Before this, I always thought "The Message" was the best one of this type. But Cliff Walkers impressed me with its story-telling.
Back in 1940s, four of the specially-trained spies were sent to commit a mission--To protect an informant and send him out so he can tell the truth about the government to the world. However, there are moles among the four. So it's harsh for the real agents to do the task.
Firstly, the acting is quite satisfying. Zhangyi played a senior spy in the movie, and his performance of being tortured was quite impressive.
Plot summary
Based on the script by QUAN Yongxian, Cliff Walkers is director ZHANG Yimou's first foray into the spy genre. Set the puppet state of Manchukuo in the 1930s, the film follows four Communist party special agents who return to China after receiving training in the Soviet Union. Together, they embark on a secret mission code-named "Utrennya". After being sold out by a traitor, the team find themselves surrounded by threats on all sides from the moment they parachute into the mission. Will the agents break the impasse and complete their mission? On the snowy grounds of Manchukuo, the team will be tested to their limit.
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Movie Reviews
The suspense is good, can be better
Chinese Revolution Inspired Films Never Gets Old
There's no end to China's revolution-themed movies because the depth of humaneness and literal drama could be excavated in every possible angle into a nutritious script. Cliff Walkers succeeded in combining a revolutionary operation with director Yimo Zhang's personal art style. Regarding photography, costume design, and environmental layout, the movie flawless depicts an era of polarization and conflict like the extremely contrasting colors. As to the plot, tension is naturally formed through dramatic ironies and the intricate objectives of every characters. The amount of attention is mandatory to completely understand the implication and intention behind the seemingly irrelevant conversations. However, even for a native speaker like myself, the exposition of the film is still confusing as I try to catch on to who each characters are (because they all look the same to me),what they want (imagine a spy of the good but serves the bad who tries to talk to the good without spoiling his identity to the bad),and how they do it, because all the details can cause later speculations and gamble between every vigilant minds. Now then, I have to praise Hewei Yu's performance as the secret reinforcement of our protagonists: all the expressions and body languages of this complicated agent is deliberately acted out to ensure his place as a loyal servant of the bad in front of the antagonists, while covertly aiding the safety of the good for the protagonists. There's no exaggeration in commending him for connecting all elements of the movie. With that said, I didn't really enjoy the sudden ending of mission accomplished, emotional agitation, and traitor execution, since the reality is a lot more merciless, and if the unobtrusive danger lives, there's no time for mourning before daybreak. There's only endurance for the martyrs who carried on with the fiery faith. Definitely an unparalleled production, and probably the best Chinese movie of this year.
Very Good
China's official entry to 2022's Oscars is a very good atmospheric historical spy thriller. Although its story is not my cup of tea, I enjoyed it and was involved in it all the time. The story unfolds interestingly and storytelling is beautiful. Cinematography, production design and costume design are all nice. Some scenes are really thrilling and intense.