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Purple Butterfly

Original title: Zi hu die
  • 2003
  • R
  • 2h 7m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Ziyi Zhang in Purple Butterfly (2003)
DramaHistoryWar

Cynthia is a young Chinese woman in love with Itami, a Japanese man about to be sent home for military service.Cynthia is a young Chinese woman in love with Itami, a Japanese man about to be sent home for military service.Cynthia is a young Chinese woman in love with Itami, a Japanese man about to be sent home for military service.

  • Director
    • Ye Lou
  • Writer
    • Ye Lou
  • Stars
    • Ziyi Zhang
    • Tôru Nakamura
    • Ye Liu
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    1.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ye Lou
    • Writer
      • Ye Lou
    • Stars
      • Ziyi Zhang
      • Tôru Nakamura
      • Ye Liu
    • 24User reviews
    • 24Critic reviews
    • 68Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 8 nominations total

    Photos2

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    Top cast11

    Edit
    Ziyi Zhang
    Ziyi Zhang
    • Cynthia
    • (as Zhang Ziyi)
    • …
    Tôru Nakamura
    Tôru Nakamura
    • Hidehiko Itami
    Ye Liu
    Ye Liu
    • Situ (Szeto)
    Yuanzheng Feng
    • Xie Ming
    Bingbing Li
    Bingbing Li
    • Tang Yiling
    Kin Ei
    • Yamamoto
    Leni Lan Crazybarby
    • A zi
    • (as Lan Yan)
    Seiichiro Hashimoto
      Wang Kai
      • Brother
      Felicia Pullam
      • Russian Prostitute
      • (as Fellicia Pullam)
      Anlian Yao
      Anlian Yao
      • Director
        • Ye Lou
      • Writer
        • Ye Lou
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews24

      6.11.3K
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      Featured reviews

      lisalaurine

      Purple Butterfly-a look at Neo-Realism today

      While the story might give one an eye sore and a headache having to keep up with the multiple characters in the storyline, there is an air of independent film-making that transcends the film's confusion. One should also note how excellent the camera-work is for those who enjoy the Italian Neo-realist films of the 1940's and 50's.

      This film is perhaps one of the most interesting of films on Chinese history told from the perspective of the Chinese themselves. The background, actors, crowded train stations and gunfights, would seem difficult to recreate in an independent film. However, the director succeeds in creating 1930's Japanese occupied Shanghai and how war affects those who are involved, both politically & non-politically. For anyone who hasn't seen a film from China other than the heavily laden Kung Fu movies made here in the U.S., Purple Butterfly is both a refresher and an excellent look at Neo-Realism in Chinese Cinema today.
      5aliasanythingyouwant

      War-time intrigue minus the intrigue.

      There are a few things director Ye Lou likes more than I do: silent, open-mouthed screams, rain and quick dissolves. His movie Purple Butterfly is composed mainly of these things, with glimpses in-between of a story about two lovers caught up in the Japanese occupation of Manchuria during the '30s.

      I know what I'm supposed to think of this movie: it's a tone-poem, an evocation of some deeper mood, something running below the surface of the action. But I can't help feeling that the whole exercise would've been more worthwhile had the director demonstrated less ambition and more good old-fashioned story-sense.

      There are these two people, one a Chinese woman working for the underground, the other a Japanese fellow toiling for his country's secret-service. We know they're lovers because we see them in bed together, but for at least half the movie, we have no real idea who these people are, what their roles are in the drama that appears to be playing out before us. Now, I'm no dummy, and certainly don't require everything to be spelled-out for me in the dopey terms of most Hollywood movies, but I do appreciate it when the director makes at least a cursory effort at filling me in on the details of the story, like who people are and why I should care about them.

      The movie doesn't let you get a food-hold, it's too busy being poetic and rainy and surpassingly glum. This might be all right if the images had some great plastic beauty, but the blue-toned pictures Ye Lou puts in front of us, dissolving from one to the next like he's putting on a museum slide-show of Chinese history, are not exactly the best eye-candy I've seen lately. As an exercise in image and cutting the film is not hall-of-fame material.

      The stuff of good cinema is there in Purple Butterfly, but it's buried under too many layers of Cinema.
      Chris Knipp

      A note, because so few people seem to have seen this movie

      Saw Purple Butterfly in NYC the beginning of December. I missed Xiao cheng zhi chun or Springtime in a Small Town by director Tian Zhuangzhuang shown there in early May. Quite likely Springtime is the better movie of the two by a wide margin. It's based on an earlier Chinese film according to J. Hoberman of the Village Voice: "Fei Mu's 1948 Springtime is widely regarded as a masterpiece-some consider it the greatest of all Chinese films. Never having seen it, I can only imagine how Tian may have annotated the original in his remake. The second Springtime is predicated on a sense of '50s film-making (not unlike the heightened Sirkness of Todd Haynes's Far From Heaven) that could hardly have existed in the original. Even as homage, Tian's movie seems to be among the finest expressions of the Chinese new wave." Jonathan Rosenbaum describes the Fei Mu Springtime as "widely considered the nation's greatest film by Mandarin speakers but tragically neglected by almost everyone else" and ends his capsule review of the new Springtime, "This erotically charged drama may not be quite as great as the original, but it's an amazing and beautiful work just the same." I no doubt need to add this to my 2004 "Wish I'd Seen" list. (Thanks to my colleagues on another film world website for bringing it to my attention in the House of Flying Daggers thread there).

