The Warlords

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AKA: The Blood Brothers, The Violent Land

Year of release: 2007

Genre: historical drama/action

Directors: Peter Chan, Raymond Yip

Action director: Ching Siu-Tung

Producers: Andre Morgan, Wong Gin-San, Peter Chan

Writers: Xu Lan, Chun Tin-Naam, Aubrey Lam, Wong Gin-San, Jojo Hui, Hoh Kei-Ping, Guo Jun-Li, James Yuen

Cinematography: Arthur Wong, Peter Ngor, Lai Yiu-Fai, Tony Miu

Editor: Wenders Li

Music: Comfort Chan, Peter Kam, Chatchai Pongprapaphan, Leon Ko

Stars: Jet Li, Andy Lau, Takeshi Kaneshiro, Xu Jing-Lei, Ngai Chung-Maan, Gu Bao-Ming, Wong Fooi-Wing, Zhou Bo

Rated IIB for violence

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A loose remake of Chang Cheh's 1973 classic Blood Brothers, The Warlords takes place during the Taiping Rebellion of the 1860's, a bloody conflict that took more Chinese lives than World War II. The story centers on Ma (Jet Li), a general for the ruling Qing. After a harrowing battle which sees the decimation of his troops, Ma decides to defect and eventually links up with a group of bandits led by Cao (Andy Lau) and his right hand man, Zhang (Takeshi Kaneshiro).

Seeing the fury of Cao's men during a raid gives Ma the idea to convince them to join the army. Ostensibly, this is so Ma can regain favor with the emperor, but he also has another motive: love for Cao's wife, Mi (Xu Jing-Lei). Ma, Cao, and Zhang lead their troops to victory early on, but during an extended siege of a city critical to the rebellion, their loyalties are put to the test.

Mostly due to the infusion of Mainland financing, there's been a resurgence in the Chinese "historical epic" genre over the past few years, with films such as Curse of the Golden Flower and Red Cliff becoming a mainstay of local screens. The Warlords certainly fits into that mold, with big stars, huge battle scenes, and lots of drama. There's no denying that this is a striking picture to look at, and the action sequences (helmed by Ching Siu-Tung) are very solid.

But somehow things feel a little hollow. Even with Jet Li delivering what is the finest dramatic work of his career, there seems to be very little real emotion going on here. Perhaps it's a matter of too many cooks spoiling the broth. With two directors, four cinematographers, four composers, and a whopping eight screenwriters, it should probably come as no surprise that not everything seems to mesh together.

Even with the loose ends playing into matters, The Warlords still remains a good film. At the very least, it was nice to see Jet Li actually participating in a movie that not only uses his martial arts skills (though this by no means a kung fu movie) but his acting chops as well, unlike some of his recent work in western productions like War that just have him as some generic Chinese guy who can kick ass.

RATING: 7

Magnolia's new US Blu-Ray version has unfortunately been edited, running at 113 minutes versus the original running time of 127 minutes. The cut scenes (along with footage also trimmed from the Hong Kong release) have been included as an extra, but there isn't a way to play it along with the movie. Besides trailers for other Magnolia releases and a short promo piece made for the HD Net channel, the rest of the special features are the same as the Mega Star special edition DVD and Blu-Ray, consisting of approximately eighty minutes worth of featurettes. The picture is crisp and clear, presented in 1080P in a 2.35:1 ratio, and the audio mix is in 5.1 DTS, with the original Mandarin soundtrack and a new English dub available. The English and Spanish subtitles (which thankfully are not dubtitles) are easy to read.

The Warlords is available at Amazon on both Blu-Ray and DVD.