awarded the honor. “The Puppetmaster,” featuring puppeteer Li Tian-lu, grabbed the Jury Prize at the 1993 Cannes Film Festival.

Hou is known for his long takes, minimal camera movements, and observant and realistic style of filmmaking.

The Cannes Film Festival will run from May 13-24.

I like the pics that show what she ISN’T wearing…:smiley:

You always gotta go there, doncha s_r?

Here’s the Shu Qi poster. She’s fully clothed. In armor, no less. :stuck_out_tongue:

Shu Qi’s The Assassin film poster released

Hou Hsiao-Hsien‘s The Assassin film poster featuring lead female cast Shu Qi was released. The filming wrapped back in January 2014. Post production has taken over a year now. This is one of my most anticipated films of 2015.

Plot summary: A female assassin during the Tang Dynasty who begins to question her loyalties when she falls in love with one of her targets.

The rest of the cast includes Chang Chen, Satoshi Tsumabuki, and Ethan Ruan. Supposedly it’s going to be similar to Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon with less CGI and special effects that have taken over the recent wuxia or period films. Apparently Shu Qi was one of Ang Lee’s first choices to play the role that eventually went to Zhang Ziyi in CTHD. Ever since learning about that tidbit, I’ve been wanting Shu Qi and Ang Lee to collaborate… maybe one day?

This is going to be all about Shu Qi, isn’t it?

I luv Shu Qi, but she tends to overwhelm the directors. Case and point: Stephan Chow’s Journey to the West: Conquering Demons

Cannes First Look: Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s Long-Awaited Martial Arts Epic ‘The Assassin’
By Ryan Lattanzio | TOH! April 28, 2015 at 4:20PM
Hou Hsiao-Hsien turns to the “wuxia” genre of Chinese martial arts epics for his first film in nearly five years.

Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s China-financed period epic “The Assassin” is finally ready after decades of stop-and-go development and production. His seventh Cannes Competition contender, “The Assassin” has been in the works since 2012 when the Taiwanese cinema figurehead, master of many a meditative long-take, began filming in Taiwan. A departure from his recent dramas including “La Belle Epoque,” this martial arts epic shows Hou painting on a much bigger canvas – and with a budget of around $15 million dollars.

Starring Shu Qi, Chang Chen and Satoshi Tsumabuki, “The Assassin” is set in 9th-century, Tang Dynasty China, where the 10-year-old daughter of a general is abducted by a nun who then transforms the girl into an ass-kicking, martial arts assassin tasked with wiping out corrupt governors. After failing an assignment, she is sent back to her homeland with orders to kill the cousin who now steers the largest military region in North China.

Hou, now 68, works with longtime collaborator and Wong Kar-wai cinematographer Mark Lee, and screenwriter Chu T’ien-wen. “The Assassin” will world-premiere in the Cannes Main Competition this May. (New images below via The Film Stage.)




Nabbed by Well Go.

Cannes: Competition Entry ‘The Assassin’ Nabbed by Well Go for North America


‘The Assassin’
by Tatiana Siegel
5/11/2015 10:02am PDT

Well Go USA Entertainment announced Monday that it had acquired all North American rights to Hou Hsiao-hsien’s martial arts epic The Assassin, which is playing in competition at the Cannes Film Festival.

Starring Shu Qi (Millennium Mambo) and Chang Chen (Three Times), the film has been in the works for close to a decade. Stephen Shin, Wen-Ying Huang, Chen Yiqi and Stephen Lam produced the film, which was shot by Hou’s longtime collaborator Mark Lee Ping-Bing.

The story is set in 9th century China. Nie Yinniang, the 10-year-old daughter of a decorated general, is abducted by a nun who trains her in the martial arts. She is transformed into an exceptional assassin (Shu), charged with eliminating cruel and corrupt government officials. After a failed mission, she returns to the land of her birth with orders to kill her betrothed husband-to-be (Chang), a cousin who now commands the largest military force in North China. After 13 years in exile, the young woman must confront her parents, her memories and her long-repressed feelings. A slave to the orders of her mistress, she must choose: sacrifice the man she loves or break forever with the sacred way of the righteous assassins.

“We have a proud history of supporting films from Taiwan, and Hou Hsiao-hsien is a legend,” said Doris Pfardrescher, president and CEO of Well Go USA. “It’s like someone made a wish list, and we got everything we could have hoped for: iconic director, stellar cast and this exciting, moving story.”

