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The Wooden Mans Bride

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Director
  
Huang Jianxin

Screenplay
  
Yang Zhengguang

Duration
  

7/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama

Music director
  
Yan Jun, Dalong Zhang

Language
  
Mandarin

The Wooden Mans Bride movie poster

Release date
  
5 February 1994 (1994-02-05) (Rotterdam)

Writer
  
Jia Pingau (novel), Zhengguang Yang

Initial release
  
December 15, 1994 (Netherlands)

Cast
  
Bao-ming Gu
(Brother (as Paoming Ku)),
Mingjun Kao
(Chief Tang),
Fuli Wang
(Sister Ma),
Lan Wang
(Young Mistress),
Yumei Wang
(Madame Liu)

Similar movies
  
Blackhat
,
Four Weddings and a Funeral
,
27 Dresses
,
Bridesmaids
,
Icing
,
License to Wed

Tagline
  
She defied a thousand years of tradition for one moment of passion

The wooden man s bride trailer 1995


The Wooden Man's Bride (Chinese: 五魁; pinyin: Wǔ kuí) is a 1994 Chinese film directed by the fifth-generation filmmaker Huang Jianxin. The film is Huang's fifth feature and the first of his films to be released in the United States. The film was also the first film shot in Mainland China to be entirely financed by Taiwanese producers. The film stars both Taiwanese and Mainland Chinese actors, and was based on the novel by Jia Pingwa.

Contents

The Wooden Man's Bride wwwgstaticcomtvthumbdvdboxart60291p60291d

The Wooden Man's Bride was something of a departure for the director, Huang Jianxin, whose earlier works were modern-day satires on bureaucracy as in the black comedy, The Black Cannon Incident, and the science-fiction dystopia in Dislocation.

Plot

Set in the 1920s during China's Warlord Era, The Wooden Man's Bride is a romance film between two unlikely people from different classes. A young woman, known only as "Young Mistress" (Wang Lan), is on her way to meet her future husband for the first time when her procession is attacked by sword-wielding bandits in the desert. A servant, Kui (Chang Shih) recklessly takes off after the bandits who have kidnapped the young mistress and taken her back to their lair. When he arrives, Kui impresses the chief of the bandits (Kao Mingjun), who allows Kui to take the Young Mistress back.

Meanwhile, word has reached the Young Mistress's fiancé of her capture. Preparing to engage in a thrilling rescue, the hapless young man accidentally sets off an explosion, killing him. When Young Mistress finally arrives, she faces her fiancé's imperious mother (Wang Yumei), who forces the young woman to undergo arcane tests of purity to determine whether she is worthy to marry the (now dead) bridegroom. When Young Mistress passes these tests, she is forced to marry the titular "wooden man", a wood-carved statue of her late fiancé.

Forced into a life she does not want, Young Mistress tries and fails to escape from her new home. She finds solace in her growing friendship with her one-time hero, Kui, a friendship that soon blossoms into an illicit love affair. When the affair is discovered, Kui is banished from the mill, and Madame Liu has the Young Mistress's legs broken to prevent escape. Kui, however, is determined to rescue his love once more. He returns to the bandit's lair to find the chief dead, and becomes the bandits' new leader.

A year after he leaves, Kui returns with the bandits to claim Young Mistress. He allows Madame Liu to commit suicide by hanging herself, then burns the house down, taking Young Mistress away with him.

Cast

  • Wang Lan as Young Mistress, the film's headstrong heroine and the titular "Wooden Man's Bride".
  • Chang Shih as Kui, a peasant-servant who first saves the Young Mistress from the bandits and later becomes her lover.
  • Kao Mingjun as Chief Tang, the charismatic leader of the bandits who kidnap Young Mistress.
  • Wang Yumei as Madame Liu, the imperious mother of Young Mistress's fiancé. Madame Liu's husband died twenty years earlier, leaving her in charge of a tofu mill.
  • Wang Fuli as Sister Ma, Madame Liu's devoted housemaid.
  • International reception

    Western critics warmly received Huang's shift into the historical drama film. One early review during its premiere at the International Film Festival Rotterdam found the film to be a "ravishing spectacle", though not necessarily groundbreaking, especially in light of similar films such as Zhang Yimou's 1990 drama, Ju Dou. The San Francisco Chronicle's Edward Guthmann, however, found the comparison to Zhang's earlier films as diminishing The Wooden Man's Bride. While he found the film to be an "entertaining melodrama", it nevertheless lacked the "technical mastery or historical reverberations" of those other auteurs. Other critics felt that Huang had more than matched his contemporaries, in the process creating the "most visually stunning, emotionally powerful western since Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven".

    At least one critic praised not only the film's sense of spectacle, but also what he saw as the film's underlying cultural criticism. Stephen Holden of The New York Times noted that the film was a "methodical, cool-headed expose of an oppressive sexual code that treats women as chattel and metes out brutal punishment to violators".

    References

    The Wooden Man's Bride Wikipedia
    The Wooden Mans Bride IMDb The Wooden Mans Bride themoviedb.org