The Blade | |
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Traditional | 刀 |
Simplified | 刀 |
Mandarin | Dāo |
Cantonese | Dou1 |
Directed by | Tsui Hark |
Produced by | Raymond Chow |
Written by | Koan Hui Tsui Hark So Man-Sing |
Starring | Vincent Zhao Moses Chan Hung Yan Yan Valerie Chow |
Music by | Raymond Wong |
Cinematography | Keung Kwok-Man |
Editing by | Tsui Hark Kam Ma |
Studio | Film Workshop |
Distributed by | Golden Harvest Paragon Films |
Release date(s) | 12 December 1995 |
Running time | 101 minutes |
Country | Hong Kong |
Language | Cantonese |
The Blade (Chinese: 刀) is a 1995 Hong Kong martial arts film directed by Tsui Hark. The Hong Kong film is notable for its unusual style which includes dramatic close-ups, employment of color gels, frenetic camera use during the fight sequences and overall dark tone.
The Blade is a loose remake of Chang Cheh's 1967 film The One-Armed Swordsman.
Ding On (Vincent Zhao) is an orphaned worker at a blade factory called "Sharp Foundry", working alongside many others, including Iron Head (Moses Chan). An old master, On's dead father's friend, runs the factory while his daughter, Ling, who narrates the film, is romantically interested in both On and Iron Head. One day when out delivering the swords On and Iron Head witness a monk fending off a bunch of thugs, who later ambush and kill the monk in retaliation. Iron Head, furious, yells out the name of the factory, swearing revenge and taunting the thugs. Later that day, On discovers that his father died while saving his master from Fei Lung (Xiong Xinxin), an infamous tattooed assassin who is rumored to be able to fly. Intent on seeking revenge, On takes his father's broken sword (the titular Dao) and goes off. Ling goes after him, but gets assaulted by a local gang of bandits. On manages to save her, but loses his right arm in the process and ends up falling off a cliff.
He is later found and nursed back to health by a poor hermit-farmer girl he calls Blackie. Thinking himself now useless, he abandons his hopes for revenge, buries his father's sword and tries to live a normal life. Meanwhile, Ling and Iron Head set out to find On, with Ling all the while narrating her disillusionment with people and her ideals, becoming especially poignant after Iron Head "saves" a prostitute who he later takes advantage of.
Meanwhile, On endures ridicule for being a "cripple" while working in a diner, building up his frustration. He also spots the heavily tattooed man who he recognises as his father's assassin, but is unable to take action and is further frustrated. To add to his trouble, the house he lives in is assaulted by thugs who torch it and beat On mercilessly. Afterward, while searching for food within the wreckage, Blackie finds a singed Kung Fu manual hidden there by her parents. On, excited, tries to learn the techniques described in it, but is unable to obtain a good sword and digs up his father's broken sword instead. Due to his injury and the book's incompleteness his efforts are futile at first, but when driven to rage by his frustration On suddenly makes a breakthrough, developing a devastating spinning technique allowing him to compensate for lack of an arm and his broken weapon.
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