The Assassin will make its world premiere at the festival on May 21.

The deal was negotiated by Pfardrescher and Wild Bunch’s Carole Baraton.

Well played, Doris.

:slight_smile: Can’t wait to see this one!

Me too, PalmStriker

This one is getting a lot of good buzz…AT CANNES NO LESS!

Cannes Film Festival: Hou Hsiao-Hsien Takes a Detour Into Martial Arts
By AMY QINMAY 12, 2015


A scene from Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s martial arts film “The Assassin,” which will have its premiere at Cannes. Credit Tsai Cheng-tai/SpotFilms Co. Ltd.

BEIJING — It has been eight years since the Taiwanese director Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s last feature-length film, the elliptical “Flight of the Red Balloon” starring Juliette Binoche, opened the Un Certain Regard section at the Cannes International Film Festival.

During this time, the renowned arthouse director dedicated much of his energy to building up the independent cinema scene at home in Taiwan, serving as chairman of both the Taipei Film Festival and the executive committee of the Taipei Golden Horse Film Festival.

But Mr. Hou, 68, said there was another reason for his prolonged absence: He was recreating the Tang Dynasty.

In a Skype interview from Taipei last week, Mr. Hou spoke of the painstaking research efforts undertaken for his newest film, “The Assassin,” a Tang Dynasty-era martial arts epic set to premiere on May 21 at the 68th annual Cannes festival.

The film, which features the actress Shu Qi in the title role, is the director’s seventh film to compete for the Palme d’Or, the festival’s top prize. Previously, Mr. Hou took home the Jury Prize for his 1993 film “The Puppetmaster,” the second in his trilogy of films dealing with modern Taiwanese history.


Qi Shu plays the title role, a young girl who is kidnapped and trained to become a killer. Credit Tsai Cheng-tai/SpotFilms Co. Ltd.

Based on a popular legendary tale from the Tang Dynasty, “The Assassin” or “Nie Yinniang” in Chinese, takes place in the year 809 and tells the story of a young girl who is kidnapped by a nun and eventually trained to become a skilled assassin (Ms. Shu).

After failing a mission, she is sent by her master back to her hometown, 13 years after she was taken away, and is given a new target: the most powerful military governor in the North, a man who also happens to be both her cousin and her childhood love (played by Chang Chen).

The film represents the first foray into the traditional martial arts genre for Mr. Hou, who first rose to prominence in the 1980s as a key figure in the New Taiwan Cinema movement. He is best known for his layered meditations on Taiwanese identity within the context of the island’s turbulent 20th-century history.

“I’ve always had a dream to make this story into a film. I first came across the Tang Dynasty legendary tales when I was in university studying film and before that I had read many wuxia stories when I was a child,” Mr. Hou said, referring to China’s rich tradition of martial arts stories. “But I could never make the film because it required such a large amount of financing.”

Now, a string of internationally acclaimed films later, Mr. Hou has less difficulty finding investors. With a budget of around $14 million, “The Assassin” is the director’s biggest production to date. Costs were split between Sil-Metropole Organization, a Hong Kong production company, and Mr. Hou’s film studio, 3H Productions.

In taking on a wuxia film, Mr. Hou is joining a growing number of commercial and arthouse directors from mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan. Prominent examples from recent years include Ang Lee’s “Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon” (2000), Zhang Yimou’s “Hero” (2002), and Wong Kar-Wai’s “The Grandmaster” (2013). Even Jia Zhangke, China’s top independent film director, is said to be preparing a big-budget martial arts film. (In the meantime, Mr. Jia’s latest film “Mountains May Depart,” his first to be filmed partly outside of China (in Australia), will be competing alongside “The Assassin” at this year’s festival.)

Still, Mr. Hou’s decision to make a martial arts film has aroused interest among followers of his work, many of whom are wondering whether he has abandoned his signature contemplative style for high-intensity subject matter.

“It’s hard to imagine a director with Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s particular style — distant camera, slow takes and long takes — doing a wuxia film, which is very fast-cutting,” said Shelly Kraicer, a film critic in Toronto who is a scholar of Chinese cinema. “It has to be a different procedure for him, so it’ll be fascinating to see a director of his stature approach this experiment.”


Chang Chen plays the protagonist’s intended target, a military governor who also happens to be both her cousin and her childhood love. Credit Tsai Cheng-tai/SpotFilms Co. Ltd.

Mr. Hou, who began working on the screenplay in 2012, said that it would be different from other directors’ wuxia films and that he had remained true to his long-established approach.

