Reviews and notes
FESTIVAL:
2018 Hong Kong
An entertaining and lovingly realized period action caper that ranks as one of the key experiences of eighties Hong Kong Cinema! Brigitte Lin is Cao Yan, the daughter of corrupt General Cao (Kenneth Tsang), who secretly plots against her father with a band of Chinese revolutionaries. But her plans to upset the corrupt order are set astray by a variety of unlikely events, all centering around an all-male Peking Opera troupe. Bai Niu (Sally Yeh), the daughter of troupe leader Wu Ma, wants to become an actress, but is denied by male-centric rules. Meanwhile, gold-digging musician Hong (Cherie Chung) shows up in the Peking Opera House chasing a box of jewelry. When General Cao decides to attend a performance at the Opera House, a chain of events is set in motion that simultaneously brings the three women together and even pits them against one another! Heartwarming drama, over-the-top action, charming Peking Opera, and even some screwball comedy combine as the Peking Opera Blues begin!
- DVDBeaver.
Rarely has the ability of Hong Kong genre cinema to juggle wildly conflicting moods been more evident than in Tsui Hark’s
Peking Opera Blues. The film doesn’t so much alternate between as simultaneously embody a screwball comedy, political thriller, buddy action flick, and a melodramatic tribute to rapidly forged yet unbreakable emotional bonds. That it not only hangs together but flows cogently and provides a stellar showcase for each of its lead actresses marks the film as one of Tsui’s finest achievements.
Set shortly after the fall of the Qing Dynasty,
Peking Opera Blues depicts a transitional society at risk of destabilization. Successful revolutionaries have begun to descend into factionalism as generals vie for power and lowly soldiers largely content themselves with looting. During one such ransacking, singer Sheung Hung (Cherie Chung) makes off with a case of jewels, only to lose them in a cart bound for an all-male opera run by Mr. Wong (Wu Ma), whose daughter, Bak Nau (Sally Yeh), wishes to be an actor. Among the opera’s patrons are General Cho (Kenneth Tsang) and his daughter, Wan (Brigitte Lin), who acts as a spy for a rival group of republican fighters opposed to wannabe warlords like Cho.
As these characters become embroiled in a violent struggle between political rivals,
Peking Opera Blues never loses sight of their individual ambitions. Cho imperiously jockeys for power, and so does an underling, Captain Lui (Ku Feng), the men’s endless scheming distracting them from stomping out the spy network under their noses. Cho and especially Lui also make rapacious passes at the women, who rally to aid Wan in her clandestine activities.
Tsui’s swooning camera movements are equally suited to scenes of opera dance and abrupt explosions of brawls and gunfights. When one shootout between revolutionary squads erupts in Wong’s theater, the camera constantly cuts above and below rows of seating as the civilians of the crowd leap up and down depending on how a given line of soldiers crouches or stands to fire. Later, the climax sees the heroes dressed as actors making an escape to hurl themselves up to the rafters and out onto the roof as soldiers pour gunfire into the ceiling.
In many respects, though, the film’s standout moments are less its intricately choreographed, escalating action sequences than the small moments where Tsui plays up the intimate and larger social ills that weigh on the characters. When Lui makes lecherous demands in Wong’s theater, first for the troupe’s lead actor and then for Bak, Wong’s encouragement to both to submit to the soldier for the sake of the company isn’t mercenary but nervous and resigned, aware that resistance will result in the same outcome but greater destruction.
Tsui often juxtaposes broad comedy on a subject with a more somber reflection on the same topic. For one, the film’s depiction of Wong’s troupe of cross-dressing male opera actors unfortunately reinforces wince-inducing stereotypes of effeminacy. On the other hand, in a scene where Bak and Sheung ask Wan why she dressed in a man’s military uniform and conducts herself with a masculine attitude, the revolutionary cannot help but smile to herself as she speaks vulnerably about the confidence and comfort it gives her.
For all its genre pleasures,
Peking Opera Blues seriously reflects on the political upheavals of 20th-century China. Nestled within that look backward is an anxious glance forward to the 1997 handover of Hong Kong from the United Kingdom back to the Mainland and the political changes it might bring to the province. In many respects, the film is an effective rehearsal for Tsui’s later wuxia epic
Once Upon a Time in China and its statelier reckoning with history.
- Jake Cole, Slant Magazine, 23 September 2025.
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