      Well, it's clear to me that Purple Butterfly isn't of this magnitude but it's notably different from the usual Chinese film fare in focusing on political conflicts in the 1930's -- which are handled in a somewhat conspiratorial and noirish way, with romance woven in. There are lots of long stares, Thirties dance songs, non-filter cigarettes pensively lighted with box matches, and events in Shanghai in the period of Japanese occupation leading up to the Sino-Japanese war involving political activist plots and counter-plots that are filmed to look rather like blurry, chaotic versions of Chicago gangster shootouts. There is a tragic star-crossed love story, and the climactic scene is rather neat. But the director, Lou Ye, isn't satisfied but has to add a disenchanted brutal sex/self doubt coda.

      The director's previous film was Suzhou River, and this is just as pretty to look at -- pretty enough so you almost don't care that at first you don't know what's happening, except that couples are inarticulately in love and it's always raining. The Village Voice thumbnail review aptly commented, "part action flick, part love story, and part posh historical pageant...a fabulously morose piece of work." Purple Butterfly calls a bit too much attention to itself to fully evoke its Thirties setting, but it manages to seem original most of the way despite occasional debts to Wong Kar Wai notable in the long pauses, languid love scenes, and incessant rain. Not a great success, but watchable as a mood piece.

      Metacritic score of Purple Butterfly: 66.

      Metacritic score of Springtime in a Small Town: 86.
      9MOscarbradley

      'Difficult' but extremely rewarding

      Sixth Generation Chinese director Ye Lou's visually stunning revolutionary romance "Purple Butterfly" is set in Japanese occupied Manchuria in the 1930's and for the first 45 minutes or so you may find it impossible to figure out who's who or what's going on, (I certainly did). Lou uses hand-held cameras to dizzying effect and shoots mostly in various shades of blue and with an awful lot of rain. What is clear is there is an underground organization, (the Purple Butterfly), dedicated to fighting the Japanese and that there's a traitor in their midst. Otherwise the plot is reasonably complex and the time structure not always clear while a case of mistaken identity does little to help. Nevertheless, trying to put the pieces together in some kind of logical order turns out to be hugely rewarding and, as I've said, it's visually magnificent with superb performances from the entire cast. Inevitably it will remind you of the cinema of Kar-Wai Wong but Ye Lou remains his own man and even if you need to see this a couple of times to 'get it' it will be time well spent.
      noralee

      A Chinese Take On The Old-Fashioned War Time Spy Romance

      "Purple Butterfly (Zi hudie)" is a Chinese take on "Charlotte Gray."

      There are also references to "The Third Man" in how the characters' loyalties and knowledge of each other's motives switch, to "Shanghai Express" for the trains, locales and extensive close-ups of beautiful faces, and to "Casablanca" as if these characters had more dialogue they would probably say something about their personal lives not amounting to a hill of beans amidst war breaking out in the late 1930's.

      Elaborate period production design and lush cinematography with very slow camera movement substitute for dialogue.

      I know very little of Sino-Japanese relations at this period so I probably missed important portents as the film first follows what I thought were two sets of star-crossed lovers in Manchuria and then Shanghai, whose lives only gradually obviously intersect.

      I consequently found some plot points confusing, particularly as I wasn't sure if the characters were spectacularly bad shots at point blank range or if we were seeing flashbacks to the point that I wondered if the projectionist had mixed up reels.

      I also wasn't sure if I was supposed to have a positive reaction to Tôru Nakamura's character, as the movie is so virulently anti-Japanese, but I found him a very charismatic actor who had terrific chemistry with the very expressive Ziyi Zhang despite the formalized set pieces of their interactions and even though I wasn't really sure about her personal feelings within her Mata Hari activities.

      It was completely gratuitous to close the movie with newsreel footage of Japanese atrocities in various Chinese cities during the war. Yes, we know this war was hell on civilians but hey I'm watching for the romances.

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      Related interests

      Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
      Drama
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      History
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      War

      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Quotes

        Cynthia: Let's see who's quicker, who's luckier.

      • Soundtracks
        Could Not Get Your Love
        Written by Yao Min (composition), Yan Kuan & Su Wong (lyrics)

        Performed by Yao Li

        Courtesy of EMI Music Publishing Hong Kong

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • December 26, 2003 (Taiwan)
      • Countries of origin
        • China
        • France
      • Languages
        • Mandarin
        • Japanese
        • Vietnamese
      • Also known as
        • 紫蝴蝶
      • Production companies
        • Dream Factory
        • Lou Yi Ltd.
        • Shanghai Film Studio
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Gross US & Canada
        • $17,790
      • Opening weekend US & Canada
        • $6,970
        • Nov 28, 2004
      • Gross worldwide
        • $17,790
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 2h 7m(127 min)
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Dolby Digital

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