“I rarely do costume pictures,” he said. “The Tang Dynasty element will be very new but I think people will see that my filming process is the same. It’s still long takes and a static camera. The actors have just changed their clothes and altered their accents a little.”

He added that he made minimal use of computer-generated effects. “I didn’t want the actors to be flying here or there,” he said, referring to the acrobatic feats in wuxia films like “Crouching Tiger.” “There’s essentially no flying.”

Hwarng Wern-Ying, the film’s production and costume designer and a veteran member of Mr. Hou’s creative team, said this time around Mr. Hou seemed even more meticulous in his attention to detail than she had seen in the past.

“He might film only one scene in one day, and then he would film that scene five or six times in one week,” she said. “Then a few months later he’d ask us to go back and film that same scene again but I had already dismantled the set.”

Mr. Hou said that he endeavored to make the film as realistic as possible, a culmination, he said, of several years of scrupulous research into historical accounts of the Tang Dynasty, which ruled China from 618 to 906. It is often referred to as the “golden age” of Chinese civilization, a time when trade and culture flourished and Chang’an, the cosmopolitan dynastic capital, was the largest city in the world.

“Everyone has a different understanding of what the Tang Dynasty was like and I think this film will be a very pure representation of Hou’s vision of that time,” Ms. Hwarng said.

In the film, the actors speak classical Chinese, a decision Mr. Hou said he made to enhance the period feel. The language also turned out to be the “biggest challenge” during the filmmaking process, said the director, since classical Chinese was mostly used for literary texts and almost never spoken. The final version includes Chinese subtitles.

Admirers of Mr. Hou’s work may be pleased to know that the director does not plan to wait another eight years to make his next film.

“There are so many movies I want to make,” he said. “Even just in terms of Taiwan’s history the possibilities are endless.” He added that he was already in talks to make a film about the Taiwanese Communist Party under Japanese and later Kuomintang rule.

A version of this special report appears in print on May 13, 2015, in The International New York Times.

reviews are coming in

So far, reviews are fairly positive. :slight_smile: Here’s the THR review.

The Assassin: Cannes Review
4:21 PM PDT 5/20/2015 by Deborah Young

Cannes
The Bottom Line
Hou Hsiao-Hsien brings a pure, idiosyncratic vision to the martial arts genre

Venue
Cannes Film Festival (Competition)

Cast
Shu Qi, Chang Chen, Sheu Fang-yi

Director
Hou Hsiao-Hsien

Shu Qi plays a mysterious female assassin whose heart gets in the way in Hou Hsiao-Hsiens first martial arts film

In his first directing effort since the 2007 Juliette Binoche vehicle Flight of the Red Balloon, art film master Hou Hsiao-Hsien confronts Taiwanese and Chinese myth, landscape and genre head-on. The Assassin (Nie Yinniang) is his first martial arts film and, at $15 million, his largest-budgeted project to date. As might be expected by those familiar with his work, this is an idiosyncratic, even personal view of the genre. Its bursts of lightning-fast swordplay interrupt long, still stretches of misty moonlit landscapes and follow a pure literary style more than current genre expectations. Detailed period costumes and art direction make it extraordinarily beautiful to watch, but its refinement may weigh against it for fans hungering after spectacular kung fu. The plot and characters are also hard to follow, and although this is par for the genre, game audiences will have to contend with substantial narrative ambiguity to reap the riches of an authentically poetic costumer. Still the film can expect a warm welcome from art film fans. It has been picked up for the U.S. by Wellgo.

The story opens in 9th century China where the Imperial Court and the powerful Weibo military province co-exist in an uneasy truce. The opening sequence introduces self-possessed protag Nie Yinniang (Shu Qi) and the princess-nun Jiaxin (Sheu Fang-yi) to whom she has been entrusted for her education. Though her parents back at the Weibo court may not know it, this consists in turning her into a killing machine of matchless skill, which she demonstrates in the pre-credit sequence. Striking with the speed of a cobra, she probably takes less than three seconds of screen time to slit the throat of a man on horseback. This is the first indication that Hou is deliberately out of the race to create longer, ever-more-astonishing and exciting aerial battles on wires; instead the film follows a formal logic of its own, where fight scenes are brief and to-the-point.

