Mighty Movie Podcast: <i>Flying Swords of Dragon Gate</i> Director Tsui Hark

is the first Tsui Hark film to be shot in Imax 3D, starring Jet Li. Okay, stop salivating and sit back down, we've got work to do.
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2012-08-31-Flying_Swords_20101022_0785_rgb_410.jpgFlying Swords of Dragon Gate is the first Tsui Hark film to be shot in Imax 3D, starring Jet Li. Okay, stop salivating and sit back down, we've got work to do.

Granted, your enthusiasm is understandable. Hark -- master of such deliriously epic action films as Peking Opera Blues and Once Upon a Time in China -- came roaring back to prominence last year with Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame, and now returns with an ambitious adventure that's actually a continuation of a film series that started in 1967, about a desert inn where both the noble and the infamous rub elbows and clash swords. In addition to all the expected Hark trappings, such as inventive battle scenes, sharp comedy, and women characters who can stand their own against their male counterparts -- including a mysterious swordswoman, played by Zhou Xun, and a lusty barbarian princess, played by Lunmei Kwai (because would you want any other kind?) -- the increased palette of China's first Imax 3D film gives the director a whole new way to mess with your mind. Trust me, Hark takes generous advantage of the opportunity.

This is Hark's return to MMP, and we're glad to have him back; less glad that it had to be via a not-quite-Dolby-grade phone connection. We've done our best to smooth out the audio -- hopefully you'll find the discussion well-worth the effort.

Click on the player button to hear the interview (or right-click to download).

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