After the unqualified failure of Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles, Zhang Yimou had nowhere to go but up. Thus we have the floridly ridiculous Curse of the Golden Flower, which is never credible but also never boring. Chow Yun-Fat and Gong Li are the emperor and empress duking it out for supremacy; hes trying to slowly poison her, shes got the hots for her adoptive son, as well as a treasonous secret. Thus the stage is set for some of the most outrageous plot contrivances in any movie this year, which includes star-crossed young lovers, scheming underlings, rope ninjas who fall from the sky and one big honkin battle scene that defies attempts at description. Theres no real substance to the psychedelically coloured film, which is every bit the CGI blockbuster that the Pirates of the Caribbean films are. As fun as those ninjas are, their defiance of the laws of physics is somewhat disconcerting, but the straight face with which the tale is told jacks the camp value of the whole enterprise over the top and straight through the ceiling. The late avant-gardist Jack Smith would have loved every frame of this way over the top romantic tragedy, with its lavish but phoney sets and pompous, declarative dialogue. It isnt Shakespeare but its entertaining, and the eye-searing colours will burn themselves onto your retinas in record time. Theres some sadness in the once great Zhangs descent into big, dumb hokum like this, as he used to make movies that were genuinely substantial. But if he must make silly pop, make it this kind of grandiloquent nuttiness rather than the limp noodle that was his previous film. Extras include a dull and hyperbolic "making of doc and footage of the L.A. premiere.
(Sony)Curse of the Golden Flower
Zhang Yimou
BY Travis Mackenzie HooverPublished Mar 9, 2007