One surprise is that Hou is not shooting in anything resembling widescreen, but a modest, nearly square format that limits the number of actors who can fit into the frame. Its a gamble that pays off in extra vertical space, which lets him exploit soulful natural locations and create images that pleasurably recall Chinese period paintings. The second shock is that exceptional D.P. Mark Lee Ping-bing is shooting in deep black and white, which is wisely dropped for bright color beginning with the next scene.

As a hit woman Yinniang has one weakness, which is a soft heart that often blocks her from carrying out her deadly assignments. Stumbling onto a governor cuddling his baby, she backs down from the kill. (Its an interesting gender switch that points to the contradictions inherent in being a female warrior.) The nun, her master, is more than a little disappointed, and sends her home to murder the ruler Lord Tian (Chang Chen), to whom she was once betrothed. In Weibo, hes making merry with his wife, concubines and small children, but the political outlook is not so good. Another stressful factor is that hes receiving regular visits from a beautiful dark assassin, who is soon identified as Yinniang.

Revealed shot by shot, the royal court is a visual extravagance of Oriental fantasies illuminated by brightly colored silk robes and patterned, transparent curtains. The camera barely moves. There is plenty of sensual atmosphere in these luscious scenes, but the actors, locked in formal poses, keep their emotional distance. So when Lord Tian throws a tantrum and exiles a young councilor, no one gets worked up over it. This is one of the films hard-to-understand plot points, which eventually turns into an ambush in a birch woods, with Yinniang arriving for another short fight.

More confusion arises back at court, where one of Lord Tians favorites (Hsieh Hsin-ying) is hiding her pregnancy. A white-bearded sorcerer gets wind of this and initiates the films single and much appreciated supernatural moment. But as in the action scenes, Hou seems in a hurry to undercut the excitement (one can imagine what Tsui Hark would have done with a smouldering concubine.)

Shu Qi and Chang are both Taiwanese-born stars and co-starred together in Hous 2005 three-part love story, Three Times. Here their roles are much more stylized, and the minimum dialog often gives them an air of posing more than actually acting. Yet both young actors have the gravitas needed for their formal roles and costumes, and acquit themselves like ballet dancers in their mutual sword fights, one of which takes place on a roof at night.

Among the films superlative tech work, major credit goes to production and costume designer Hwarng Wern-ying and composer Lim Giong for a highly original use of music, drumbeats and other effects to convey an unsettling modern mood.

Production companies: Spot Films, Central Motion Picture Organization, Sil-Metropole
Cast:Shu Qi, Chang Chen, Tsumabuki Satoshi, Zhou Yun, Juan Ching-tian,Hsieh Hsin-ying, Sheu Fang-yi
Director: Hou Hsiao-Hsien
Screenwriters: Chu Tien-wen, Hou Hsiao-Hsien
Producers: Wen-Ying Huang, Chen Yiqi, Stephen Lam, Stephen Shin
Director of photography: Mark Lee Ping-bing
Production and costume designer: Hwarng Wern-ying
Editors: Liao Ching-sung, Pauline Huang Chih-chia
Music: Lim Giong
Sales:Wild Bunch
No rating, 120 minutes

And here’s Variety’s review

Cannes Film Review: ‘The Assassin’


Courtesy of Cannes Film Festival
May 20, 2015 | 05:45PM PT
Shu Qi plays the eponymous killer in this ravishingly beautiful foray into historical martial-arts territory from Taiwanese master Hou Hsiao-hsien.
Justin Chang
Chief Film Critic @JustinCChang

In the seven years since Hou Hsiao-hsien began working on a ninth-century wuxia epic, his admirers have been madly curious about how the Taiwanese auteur known for such refined historical panoramas as “Flowers of Shanghai” and minor-key urban portraits like “Cafe Lumiere” would handle his rite of passage into one of China’s most storied and vigorous popular genres. We have the answer at long last in “The Assassin,” a mesmerizing slow burn of a martial-arts movie that boldly merges stasis and kinesis, turns momentum into abstraction, and achieves breathtaking new heights of compositional elegance: Shot for shot, it’s perhaps the most ravishingly beautiful film Hou has ever made, and certainly one of his most deeply transporting. Centered around a quietly riveting performance from Shu Qi, the film is destined for a limited audience to which gore-seekers with short attention spans need not apply. Still, with a Stateside release already secured and passionate critical response assured, it should emerge as one of Hou’s more commercially successful and internationally well-traveled efforts.

