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Full River Red

Original title: Manjianghong
  • 2023
  • 2h 39m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
3.8K
YOUR RATING
Full River Red (2023)
Trailer 1
Play trailer1:25
1 Video
80 Photos
ComedyDramaHistoryMystery

A pawn tries to get rid of a traitorous minister, Qin Hui, when he leads an army to the border for talks with a Jurchen mission.A pawn tries to get rid of a traitorous minister, Qin Hui, when he leads an army to the border for talks with a Jurchen mission.A pawn tries to get rid of a traitorous minister, Qin Hui, when he leads an army to the border for talks with a Jurchen mission.

  • Director
    • Yimou Zhang
  • Writers
    • Yu Chen
    • Yimou Zhang
  • Stars
    • Teng Shen
    • Jackson Yee
    • Yi Zhang
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    3.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Yimou Zhang
    • Writers
      • Yu Chen
      • Yimou Zhang
    • Stars
      • Teng Shen
      • Jackson Yee
      • Yi Zhang
    • 37User reviews
    • 23Critic reviews
    • 75Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 25 wins & 18 nominations total

    Videos1

    Full River Red
    Trailer 1:25
    Full River Red

    Photos80

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    Top cast19

    Edit
    Teng Shen
    Teng Shen
    • Zhang Da
    Jackson Yee
    Jackson Yee
    • Sun Jun
    Yi Zhang
    Yi Zhang
    • He Li
    Jiayin Lei
    Jiayin Lei
    • Qin Hui
    Yunpeng Yue
    Yunpeng Yue
    • Wu Yichun
    Jiayi Wang
    • Yao Qin
    Binlong Pan
    Binlong Pan
    • Ding Sanwang
    Ailei Yu
    • Liu Xi
    Jingfei Guo
    Jingfei Guo
    • Wang Biao
    Hao Ou
    Hao Ou
    • Zheng Wan
    Xiang Wei
    • Ha Deng
    Zhang Chi
    • Chen Liang
    • (as Chi Zhang)
    Yan Huang
    • Hu Yong
    Jingya Xu
    • Lan Yu
    Pengyu Jiang
    • Lü Zhu
    Boyang Lin
    • Liu Yan
    Fan Fei
    • Qing Mei
    Ren Sinuo
    • Tao Yatou
    • Director
      • Yimou Zhang
    • Writers
      • Yu Chen
      • Yimou Zhang
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews37

    6.43.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8kluseba

    Slapstick Comedy, Martial Arts Action, Emotional Drama and Conspiracy Thriller Collide in Zhang Yimou's New Blockbuster

    Man Jiang Hong, internationally known as Full River Red, is a mixture of a period drama and a conspiracy thriller taking place during the Shaoxing period of the Southern Song dynasty. The entire movie takes place at the prime minister's residence where a foreign diplomate dies under mysterious circumstances and a secret letter he was carrying disappears without a trace. A team of investigators uncovers a conspiracy that is much more significant than initially anticipated.

    This movie convinces on several levels. It has been directed by experienced veteran Zhang Yimou who has been responsible for cinematic masterpieces such as Shadow, The Flowers of War and Hero. While Full River Red isn't among his greatest movies, the calm, precise and swift camera work, the impressively detailed bird perspectives and the use of epic backdrops make this movie a visual sensation.

    Full River Red brings the Southern Song dynasty to life with numerous imaginative details. This includes the diversified clothing, the way the huts and palaces are designed and also the use of numerous different weapons. The attention to detail in this film is particularly outstanding.

    This film also entertains with a fluid blend of genres that will keep viewers intrigued through its ambitious running time. The movie starts with some slapstick comedy scenes, quickly features some visually stunning martial arts sequences, develops into a profound drama and ultimately becomes a gripping conspiracy thriller. The transitions between all these sections are very smooth as each genre gets about thirty to forty-five minutes to start, shine and fade out before the next section takes over. This procedure makes for a highly entertaining final result.

    This movie however isn't without its flaws. The running time of one hundred fifty-nine minutes is a little bit too long for one single film. Zhang Yimou could have easily cut half an hour worth of material to avoid unnecessary repetitions and slow transitions. The plot is very clever but at times includes a few too many twists for its own good before concluding on an exaggeratedly patriotic note that many contemporary Chinese movies are dreadfully suffering from. One last element to criticize are the acting performances that are decent to good but fail to leave a deeper impression. The country's greatest actresses and actors can be found in other contemporary films such as Ride On, Sakra and Post Truth rather than this film.

    At the end of the day, Full River Red is a wonderful movie for anyone interested in ancient Chinese culture, creative martial arts films and twisted conspiracy thrillers. For anyone who appreciates all three elements, this movie should firmly sit among the top twenty films of the year. However, this movie isn't as great as the promoters would like us to believe and Zhang Yimou has done better jobs on numerous occasions in the past.
    jackson_ro

    Full River Red

    A rather slow and stagnant film in the first half, it was largely driven by charisma of individual actors. Also not helped by the monotonous setting of the film, which is just grey wall and grey sky throughout. But Full River Red quickly picked up steam as twists after twists and as the suspense grew. The movie has a powerful ending as Yue Fei's poem is recited, for which the film is named after. It is not hard to understand why the film had sub a great box office as it is truly a star studded lineup, but perhaps it is a little surprising that the film is more than what is shown on the surface. It is about struggle and standing up to power and desires while being told in a self deficating way.
    7Radu_A

    The reason why this was such a big hit

    Zhang Yimou is the most famous Chinese director of all time, but even he cannot be sure to get away with social criticism after the clampdowns against Jack Ma, Hong Kong activists and CoVid critics. So what does a film maker do when he wants to address the frustration many of his compatriots feel? He resorts to satire, and sets the action comfortably far away in the past.

