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Release Date: Tuesday, July 10, 2012 MPAA Rating: R Rating Reason: Strong violence including a sexual assault, disturbing images and brief strong language Genre: Drama, War Starring:
Christian Bale, Ni Ni, Paul Schneider
Written By: Heng Liu, Geling Yan Director: Zhang Yimou Official Site: Flowers Of War, The (2011) Synopsis:
The film, set during the Japanese invasion of China, is told from a young girl's point of view, not as a history lesson, but as an intimate, elemental and paradoxically universal celebration of the human spirit. Bale stars as a dissolute Westerner who seeks refuge in a Catholic Church. There he meets a beautiful Chinese courtesan who helps him rescue a group of schoolgirls from a terrible fate at the hands of the Japanese.
The film represents one of China's most ambitious productions, involving the recreation of 1937 Nanking built from scratch over a one-year period and the collaboration of one of Hollywood's most sought after leading men (Christian Bale).
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Flowers Of War, The (2011) | Review
Stranger In A Strange Land
Jacob Sahms
John Miller (Bale) doesn't seem to have many people skills, and there are certainly some funny scenes which play out as he tries to figure his way around the kids of the orphanage and the teenage prostitutes that he soon provides shelter for. He wants money, alcohol, and sex, and those things just happen to be in short supply in the middle of this ugly war. Special features here take us behind the scenes of the movie, using information about the actors and the types of people they play (out of a historical background) to show us more of the war we're watching cinematically conveyed in front of us. This one is in high definition for detail and beauty, and there's beauty and power in the story that unfolds here. While it's not my favorite Bale movie, it's entertaining and thought-provoking. How would we respond if pressed into duty? What would it look like for you to care for someone you had no compassion for before? How could you come to appreciate the situation you were in through someone else's eyes? There's no way around it for Miller—he must get involved. Copyright © 2012 Hollywood Jesus. All rights reserved.
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