Freely reimagined from a story written by the Tang Dynasty scribe Pei Xing, titled “Nie Yinniang” after its formidable female protagonist, “The Assassin” employs the sort of rigorously off-center storytelling devices that will prove immediately recognizable to Hou’s worldwide fanbase: a dense historical narrative laid out with unobtrusive intricacy, a masterfully distanced sense of camera placement, and an attentiveness to mise-en-scene that is almost Kubrickian in its perfectionism, as if a single absent detail or period inaccuracy would cause the whole thing to collapse. At the same time, the director and his d.p., Mark Lee Ping Bing, have delivered a picture that looks markedly different not only from any of its myriad genre forebears, but also from any of their nine previous collaborations.

The differences are made clear in the film’s prologue — lensed in crisp, high-contrast black-and-white and framed in the Academy aspect ratio — which situates us amid the volatile power plays and political instabilities that marked the decline of the Tang Dynasty. It’s here that we first meet Nie Yinniang (Shu), who was abducted from her family at the age of 10 by a nun, Jiaxin (Sheu Fang-yi), who trained her to become an exceptionally lethal assassin tasked with killing corrupt officials. A lithe but imposing vision clad entirely in black, Yinniang gives us a taste of her prowess when she coolly executes a man on horseback — an act pulled off with swift, unerring skill in front of and behind the camera, making use of a whiplash edit that briefly disrupts Hou’s usual aesthetic of long takes and slow pans. But Yinniang’s ruthlessness fails her when she confronts another target and, moved by the presence of his young son, chooses to spare his life, spurring Jiaxin to send her protegee on a mission that will both punish her and rid her of all pity.

At this point, the monochrome bleeds into color, the screen widens to the 1.85:1 aspect ratio, and the location shifts to Weibo, the largest and strongest of the many mainland districts, which maintain an increasingly uneasy balance of power with the Imperial Court. This is where Yinniang was born, and now, after an absence of untold years, she has quietly returned with orders to murder the governor of Weibo, Lord Tian Ji’an (the charismatic Chang Chen, previously paired with Shu in Hou’s “Three Times”), who also happens to be her cousin. Yinniang makes her presence known through a series of furtive ambushes, though as with her last assignment, she never quite goes in for the kill. Her hesitancy is rooted, we learn later, in the fact that she and Lord Tian were once betrothed, with the intention that their marriage would help maintain peace between Weibo and China.

That peace looks in danger of crumbling imminently, as Lord Tian discusses with the other men of his court — a session that will have potentially deadly consequences for his unwisely outspoken aide-de-camp, Xia Jing (Juan Ching-tian), whom the governor angrily banishes from Weibo. The fallout from that decision precipitates the most robust action sequences in “The Assassin,” providing an occasional burst of visceral punctuation in a film where most of the battles are waged verbally. Hou and his chief collaborators (including d.p. Lee and editor Huang Chih-chia) rarely shoot these sequences the same way twice, and they understand that effective action is often a matter of both revelation and concealment. In their hands, an attack can be presented as a breath-catching blur of super-quick closeups, or shown from a discreet distance behind a row of birch trees, or captured in a straightforward medium shot, the camera never blinking as Yinniang’s foes are felled by swords and arrows (every blow and thwack registering in Tu Duu-chih’s immaculate sound design).

Pointedly, the expertly choreographed armed combat is never treated as an end in itself, and while the film presents it as an object of contemplation and sometimes excitement, the violence itself never becomes a source of pleasure. This is action forged by necessity and purged of all excess and spectacle, in the process achieving a clarity of vision that is not just aesthetic but implicitly moral. For the same reason, Hou and Shu wisely resist the anachronistic impulse to turn Yinniang into some sort of kickass proto-feminist avenger (Imperator Furiosa she’s not): When this assassin kills, she goes about it with matter-of-fact precision and practiced efficiency, never lingering or wasting a breath or move.

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Still, there’s no denying that Shu’s sleek, stealthily commanding, intriguingly opaque performance — her third lead turn for Hou, after “Millennium Mambo” and “Three Times” — possesses a mythic allure that occasionally lends the film the dramatic coloration of a fantasy or folk tale. One way to think of “The Assassin” is as a very early version of “Sleeping Beauty,” in which Shu is playing the abducted princess and the evil fairy simultaneously — an association suggested by the heart-stopping image of her looming in wait behind a curtain, uncertain if she is going to prove murderous or merciful. We’re made to understand that Yinniang’s indecision, far from branding her as weak, is ultimately a mark of power: In a world where individual lives can be so cruelly limited by social circumstances and the unpredictable fluctuations of history (a thematic constant in so many of Hou’s period films), Yinniang emerges as the rare figure in command of her own destiny.