    What starts out as a mystery concerning a missing letter no one must know quickly turns into slapstick comedy, and many viewers familiar with Zhang's epics feel let down by this because there isn't really any suspense. There are numerous twists and turns which seem haphazard and do not dive the plot forward. All the while the action is confined to the same palace grounds. It's totally understandable if this seems rather pointless and dull. And the Hamlet-like ending seems out of sync with the previous irony.

    And yet, there is something beneath which only people familiar with authoritarian regimes will catch on to - the zeal of government officials to save their own skin with complete disregard to the task at hand. The characters constantly plot against each other and/or form allegiances to somehow emerge from the whole dilemma unscathed. It's mostly in vain because they are puppets of an invisible power - like in contemporary China, where no one can figure out the meaning behind the latest regulations, and where even the powerful thrive at the mercy of appearances. Even the title-giving poem, which could be seen as an allusion to Taiwan, is actually just another smokescreen for personal ambition.

    If Zhang had made this into a straightforward mystery or wuxia, it could have been interpreted as subversive by the censors, but because it's farcical, it's all a joke so they can't. So even if the story is too convoluted and the black humor doesn't stick, it's probably still a breath of fresh air for many Chinese spectators and deserves its commercial success.
    9lemonosharky

    Traditional Chinese theatre at a higher definition on the big screen

    Right, just watched it so it's fresh in my mind.

    The sound design is probably the first thing the audience would notice. Every action, every scene is accompanied by a unique noise such as having gongs beaten on the slap of a fan, that, I wouldn't go as far as to say it is innovative but it is certainly rare to hear in most modern films. It essentially takes traditional Chinese theatre music and integrates them into the movie.

    You've probably seen this film being listed as a comedy but by no means is this a comedy so don't be misled into thinking it'll be a Stephen Chow type thing. Sure there are some comedic elements to break the steam a bit once and a while but the seriousness of the movie is very well reflected throughout. Also, don't expect much action, this is not an action film. It works in the same way as a detective movie would go about.

    And that leads me into the penultimate point. The unpredictability of every corner. Sure sometimes, going overboard with avoiding cliches can be detrimental at times but this is an instance where it remains impressively well thought out. There's a very clear crescendo that hits its climax at the very end so just know the tension will only keep rising whilst maintaining a good storytelling pace.

    Mind you, you really need to keep track of what's going on or you are for certain going to lose grip on the story.

    However, if there are a couple of critiscms to be made. The ending had room to be even more fleshed out, since at that point, everything happens really quickly and there's a weird unexplained twist that gets shoved in there without too much explanation. Furthermore, as good as the non-cliches are, it creates a pattern that you pick up pretty easily if you're focused enough.

    My personal verdict on this movie comes as a 9/10. Highly unexpected for this year. I had not even heard of it before today in fact except reading on the background history of the time period of which this film is set in. There are few films in the past few years which has actually attracted my attention to write a review on it, and I'm glad that I've watched it and have been able to give my review.

    Thank you.
    6cherold

    a perplexing movie that would probably make sense if you were Chinese

    This is a tough movie to get a hold of. The producers apparently described it as a suspense movie with comedic elements, but it is rarely either funny or suspenseful. I'd say it's in part a drama of intrigue, part a mystery, but mainly I'd call it a horror movie because it's got a brutal body count and many deaths are horrifically cruel.

    In fact, for me what's most interesting about the movie is how well it portrays a world where the pecking order involves who can kill who, making life cheap as people use murder to impress or jockey for position. It's actually a good example of a systemic issue - it's a kill or be killed world and there's really no way out.

    The story involves a murder investigation, at least at first, but there are all sorts of twists and turns along the way. It's convoluted and at times I got lost.

    But finally at the end the central driving force of everything is revealed, and it made ZERO sense to me. I had to do a bunch of research to figure out the meaning. Full River Red is apparently a poem schoolchildren learn in China but if you don't know the poem or Chinese history then the denouement is incomprehensible.

    I'm not saying this as a criticism - it's perfectly fine to make a movie that only makes sense to the people of the country it's made in. I'm just offering a warning that the ending may not resonate as well if you didn't grow up in China.

    Overall, I liked Full River Red but didn't love it. It's genuinely engrossing. The cast is good, particularly Teng Shen and Wang Jiayi. The score by Hong Han is amazing, with all these crazy punk songs that I've read are rocked-out Chinese folk songs. But the weird genre stew, the unpleasant brutality, and the puzzling-until-you-research-it ending made it less enthralling than the best of director Yimou Zhang's films.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The location is the same with Zhang Yimu's famous movie : raise the red lantern!
    • Goofs
      There is a scene where a suspected victim is being waterboarded, however with vinegar instead of water. Although vinegar has a high amount of acidity in its ingredients, the victim's eyes fail to turn red and watery during the interrogation.

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 17, 2023 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • China
    • Official sites
      • Magnum Films (Australia)
      • Niu Vision Media (Canada)
    • Languages
      • Mandarin
      • Sign Languages
    • Also known as
      • Tam Nehir Kırmızısı
    • Production companies
      • Huanxi Media Group
      • Yixie (Qingdao) Film
      • Beijing Lifeng Culture Development
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • CN¥500,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $670,491,959
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 39 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Atmos
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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