There are moments when the film’s relatively straightforward plotting can nonetheless seem a confusing tangle, simply because the story is allowed to unfold as it plausibly would in real life, with occasional digressions and repetitions — one key detail involving Lord Tian’s concubine (Hsieh Hsin-ying) is recounted at least three times — that reveal the complex channels of communication at work. As ever, Hou (who wrote the script with three other scribes) prizes verisimilitude over expedience. Dialogue plays the crucial role of not only advancing the drama but fleshing out context: Eschewing flashbacks and other narrative shortcuts, Hou understands the most piercing way for us to feel the past bearing down on the present is to have a character simply tell their story, as when Lord Tian sadly explains the significance of the two matching jade pieces that he and Yinniang were given as children.

The physical reconstruction of ninth-century Weibo is nothing short of astonishing, opening up a painterly world of brilliant green forests, silvery mist-wreathed lakes and the occasional gorgeous sunset (the exteriors were lensed in Inner Mongolia and China’s Hubei province). The Taiwan-set interiors are no less vivid, thanks to Hwarng Wern-ying’s exquisitely bejeweled costumes and obsessively detailed production design, all flickering candlelight and gorgeous brocades. Lee’s camera finds a marvelously subtle balance of colors and textures in every shot, and his eye for composition is as superb as ever; building a world frame by frame, his long takes and slow pans capture the interaction of Hou’s characters within the space and with each other. Particularly evocative is the way he films a private exchange between Lord Tian and his wife (Zhou Yun) through a gently billowing curtain, conjuring a mood of intimate languor while also lending the proceedings a clandestine, conspiratorial air. Lim Giong’s score, making use of menacing drumbeats and delicate zither strumming, is deployed with particular subtlety.

The sheer depth of its formal artistry places “The Assassin” in a rather more rarefied realm than not only the classic action epics of King Hu and their ilk, but also popular hits like Ang Lee’s “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” (2000), Zhang Yimou’s “Hero” (2002) and “House of Flying Daggers” (2004), and Wong Kar-wai’s “The Grandmaster” (2013), to name the most prominent recent examples of revered Asian auteurs making rare and overdue forays into martial-arts cinema. As one would expect, Hou implicitly grasps the expressive power of stillness and reserve, the ways in which silence can build tension and heighten interest. Above all, he never loses sight of the fact that the bodies he moves so fluidly and intuitively through space are human, and remain so even in death. As Jiaxin rightly tells Yinniang at one point: “Your skill is matchless, but your mind is hostage to human sentiments.” In that respect, Hou Hsiao-hsien proves himself to be not just the creator of this assassin but an unmistakably kindred spirit.

Cannes Film Review: ‘The Assassin’
Reviewed at Cannes Film Festival (competing), May 20, 2015. Running time: 105 MIN. (Original title: “Nie Yinniang”)
Production
(Taiwan) A Well Go USA Entertainment (in U.S.)/Ad Vitam (in France) release of a SpotFilms, Central Motion Pictures Intl., Sil Metropole Organization production, in association with Wild Bunch. (International sales: Wild Bunch, Paris.) Produced by Hou Hsiao-hsien, Chin Yiqi, Peter Lam, Lin Kufn, Gou Tai-chiang, Tung Tzu-hsien. Executive producers, Hou, Liao Ching-song.
Crew
Directed by Hou Hsiao-hsien. Screenplay, Hou, Chu Tien-wen, Hsieh Hai-meng, Zhong Acheng. Camera (color/B&W, 35mm, partial Academy ratio), Mark Lee Ping Bing; editor, Huang Chih-chia; music, Lim Giong; set designer/costume designer, Hwarng Wern-ying; sound editor, Tu Duu-chih; special effects, Ardi Lee; martial arts consultant, Stephen Tung Wai.
With
Shu Qi, Chang Chen, Zhou Yun, Satoshi Tsumabuki, Juan Ching-tian, Hsieh Hsin-ying, Sheu Fang-yi. (Mandarin dialogue)

As Well Go has it, hopefully there will be a theatrical release.

Cannes press conference

//youtu.be/lWMIB449lCw

I haven’t watched this. It’s 48+ mins. But someone here might want to watch it so I’m posting it.

Here’s a shorter vid

This clip is floating around the web.

//youtu.be/ymQvlTo0O_U